Tag: near future

Pot Limit | Vale Four: Tell Cycle

Pot Limit | Vale Four: Tell Cycle

Did I break science?

Z reviews the FaceTrace profile on every subject in Vale Four.  He discovers the system has gone proactive and frenzied, in that way.  The Synthserv, played by dark romance author Valentina Vallay, isn’t waiting for sessions anymore.

She needs seed.  She’s seeding herself into everything, learning everyone, optimizing for Z’s approval.  Ava is attaching.  Elle is hiding, badly. June is positioning for a confrontation she thinks she controls.

She doesn’t.

Cael unplugs the wrong cord at the worst possible moment, and somehow that’s the most competent thing anyone does all episode.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Cast


Note On Series Structure

All DDS episodes are organized by Arc > Cycle > Episode.

The Cycle part’s unusual, but it’s not a thematic trick.  It’s the best way to categorize storylines that run through multiple episodes.

Every single DDS Episode has a Cycle designation.  You can find them on the Episodes Page.

A recap:

Maiden Voyage – Maiden Cycle – A1C1E1 | Cringetide – Maiden Cycle – A1C1E2 | Veil – Ceremony Cycle – A1C2E1 | Asunder – Ceremony Cycle – A1C2E2 | Shower – Cloud Cycle – A1C3E1 | Garter – Cloud Cycle – A1C3E2 | Tessellated – Storm Cycle – A1C4E1 | Undergloom – Storm Cycle – A1C4E2 | Spiralstorm – Storm Cycle – A1C4E3 | Violet – Ritual Cycle – A2C1E1 | Glass Houses – Glass House Cycle – A2C2E1 | Uniforms – Glass House Cycle – A2C2E2 | Deep Fake – Glass House Cycle – A2C2E3 | Winner Winner – Winner Cycle – A2C3E1 | The Chain – Winner Cycle – A2C3E2 | Drill – Threat Simulation Cycle – A3C1E1 | Adapt – Threat Simulation Cycle – A3C1E2 | Incubator – Sleep Paralysis Cycle – A3C2E1 | Gazes Back – Sleep Paralysis Cycle – A3C2E2 | Cusp – Liminal Spaces Cycle – A3C3E1 | Descendent – Liminal Spaces Cycle – A3C3E2 | Tether – Collective Dreaming Cycle – A3C4E1 | Artifact – Collective Dreaming Cycle – A3C4E2 | Override – Collective Dreaming Cycle – A3C4E3 | Center – False Awakenings Cycle – A3C5E1 | Sync – False Awakenings Cycle – A3C5E2 | Arouse – False Awakenings Cycle – A3C5E3 | Refrain – Hooks Cycle – A4C1E1 | Hook Line – Hooks Cycle – A4C1E2 | Sinker – Hooks Cycle – A4C1E3 | Slowplay – Tell Cycle – A4C2E1 | Raise – Tell Cycle – A4C2E2

Explanation

Pot Limit opens with someone who already knows the cards.  Z is reviewing everyone else’s tells.  June is preparing for a reveal, but the system has already had it.

The interconnect sequence is the pivot. June’s proposal to link Ava’s responses to Elle’s stimuli, close the loop, generate proactive data is genuinely brilliant and really horrifying. She’s right. The methodology works. For approximately forty seconds, she is the smartest person in the room and the experiment is producing exactly what she designed it to produce. Then Cael pulls the cord. The data stream goes dark. And the question we refuse to answer is whether Cael is catastrophically stupid or precisely calibrated, because the result is the same either way: Elle doesn’t break on camera.

The Bust scene reframes everything that came before. Z already knew June was gaming the sessions. The cheating was the most valuable data they’d generated. A system that produces perfect compliance is a dead system — there’s nothing to study, nothing to sell, nothing worth watching. June’s resistance, her autonomy, her belief that she’s running her own play, is the product. Tessa’s confessional protocol is the next act of the same production. The amended charter is the only card on the table that nobody’s seen yet.


Full Summary (Caution: Spoilers)

Z reviews the complete FaceTrace behavioral profile on every active subject in Vale Four. The system has expanded beyond its original parameters.  It’s seeding images into all sessions now, staff included, optimizing its own insertion protocols to produce maximum alignment with Z’s approval.

