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1[[quoteright:258:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dream_machine_game.jpg]]
2''The Dream Machine'' is a [[PointAndClickGame point-and-click]] AdventureGame for [[UsefulNotes/IBMPersonalComputer PC]] by the Swedish developer Cockroach Inc. It follows the story of a young, expecting couple, Victor and Alicia Neff, shortly after their arrival in their new apartment. As they settle in, however, things soon turn very unsettling.
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4The games themes focus on dreams, particularly Freudian and Jungian theories of dream symbols. As such, surreal elements show up early and increase as the story unfolds. Moreover, the game is made from clay and cardboard, further giving it a very unique feel.
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6The game is also notable for being one of the first to go for an episodic format, yet also taking its time for each episode. The first one was released in 2010, and can be played for free at [[http://www.thedreammachine.se/ the game's official website.]] Chapter 1, 2 and 3 all hit UsefulNotes/{{Steam}} in 2012, while Chapters 4 and 5 followed in 2013 and 2014. The story was originally meant to end there, but the developers realized halfway through the series they needed a final, 6th chapter, which was ultimately released in 2017.
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8Also, has [[SimilarlyNamedWorks nothing to do]] with the Creator/SatoshiKon & Creator/{{Madhouse}} anime currently stuck in development hell.
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10!! This episodic game provides examples of:
11%%* AbusiveParents: Morton's grandfather was this, as we learn in the second game.
12%%* AIIsACrapshoot: [[spoiler: The titular dream machine. It starts out much less intelligent than most examples of this trope, but seems to get progressively smarter as the story goes on.]]
13* AliceAllusion: Aside from the whole dream theme, let's just say that Episode 5 involves a great deal of shrinking and growing back.
14* AmbiguouslyGay: Mr. Morton has no children, and one of the characters who knew him says in chapter 6: "Felix never had much luck with women. No surprises there", but never elaborates on that.
15* AndIMustScream: [[spoiler: When the Machine took over Alicia in chapter 3, Alicia was still fully conscious and aware of what's going on]].
16* AntagonistTitle: The titular machine is feeding on the tenants of the apartment complex, and is the main reason Victor is going into people's dreams in the first place.
17%%* AnxietyDreams: Referenced. Alicia suggests that Victor's dream is this.
18%%* AudienceSurrogate
19* BlackAndNerdy: Martin Willard, whose dream you enter in Episode 5, has a telescope in his flat, and his dream looks like a far more desolate version of [[Film/{{Tron}} the Grid]].
20* BeautifulVoid: Mr. Morton's dreamscape, which is a great metaphor for his loneliness, detachment from the outside world, [[spoiler: him not having an heir and unable to do good with his research]]. In Episode 5, there's Martin Willard's dreamworld that looks rather cyberpunk-ish.
21* BigScrewedUpFamily: Mortons are this... sort of. At any rate, their family business is very specific.
22* BookEnds: The island that Victor is dreaming about in the start of Episode 1 [[spoiler: is where he ends up at the very end of the game.]]
23* BreatherEpisode: Between Episode 3, which has a sinister mystery, a lot of suspense and a shocking reveal, and the completely harrowing Episode 5, Episode 4 is definitely that. It may be a somber family drama, but the ending dialog is very uplifting.
24* CerebusSyndrome: Episodes 1-4 may have a vaguely unsettling atmosphere and a genuinely scary moment here and there, but Episode 5 is straight-up horror.
25%%* CoveredInGunge: Alicia describes a dream she had before the start of the game which ends with their landlord in this state.
26%%* CrapsaccharineWorld: [[spoiler: HMS Albatros]].
27* CrustyCaretaker: Morton is pretty scary even when you don't know anything about him yet. Then, you find out that he [[spoiler: have been spying on you through multiple videocameras, invaded your wife's dreams and disposed of the previous tenant of your flat]].
28* DeathOfAChild: In Chapter 6. [[spoiler: Victor needs to kill the fetus version of himself in order to reach his child.]]
29* DemonicPossession: Or, rather, [[spoiler: Mechanic Possession. In chapter 3, the Machine takes over Alicia]].
30** [[spoiler: The same thing happens to Victor himself at the end of the game, though by the machine's words, it's more of a symbiosis.]]
31* DreamLand: As the title indicates, the game takes part in one. Although, it's made up of a significantly smaller amount of contributing dreamers. Specifically, the whole place is roughly disc-shaped, with the dreams of newborns starting out at the center, moving away from it as they age, and crumbling at the edge where dreamers die of old age. [[spoiler: And that's not even touching upon the topic of [[EldritchLocation the prenatal]] [[TheLifestream realm!]]]]
32* DreamPeople: Episodes 2 and 3 take place within dreams, meaning Victor interacts with mostly with these. Of course, the name of the game could have been a clue this trope would be present.
