Everything about Lsd Video Game totally explained
LSD is a
video game released in
Japan in
1998 for the
Sony PlayStation video game console and is one of three products (the others being a music
CD and a
book) based on a
diary of dreams that a staff member at
Asmik Ace Entertainment had been keeping for a
decade. It has a small
cult following and is recognized as being genuinely disturbing at times.
Gameplay
In this game, the player simply navigates a
dream world. There is no action or
experience points, nor is there any clear goal. The idea is simply to walk around and enjoy things in a dream environment. There are many bizarre environments in this world, and one way to travel through them is by foot. However, if you bump into walls or other objects in the game, you'll be instantaneously transported to another environment, the system of which is called "linking". Bumping into people, animals, or special objects usually gives a stranger dream.
Each dream lasts 10 minutes, and the player wakes up automatically from the dream at that time. However, if the player falls off a
cliff in the dream, then the player may wake up immediately. There is also a
graph that appears at the end of each dream that keeps track of the player's state of mind. Depending on that state, the next dream may start differently.
While you walk through an environment, the surroundings may suddenly change. For example,
eyes may suddenly appear all over a wall and stare at you. Even if you visit the same place twice, it may look quite different. You may also encounter very strange creatures while roaming around, including a celestial
nymph flying through the air, a wild
horse running through the
prairie, or a
huge man filling up an entire room.
The number of "days" are kept track of. As you progress, the pattern on walls and the form of the player may transmute. Occasionally the player may come across a man in a suit and hat. He is possibly the only thing resembling an antagonist, and erases the memory of the dream.
Presently, the game is difficult to procure, and it sells for high prices at some
Japanese auction sites.
Audio
There are over 500
patterns of
background music in the game. These are called patterns, not
tunes, because they all share the same
musical score, but are played in different
tones.
Some of the music was made by
Ken Ishii, a
Japanese techno DJ and producer who also have made a track for the game
Rez.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Lsd Video Game'.
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