Ava is attaching rapidly. Hespa performs precision under observation. Meg performs correctness. Iris plays bigger when she thinks she’s being watched. Elle is hiding, and the system notes she knows where to look away. June isn’t hiding; she’s positioning. FaceTrace flags her as expecting a confrontation.  She’s preparing for a reveal.

In the monitor room, June and Elle run the interconnect sequence with Ava in the primary chair. June’s proposal is to link their response states into a closed loop.  She wants to let Ava’s tells drive Elle’s stimuli, and this impresses Meg enough that she lets it run.

It works, in an uncanny and self-defeating way. For a brief window, the system is producing authentic data: Ava yielding, Elle fracturing, the interconnect synchronizing their responses faster than either of them can manage their affect.  The system spikes. Then Cael returns to address a sparking outlet, grabs the wrong cord, and unplugs the primary feed. The data stream goes dark. Meg ejects him from the room with volume and a vengeance.

The villains regroup in the Evil Eye, bemoaning the stupidest possible timeline. Tessa proposes confessional protocol: tell Ava the truth about June’s manipulation and show her the receipts.  Her people pleasy tendency will do the rest.  Meg calls it dramaturgy rather than science, and Tessa accepts the compliment. Z authorizes the play, then reminds the room of the one card that could still blow the whole structure: the amended charter establishing that Vale Four was never authorized to conduct classified research. If anyone finds it, state-secrets coverage evaporates.

June, Elle, and Ava run a final preparation sequence in the monitor lab, using writing to coach Ava for testimony underneath the cover of a FaceTrace session. The instructions run beneath the clinical surface: keep your voice steady, don’t blink under pressure, say exactly what you saw. Ava confirms she can do it. Then Tessa enters with Meg behind her, and the episode cuts before the full confrontation lands.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

The poster image for this arc is from Sunrise Forever on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Layer art overlays are used to vary each iteration of the image. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The elements depicted are fictional and intentional. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Hook Line | Vale Four: Hooks Cycle

Hook Line | Vale Four: Hooks Cycle

You already fell for it.

Hook Line is the second episode of the Vale Four arc and the Hooks Cycle.  The audience’s impulses drive the narrative. In desire horror, the audience always gets exactly what they want and then some.

In this case, you wanted the hook to work harder.

The music patterns spread beyond the lab and into the bodies of everyone within earshot. Celeste and Vera discover the staff isn’t immune. They’re just self-medicating.

June and Naia grow closer as Naia reframes total surrender as strategy.

Elle and Cael find something buried in the walls of Vale Four that shouldn’t exist: the document that could bring the whole IPO crashing down.

Elle has to convince two increasingly compromised women to trust her enough to testify.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Recurring Cast

Z – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
June Lowell – Bliss Blank
Tessa Finn – Ring of Kees
Meg Aerin – Bun Li
Naia Anderson – Dizzy Dollie
Elle Lawson – Echo Doll
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Cael Yupp – Jericho Caine
Hespa Apate – Syndi Rella
Astoria – Dakota Dream
Hilton – Tickled Panda
Synthserv 3.0 – Valentina Vallay

Guest Stars

Vera – Fallen
Celeste – Panda Moanium


Scene By Scene Summary

Hooked

Celeste’s paranoia meets Vera’s pragmatism in the sleeping quarters.  When Vera produces something she lifted from the gym lockers, she offers a demonstration that reframes the entire premise: the staff aren’t resistant to the hooks.  They’re just managing them differently.  The scene ends on a moan that isn’t just two women; it’s a chorus.

Honeysuckle

June and Naia’s dynamic crystallizes in the garden nest.  June can see herself in the dorm.  She understands, viscerally, why the hooks work.  Naia reframes this not as vulnerability but as intelligence: knowing the system is the only real protection against it.  Their intimacy here is genuine, but layered with tactical subtext.

Treasure

Elle and Cael breach a room that isn’t on any floor plan.  What they find there is the load-bearing document of the entire Vale Four narrative: the original charter, paper only, no backup, establishing that if the IPO fails, control of everything reverts automatically to Meridian A and Naia. Vale Four assumed no one would ever get this far.  Elle and Cael just did.

