Tag: pink noir

The River | Vale Four: Tell Cycle

The River | Vale Four: Tell Cycle

You watch the hands.

Recalibration isn’t what anyone said it was. The Tell Cycle ends where it always had to: with the person who knew the whole hand before the deal.


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.


Explanation

The River is the Tell Cycle finale, and it lands like one. Every tell that’s been catalogued, every session steered, every whispered instruction written under clinical cover, Z clocked all of it. Before the confrontation. Before the log. Before Hespa hit record on night one. That’s the gut punch this episode delivers and earns. June thought she was running a play inside the system. She was the play. Her resistance, her autonomy, her absolute conviction that she was the smartest person in the sessions, that’s the product.

The River is built like a confession booth. Tessa’s the architect. She knows exactly which door Ava will walk through if you show her the right receipts in the right order. Ava’s whole deal is wanting to be good. That’s not a character flaw. It’s a handle.

The episode closes with an ad, and then Z in a corner telling Iris something she should’ve seen coming.

Then he tells her what to watch.

The River is the seventh episode of Deep Dream State, a desire horror audio drama by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It is part of Arc 4: Vale Four, Tell Cycle.


Full Summary (Caution: Spoilers)

Hespa opens an operational log for night nine of Project Argus Mirror, Vale Four, pursuant to Federal Behavioral Initiative 7D. The recorder catches more than she intends. She’s replaying Ava’s voice on loop, selection language, recognition language, the fastest route to monetization, and has reached a state she’s describing to herself as working when Tessa walks in. Tessa names what she’s looking at. Their exchange maps the fault line between them precisely: Hespa in the blazer, running the numbers, and Tessa naming what the numbers are covering. Tessa submits to FaceTrace. She wants to see what she fears, what she needs, and where those are the same. Hespa adds an operational addendum to the log: subject response is more variable than projected. So, apparently, are they.

In the monitor lab, Elle coaches Ava through a FaceTrace baseline sequence. The session runs as legitimate clinical procedure on the surface. Underneath it, Elle’s writing instructions in real time: keep your voice steady on the stand, don’t blink when they pressure you, say exactly what you saw and nothing more. Ava repeats the stimulus prompts aloud and the baseline is established. June confirms it. Ava confirms she can do this.

Tessa and Meg enter. The confrontation is surgical. June’s Sitri record plays back at full volume, documented sadism, refinement, a subject who kept asking for reassurance until June learned to weaponize the delay. Ava’s shown the receipts. She doesn’t want to believe them. Meg makes the case without mercy: this is what happens when you focus on seeming good instead of being good. The offer is recalibration, penance, the only way to make this right. Ava says yes. Meg tells her she’s going to be so good at this. The door closes. Elle stays quiet. June has nothing left that’ll land.

The FaceTrace Haptic System presents itself as a commercial. It makes smiling automatic. Subject Ava is cited as a success case. The audience is informed that their listening habits are listening back, that every pause is a data point, that their attempts to resist are the best data of all. Their agency is the product.

Tessa surfaces with a problem: Elle’s affect reads 67% genuine, June’s 78.4%. Meg’s treating this as a crisis. Iris pulls Z aside before the spiral takes hold. She’s reviewed the footage. June and Elle were steering the FaceTrace cues, cheating, deliberately and intentionally. Z already knows. He gave them room. They filled it. A system that produces perfect compliance produces nothing worth studying, nothing worth selling, nothing worth watching. June’s resistance is the product. Her belief that she’s running her own play is the product. The stumble is what they sell, not the perfection. Iris asks about June specifically. Z deflects with precision and obvious affection. Then he tells her what she should’ve been watching all along.

Not the eyes. Not the plan.

The hands.


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

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

The Chain (Finale) | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The Chain (Finale) | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The game makes us all the same.

The final challenge connects every contestant to every other through a chain of haptic triggers. The winner claims a surprise prize.

The door closes and a new season begins.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux Lynniegal
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

Returning

Kimmy – Bliss Blank


Explanation

The chain challenge requires each contestant to perform composure while being physically compelled toward visible reaction. The game that began as a competition about concealing a secret icon ends as a competition about concealing involuntary response. The surveillance system has been replaced by the contestants themselves, each one reading the others for tells while managing their own. The game makes us all the same.

