I think gore enhances the fear, if done right.
Take The Blair Witch Project ( as an example). There is a scene involving a bloody something found near the end of the film... it still gives me shudders, partly because I don't know exactly what I'm looking at in the scene, and partly because the victim wasn't dead.
Again, gore in and of itself doesn't serve to 'scare' as much as it does to make one uncomfortable, to shake up and upset. It implies physical violence, often something to be feared in and of itself.
Take The Blair Witch Project ( as an example). There is a scene involving a bloody something found near the end of the film... it still gives me shudders, partly because I don't know exactly what I'm looking at in the scene, and partly because the victim wasn't dead.
Again, gore in and of itself doesn't serve to 'scare' as much as it does to make one uncomfortable, to shake up and upset. It implies physical violence, often something to be feared in and of itself.