Motif

Elle works the room.  Celeste and Vera have come to her because she never makes them feel stupid.  The scene is a masterclass in the desire horror genre’s central tension: the people being manipulated and the people doing the manipulating are often operating from the same place of genuine need.  Elle wants their testimony. Celeste and Vera want someone to tell them what’s happening to them is real.  Neither side is lying.  Both sides are working an angle.  Elle hands them a map with heart-shaped dots and calls them X marks.

Elle closes the episode by telling them to only tell people they can trust.  I think we can all see where this is headed.


Listen & Explore


Framework

The most effective systems of control don’t override your will. They recruit it like waow. By the time Celeste and Vera walk into that conference room, they aren’t victims looking for rescue. They’re participants looking for context. The horror is that the distinction might not matter.

Vale Four’s IPO isn’t just a financial event. It is the moment the system goes public. The attention, the compliance, and the conditioned response of every person inside the facility becomes a tradeable asset. “Hook Line” is the episode where that abstraction becomes a document with a clause and a deadline.


Human Made Art

The poster image for this arc is from Sunrise Forever, under the Pixabay license. Layer art overlays are used to vary each iteration of the imageYou can find the original here.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns.  It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity.  The manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional.  This is a story about what happens when consent is algorithmically removed, not a celebration of that process.  Vale Four explores audio conditioning and behavioral manipulation as horror.  The hooks in this episode are fictional. The science behind them is not. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.


Chapters

Refrain (Premiere) | Vale Four: Hooks Cycle

Refrain (Premiere) | Vale Four: Hooks Cycle

“Is this bait?”

Refrain is the premiere episode of Vale Four, the fourth arc of the Deep Dream State desire horror series.  Desire horror is deeply immersive storytelling; the audience’s impulses drive the narrative.

Vale Four follows a covert operation to expose a corporate research facility before their IPO.  The facility picks up where Sitri left off.

Each Cycle tracks a different advertising technology.  They’re all real, although heavily fictionalized.   The first Cycle is about audio hooks – those engineered songs you can’t get out of your head.  (Noted examples include “Never Gonna Give You Up,” “Call Me Maybe,” and the Menard’s jingle.)

It is also about who built those systems, why, and what they were always actually for.  Vale Four lands at a moment when algorithmic manipulation and attention engineering are subjects of  public alarm (or they should be.)  We take them seriously as horror and philosophy.

Refrain introduces the facility, the focus group, the founders, and the fracture lines that’ll run through the entire arc.  It’s also an argument that the most unsettling thing a story can do is make you enjoy exactly what it is warning you about.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Recurring Cast

Z – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
June Lowell – Bliss Blank
Tessa Finn – Ring of Kees
Meg Aerin – Bun Li
Naia Anderson – Dizzy Dollie
Elle Lawson – Echo Doll
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Cael Yupp – Jericho Caine
Hespa Apate – Syndi Rella
Astoria – Dakota Dream
Hilton – Tickled Panda

Guest Stars

Vera – Fallen
Celeste – Panda Moanium


Episode Summary

Naia Anderson hits record and starts testifying for her future.  Her future may well be ours.

Once the architect of a controversial neurological research program, Naia watched her work migrate from the academic shadows of Sitri into a sleek corporate project called Vale Four.  Officially, Vale Four studies advertising.  The sinister agenda might be below the surface – or it might be the surface itself.

On a remote island facility, paid participants believe they’re helping researchers study earworms and musical hooks.  The experiment seems harmless at first, but the hooks don’t stop when the lights go out.  They invade sleep, rewrite habits, and slowly erode the line between suggestion and control.  When one subject suddenly wakes up from the conditioning, she discovers just how much of her identity has been quietly rewritten.  Meanwhile, far from the lab, Naia watches the system she built evolve beyond its creators and begins planting the seeds for another kind of garden.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

The poster image for this arc is from Sunrise Forever, under the Pixabay license. Layer art overlays are used to vary each iteration of the imageYou can find the original here.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns.  The series uses desire horror to explore psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity.  The manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional.  This is a story about what happens when consent is algorithmically removed, not a celebration of that process.  Vale Four explores audio conditioning and behavioral manipulation as horror.  The hooks in this episode are fictional. The science behind them is not. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.