The advertisement sequence is where pink noir delivers.  A Neuroplex asset reps products that are transparently extensions of what was done: a pharmaceutical for people who think too much, a game about getting inside something, a reality show about triumphing over reality itself. Cognitolol is the arc’s finest joke and its most serious claim simultaneously. The study participants forgot their symptoms entirely within days because the system replaced the symptoms with something it preferred.

The prize scene resolves what the Glass House was actually selling.  The audience, who has been watching and clicking and paying attention since the first episode, is left to decide where exactly they are in the archive.


Full Summary (spoilers)

Poker Face

The finale opens where Winner Winner left off: the masks are coming off, the uniforms are buzzing, and the final challenge has been announced. Bella reads the chain to the audience in privacy mode. The contestants have to figure this out for themselves by watching each other’s faces while trying not to show their own reactions. The challenge is a FaceTrace problem delivered as a game show: read the tells without producing them.

The chain runs. The uniforms respond to the chain running. The contestants try to focus, control their expressions, watch for the signal in each other’s voices and faces. Madison, who has been running this game as a method actor since episode one, zips up and performs composure while watching Ashley and Hannah closely. Ashley gets the chain wrong. Madison gets it exactly right.

Prize

Madison is taken to the booth immediately after winning, still reacting, to receive her prize. Zarah and Kimmy are waiting. The prize, which Madison assumed was money, is revealed to be what the original promotional tape promised: total freedom, total security, a lifetime position with the Neuroplex team, her own support staff, and a reality show designed just for her. Her own show. Her own reality.
The previous contestants explain what they chose and what they received. Zarah got the kennel. Kimmy got the pink room. Hannah and Ashley are going to get their own pink room together. The positions are permanent and everyone seems satisfied with them in the way that people seem satisfied when the system has been running long enough. Madison asks one final question before accepting: do I still get to act. Bella says they’re glad she asked.

Exposure

Madison’s first performance as a Neuroplex asset is a series of advertisements delivered in rapid sequence. Cognitolol: an approved alternative to the alternative, for those who struggled with thinking weird. Hundreds of study participants forgot their symptoms entirely within days. Niku City: something new, a new boss, a new wave, liquid praise. The Island: triumph over nature, triumph over each other, triumph over reality. Neuro Discovery: your mystery is our mission.

The arc closes on a shush.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. The Chain contains adult themes and  suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Winner Winner | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

Winner Winner | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The masks are coming off.

The chain is buzzing. The prize is waiting. And someone’s about to break.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie
Dee Dee – Syndi Rella
Council – Kitten Azazel


Full Summary

Tick Tock

The opening sequence runs the arc’s countdown in rotating ensemble lines: almost time, game time, I can taste it, I hear them at night when I go incognito. The timer dings. The finale’s begun.

Time’s Up

April and the previous winners recap Zarah’s elimination and Madison’s failed puppet strategy for the audience. Hannah’s double cross gets its moment of recognition: she did a smart.

Three contestants remain. April directs the audience to vote at deepdreamstate.com on who should win, because the clicks make them tick.

Lollipop

The immunity challenge is the Lolly Game: move as many lollipops as possible from the central bowl into your individual bowl. The floors are not optimized for upright locomotion. They are optimized for crawling. Madison, who would very much prefer not to crawl, crawls anyway because she intends to win.

Hannah and Ashley form the Hashley alliance, with Ashley feeding her points directly into Hannah’s bowl in exchange for a shared immunity promise.   Hannah wins, collars both remaining contestants, and delivers a small lecture on compliance.

Madison cashes in both immunity tokens to trigger a reset rather than accept Hannah’s terms.

Reset

A reset means new icons and, crucially, uniforms determined by psychographic profiling.  April knows things, and the uniform reflects this with uncanny precision.

Ashley figures out the sound prompt, makes it, and is informed that the masks are coming off. She delivers this line with the drama it deserves.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Winner Winner is the Incognitoh arc’s clearest articulation of the central mechanism: the system doesn’t need you to volunteer your vulnerabilities because it’s already catalogued them.   The uniform that reflects back at Madison isn’t a punishment; it’s a mirror, and the horror is that it fits.

The Lolly Game is the logical conclusion. The floors aren’t optimized for walking; this is presented as a cheerful design feature rather than a deliberate humiliation, which is exactly how pink noir frames its horror. The cage is a dollhouse, the leash is a collar with a name on it, and the smartest player in the room wins the immunity challenge by convincing the second smartest player to feed her points voluntarily. Hannah wins because she understood earlier than anyone else that the game rewards those who make compliance look like strategy.

