When the dream starts talking back, do you listen—or run?
Alex Rei is slipping—between waking and dreaming, control and chaos. Their mind is a shifting landscape, a battleground of fragmented realities.
Then a shadow speaks their name. A door opens.
On the other side is something vast. Something watching.
Plagued by sensory overload and questioning whether their neurodiverse mind is opening doors it shouldn’t, Alex is drawn to The Lucid Palace—a dream forum where identities dissolve, and reality is dictated by consensus. But when a voice from the dark whispers deeper truths, Alex begins to wonder:
Where does the dream end? And what happens if waking up is no longer an option?
Told through an intense, immersive first-person perspective, Lucid-X drags you to the fragile edges of consciousness—where perception is a weapon, and the only certainty is that you are not alone.
A glimpse into the mind-warping world of Polyphrenia, Lucid-X is recommended for fans of Philip K. Dick, Black Mirror, and existential thrillers that linger long after the final page.