In
Twenty-First Century Digital Gothic (2019), Joseph Crawford, a lecturer at the
University of Exeter's English department, argued that "Ted the Caver" was significant because it was one of the first internet horror stories to use
hyperlinks and real-time updates as narrative techniques. These techniques are distinctly digital and cannot be replicated in print. While "Ted the Caver" follows the traditional
structure of these stories, the irregular real-time updates gave readers the impression that they were witnessing the events unfold as they happened; in print works, the events described have already concluded. Crawford added that "the final entry only became 'final' retroactively after its readers had given up hope of a new entry ever appearing", exploiting the fact that readers did not know when the website would receive a new update. Many later online horror works, such as
Marble Hornets ("Entry #26", 2010), also use live updates to create tension and anticipation and imply that a terrible fate had befallen the authors. "Ted the Caver" has a rudimentary website design. Rather than
embedding images in the text, it linked to thema then-common practice which reduced
load times on the slower
connection speedswhich Crawford thought gave the reader a sense of apprehension over what would appear. While none of the story's images are disturbing, this technique would be used more consciously in later horror stories such as "The Grifter" (2009). Since the blogs link to the next entry, it makes it impossible to know when the story ends until the final hyperlink ends up directing the reader to the same page, implying that Ted had been killed by the entity.
Bloody Disgusting's Luiz H.C. wrote that "Ted the Caver" has had "a notable influence on
internet culture" because of its status as one of the earliest creepypastas. The story influenced later Internet horror, such as
Eric Heisserer's "The Dionaea House" and the
SCP Foundation. The former was another important example of early online horror fiction. While "Ted the Caver" existed on a single website, "The Dionaea House" was spread across multiple
blogs written by each character and updated in real-time; the accounts also communicated with each other via
comment sections. Crawford wrote that Heisserer's presentation gave the story "a much greater sense of authenticity and immediacy" than "Ted the Caver". H.C. compared "Ted the Caver" to
The Blair Witch Project (1999) in that, while the fear has been reduced now that readers know that it is not a true story, it still "stands on its own" as an "effective [and] old-fashioned supernatural mystery". Romano observed that some elements of "Ted the Caver" would become creepypasta tropes. He cited the unsettling setting inhabited by a supernatural entity, the "obsessed narrator" who nevertheless continues to return to the danger, and an ambiguous ending implying the danger's continued existence. == Film adaptation ==