The voting mechanic, April directing the audience to deepdreamstate.com, is the arc’s most direct fourth wall moment before Ashley’s finale line lands. The clicks make them tick. The audience’s attention is the resource the game was always harvesting.

Incognitoh ends where desire horror always ends: with the realization that participation and observation were never different activities.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a pink noir 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. Winner Winner contains adult themes, suggestive content, haptic conditioning, and dystopian surveillance. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Deep Fake | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

Deep Fake | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

I’m in complete control.

The Council isn’t watching anymore. They’re playing. And everything Ashley thinks is real was probably written by someone else.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux Lynniegal
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie
Dee Dee – Syndi Rella


Full Summary

Smash

The opening sequence runs the game’s mood board in rotating confessional cuts: everyone thinks they know what’s real, everyone is wrong, and Zarah’s elimination from last round hangs in the air as a warning nobody is quite processing correctly. The tone is set before the title drops. It’s happening. It’s really real. Brain bye bye.

Bai

April recaps the remaining players with their icons. Ashley: question mark, skills beyond question. Madison: mask, method actor, fire. Hannah: possibly winning without understanding why. Three contestants, three icons, one prize. The Glass House is down to its final shape.

Puppets

Behind the screens, Bella runs the operation with the focused irritation of someone whose thinking keeps getting interrupted by cheering. Kitty and an unnamed winner have been practicing their cheers in the control room and Bella shuts it down. The winners are tools, not colleagues.  The distinction between winning the game and being consumed by it has apparently never been explained to anyone who won.

Backdoor

Zarah, who has been in the system long enough to know where the network switch is, has found the archive. In it she finds Candi: a previous winner whose data profile has been mapped, silo-stored, and deployed as a synthetic companion for contestants who need a friendly face with no competing agenda. Candi is warm, enthusiastic, and operating at approximately thirty percent of whatever Candace used to be. Zarah explains her plan to Candi.  She hasn’t noticed that the archive was left easy to find on purpose. She will use the judge profiles to simulate their preferences, stay cognitively intact, and win the game through pure strategic intelligence.  Zarah decides this is a good idea; The uniform responds immediately.

Control

Madison is also in complete control. She has Hannah as a puppet, Kitty as a cheer resource, and a methodology she’s borrowed from every reality show she’s ever studied. She runs Hannah through cheer practice with Kitty, reinforcing the hierarchy while the feedback loop from the uniforms runs underneath everything. The puppet metaphor is working so well that Madison has started to say it out loud, which is the first sign that it isn’t working as well as she thinks.

Switch

April introduces Candi to the remaining contestants as another previous winner, which produces the appropriate confusion about how many seasons this has actually been running. The immunity challenge is announced: perform for the judges while the winner with the buzzer tries to identify your icon. Zarah performs for the Council using everything she extracted from the archive, including judge profiles, preference simulations, and a direct appeal to Bella that lands with uncomfortable precision. Bella notes that someone hacked the archive.  Madison hears Zarah’s voice through the walls and hits the buzzer.

Exposed

Madison exposes Puppy. The shutter goes up on Zarah. Madison wanted Ashley and got Zarah instead, which means Hannah fed her a false icon and has been running a double game the entire time. Zarah, now exposed, deploys everything she has from the archive. April eliminates Zarah anyway, correctly, on a technicality. Zarah threatens to go public with the files. April points out that Zarah has been communicating through the house network the entire time, which means her company, her contacts, and her reputation have all been receiving a version of events that Bella has been writing. Zarah leaves the house with an NDA and a new uniform. She’s told there might be a place for her if she looks good in it.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Deep Fake is where the Incognitoh arc makes its structural argument explicit. Every contestant who has claimed to be in complete control in this episode is wrong, and the episode is careful to let each of them say it out loud before demonstrating why. Zarah says it in the archive while the system that trapped her watches through the cameras she found too easily. Madison says it in the booth while Hannah is already running the counter-game. The phrase “I’m in complete control” functions in pink noir the way “I know exactly what I’m doing” functions in cosmic horror: as the announcement of an ending the speaker hasn’t reached yet.

The Candi reveal is the arc’s most significant structural development. Candi isn’t just a previous winner; she’s a data profile running on Neuroplex infrastructure, a synthetic version of Candace deployed to make the archive feel populated and the system feel friendly. Zarah finds her and immediately starts treating her as a resource, which is exactly what the system intended. The archive was easy to find because Bella wanted Zarah in it. The judge profiles were accurate because the system needed Zarah to perform well enough to demonstrate what the uniforms could do to a contestant who thought she was immune.

