
We probably won't encounter all of them, but there will be a point where we're officially done with the LP. There are many dreams and some random factors that can alter them (like different textures). Each "day" lasts between 5 and 11 minutes. It's as long and short as you want it to be. This is why in this Let's Play, YOU choose the outcome. I believe you need to actually play the game to realize its intricacies and deep plot. It is impossible to fully grasp the beauty of LSD by being an observer. This is a Choose Your Own Adventure Let's Play, or CYOALP for short. I feel like a lot of communication is lost without the non-verbal factor, and as LSD is a very emotional game, I want the viewer to understand my own emotions while playing it better. I feel like an analytical and well-thought-out commentary helps supplement the abstract nature of LSD. I feel like with the time pressure of the digital age and the need to consume as much media as possible within a short amount of time, the only proper way to do Let's Plays now is to condense several into one. I feel this works for a game as abstract as LSD and nobody wants my heavy accent distracting from the surreal exploration. It's not about the context, it's about the emotion that's conveyed, and ASMR does that best. I feel that mere narration does not do LSD justice. This is an ASMR (autonomous sensory meridian response) Let's Play. I feel that it's hard to get LSD's point across, so I've opted into a new form of Let's Play to give the game's innovative nature the showcase it deserves. I feel that there's a hidden skill-based aspect to LSD that doesn't get too much attention, and I'd like this LP to introduce that side of LSD to a wider audience. I feel subtitles would distract from the visuals and a live reaction would make the journey more earnest. What kind of LP is this? This is a subtitled LP. It is one of three products released in conjunction with the journal, with the other two being a music album, called LSD and Remixes and the journal itself, published as Lovely Sweet Dream. The game is based on a dream journal that Hiroko Nishikawa, an artist at Asmik Ace Entertainment, had been keeping for a decade. Introduction Latest Upload: LSD Dream Emulator - Part 01 (10) LSD (also known as LSD: Dream Emulator) is a surrealistic exploration video game developed and published by Asmik Ace Entertainment for the Sony PlayStation on October 22, 1998.