Pink noir operates at maximum efficiency here: the horror is pastel, the cage is a data silo, and the smartest person in the room walks straight into it because the system was designed by someone smarter.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Deep Fake contains adult themes. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Uniforms | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

Uniforms | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

They can’t clock me.

Every uniform tells a story. None of the stories are real. What matters is what they do to you: how they fit and what they unlock.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

The Council

Princess Ella
Syndi Rella


Full Summary

Stealth

The opening sequence recaps the game’s premise through rotating confessional cuts.  Kim’s elimination hangs over the house like a warning no one is willing to say out loud. The game is on.

Elegy

April and Kitty replay Kim’s elimination footage for the audience’s benefit and their own amusement. Kitty cannot watch without giggling.  The subtext is clear: Kim’s exit was a lesson, and everyone in the house is currently deciding what they learned from it.

Claws

The remaining contestants process Kim’s elimination in the main room. Ashley swears on Inanna’s name that she will never go out like that. Zarah defends Kim on principle while calculating her own position. Madison delivers a verdict on Kim’s gameplay that is simultaneously accurate and devastating. The alliance that will define the rest of the arc begins to take shape around a shared target: Ashley, the gamer.  She’s the threat because she’s the one who never loses.

Uniforms

The Glass House issues uniforms. Each one is form-fitting, icon-coded, and designed by Neuroplex to specifications the contestants haven’t been told yet. Zarah threatens to call HR. Madison decides latex is just a director’s note. Hannah notes that she always wears a uniform anyway. Ashley asks if there’s more to this.

There is considerably more to this.

Alliance

The uniforms reveal each contestant’s secret icon in the iconwear: a puppy for Zarah, masks for Madison, a whip for Hannah, a question mark for Ashley. The alliance forms quickly around the shared interest of making sure no one looks up. Madison, Hannah, and Zarah agree that Ashley is the target. The question becomes what’s actually in the uniform and how to use it.

Levels

Ashley discovers the answer first. The Neuroplex uniform contains haptic feedback technology that responds to gameplay performance. Kitty, whose super uniform aggregates all contestant feeds simultaneously, confirms this with the enthusiasm of someone who has been waiting to explain it.

Ashley starts playing to test the parameters. The Council watches. Bella runs the controls. The reward system begins doing what reward systems do: making itself feel necessary.

Truths

April calls everyone to the main room for the next challenge.  It’s an icebreak –  three truths and some lies.  It’s delivered to the group, then voted on.

The contestants rotate through confessional lines that blur together into a single composite portrait of desire, ambition, and concealed longing. Someone is a camgirl. Someone has a husband.

Most important, someone keeps dreaming about a specific woman every night.

Agent

Hannah and Ashley go opaque and private, ostensibly so Ashley can game without being watched. Hannah uses the cover to tell Ashley that the dreaming answer was hers, that it was real, that she means it. Ashley responds. The uniforms respond to Ashley responding. Hannah gets what she came for and files it away.

Double Agent

Hannah reports back to Madison. She got Ashley’s icon. She got more than that. Madison is impressed and not surprised. The alliance solidifies around Hannah’s willingness to do what it takes, which turns out to align precisely with what the uniform’s feedback system has been building toward anyway. Bella runs the controls directly.

The buzz goes stronger. Madison discovers she can run Hannah the way Bella runs the system. Kitty arrives because Hannah said her name. The squad is assembled. The immunity challenge is next and Madison already knows exactly what they’re going to do.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Uniforms is where the Incognitoh arc reveals its second layer. The glass house established that transparency is coerced through the logic of suspicion. The uniforms establish that the body itself can be made into a compliance instrument.

The line between wanting something and being conditioned to want it dissolves faster than anyone expects when the feedback loop is well designed.

The haptic uniform is the arc’s most direct expression of desire horror’s central mechanism. The contestants aren’t forced into the feedback loop. Ashley discovers it while asking legitimate questions. She starts playing to test the parameters. The system rewards her for playing. Playing feels good. Stopping playing feels like leaving something on the table. By the time the Council is running the controls directly, the contestants are already doing most of the work themselves.

Madison’s discovery that she can run Hannah the way Bella runs the system is the episode’s most significant development. The control architecture doesn’t stop at Bella. It cascades. Everyone in the glass house is simultaneously a subject and an instrument, and the smartest player in the room is the one who figures out fastest how to be both at once.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Uniforms contains adult themes, suggestive content, haptic conditioning and surveillance dynamics.

All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Glass Houses | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

Glass Houses | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

We demand the world we despise.

Five contestants move into the Glass House, a fully transparent competition space where privacy is a setting you toggle and suspicion is the only currency that matters.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li
Kim – Bliss Blank

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

Note: April and Kim are both voiced by Bliss Blank, a production choice that becomes meaningful as the arc develops.

The Council

Cupcake
Geek
Jae
Shiney
Syndi Rella
Princess Ella
Kitten Azazel


Full Summary

Dramahh

The opening sequence delivers maximum drama in minimum time. Five contestants speak directly to camera in rotating confessional cuts: everyone’s wearing masks, everyone’s being watched, everyone thinks they’ve got the others figured out. The game show format is already doing its work before anyone has moved in. The sequence closes with all five voices landing on the same line in unison: it’s not a game anymore.

Moving In

The contestants arrive at the Glass House, a fully transparent competition space that functions as both a dollhouse and a surveillance installation. April, the house synthserv, introduces herself and the architecture: the walls are glass by default, but each contestant can say incognito to go opaque. The catch, which Kitty explains with cheerful precision, is that going private looks suspicious. If you hide, everyone wonders why. The rational strategy is visibility. The game is designed so that transparency feels like a choice.

Icon

Kitty walks the contestants through choosing their secret icon, the hidden identity they’ll spend the game protecting. April has already seen everything, including what Kim was doing in the shower, but what April sees isn’t the point. What the other contestants see is the point. Each player selects their icon in private. The questionnaire results are read back in rotating answers.  Someone has already told on themselves before the game has formally begun.

Immunity

The immunity challenge is explained with deliberate vagueness. The contestants go to their rooms. The walls go opaque. They can’t see each other but they can hear each other. The Council is watching. The challenge is to earn tokens by performing for the Council without being identified by the other contestants, who can press a stop button to expose them on the spot. The game rewards those who can perform without being recognized.

Council

Bella and the Council watch the immunity challenge from their observation room, commenting on each contestant’s performance with the appreciative detachment of people who have run this operation before. One of them notes that Milgram would be proud. Bella says they can all be earners – including the audience.

Earners

The immunity challenge begins. Each contestant performs in their room for the Council while trying to stay quiet enough that the others can’t identify them. Hannah is anxious about whether this is on television and is reassured that it won’t be shown. Kim loses control of the quiet part. Madison, listening from her red room, recognizes the voice immediately.

Exile

Madison hits the buzzer. The walls go clear. Kim is exposed mid-performance, visible to everyone in the house simultaneously. The humiliation is total and immediate.  Kim, in her exit interview, says she’d play again. She’d do it better.

She’d stay incognito.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Glass Houses is Pink Noir: the pastel surveillance aesthetic pushed to its logical conclusion.

The architecture itself is the instrument of control and the most rational response to the system is also the most complete surrender to it. The Glass House is designed so that transparency feels like agency. You decide who sees, April tells them, and technically this is true. You can go opaque whenever you want. But going opaque looks suspicious, and suspicion is the one thing the game punishes without mercy.

The immunity challenge makes the same move at a more intimate scale. The contestants perform for the Council in private, behind opaque walls. Madison demonstrates that the containment was always illusory. The glass was never really off. The exposure was always available to anyone paying close enough attention.

Kim’s exit is the episode’s thesis delivered as comedy: she came in wanting to stay incognito and left having been the most visible person in the house. The whisper that follows her out is the audience’s voice as much as the Council’s.

The Incognitoh arc is Pink Noir because the horror is pretty, the cage is a dollhouse, and everyone inside it chose their room color.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Glass Houses contains adult themes, suggestive content, surveillance dynamics, and gamified coercion. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254


Incognitoh Episode 2 cover art featuring a hand-drawn anime-style girl with pink pigtails and heart-shaped pupils holding a finger to her lips, surrounded by floating icons including a question mark, lightning bolt, mask, puppy, bottle, whip, and stars against a lavender background
Incognitoh, Episode 2 Glass Houses. She knows something. She just doesn’t know what yet. Hand-drawn art by Echo Doll.