33* DreamWalker: During the game play, Victor and [[spoiler: the machine]]. [[spoiler: Mr. Morton is revealed to have done this to Alicia, arriving in a fairly...Unusual manner. His father is implied to have done this, as well.]]
34** This is also done, in a less conventional way, by [[spoiler: Martin Willard, who is able to fly between his dream and that of his neighbor.]]
35* EvolvingTitleScreen: Finishing the game changes the title screen to [[spoiler: Victor in a coma, instead of just sleeping.]]
36%% * FinalSpeech: [[spoiler: Mr. Morton gives a long, ''long'' one]].
37%% * EnvironmentalSymbolism: The dreamscape of each person reflects their personality, so, naturally, these tropes are present.
38* {{Foreshadowing}}: In the beginning of Episode 1 Alicia tells: "It's comforting to know that my mind is looking out for me even when I'm sleeping". In Episode 2, we learn that [[spoiler:the dreamlands are born at the center of the shared dreamworld and fall off the outer edge at the point of death. The Center of Dreams is also marked on the dreamworld map. Obviously, it would be catastrophic if the Dream Machine were to reach it, but there's no way for it to do that... right?]]
39%%* FrankensteinsMonster: [[spoiler:Featured in Episode 5]].
40* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler: Victor lets the machine possess him, in order to save his child.]]
41* HeWhoFightsMonsters: Episode 5 opens with that particular Nietzsche quote, and Victor is forced to use Mr. Morton's tactics to get into the heads of Martin and Selma. [[spoiler:The Dream Machine even offers Victor to [[WeCanRuleTogether join with it]], although Victor's not buying it.]]
42* ImAHumanitarian: [[spoiler:The Machine in chapter 3]].
43%%* IndianBurialGround: Your neighbour invokes this trope as a joke. You soon find out that there is a different sort of horror lurking in the house.
44%%* GoneHorriblyWrong: [[spoiler: The dream machine, again.]]
45* LastOfHisKind: [[spoiler: Mr. Morton has no children and, therefore, is the last one in his family line.]]
46* LivingEmotionalCrutch: The third game implies that Victor is this to Alicia. [[spoiler: If the only humans in your dreams, besides you, are replicas of your husband, you do have issues]].
47%%* LonersAreFreaks: Mr. Morton, in spades.
48* MoonLogicPuzzle: In chapter 3, you have to make an umbrella drink. To do this, you need to [[spoiler: pick up a life-sized umbrella on the deck by the coach, that somehow fits in a little glass]].
49** Plenty of puzzles run on the sort of surreal logic that only works in dreams and adventure games. For instance, you can make a deaf statue able to hear by stuffing a hammer, anvil, and stirrup into its ear (since those are names of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_ear#Ossicles the three bones]] [[GeniusBonus inside the middle ear]]).
50* MysteriousNote: The one Victor finds is the first tangible clue something isn't quite right.
51** Another one makes an appearance in Chapter 3. In this case, the sender and intention is clear, the mystery is in who it is addressed to.
52* ObsessiveCompulsiveBarkeeping: The barkeeper in chapter 3 is always drying a glass. Justified both in- and out-universe: he's been stated to be a manipulative {{Jerkass}} who takes credit for others' work, and the game is made in claymation, which demands so much effort that even a single IdleAnimation for a secondary character takes a long time to make.
53* TheOnlyOne: In the second chapter, Victor discovers that [[spoiler: he is the only one capable of fighting the machine since Mr. Morton never got the chance to enter his dreams.]]
54%%* PleaseWakeUp: [[spoiler: Alicia to Victor, after the machine takes over. ]]
55* PlotPoweredStamina: The people of Selma's dream in Episode 5 are rather blase about the fact that their vitals are missing, all things considered.
56%%* PoliceAreUseless: Not that they'd be able to get into the building anyway.
57* RecurringDreams: After reading Morton's dreamjournals, Victor notices that "his dreams are oddly repetitive".
58* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Arguably, the case with [[spoiler: Mr. Morton]]. S/he may have been a nasty piece of work, but when [[spoiler: the machine demanded to kill Victor, he refused to do it and was mortally injured by the machine, living just long enough to tell Victor what to do]].
59* ReleasedToElsewhere: [[spoiler: In chapter 3, "promoted to Command" and "sent to coal room duty" have this meaning]].
60* ShoutOut: The shirt Victor wears is the same the main character in ''Film/BladeRunner'' wears.
61** Victor finds dolls of [[VideoGame/IloMilo Ilo and Milo]] while going through one of the many boxes in the apartment.
62** When Victor takes up his duty on the board of HMS Albatros, he receives [[Series/ThePrisoner1967 a badge with number six on it]]. [[spoiler: Serves as a nice bit of {{Foreshadowing}}, too]].
63* StalkerWithoutACrush: [[spoiler: Mr. Morton and Victor for the tenants of the house, albeit for different reasons - Morton's reasoning is ForScience, and Victor has to save them]]. The unsettling implications of such invasion of privacy are certainly not lost on the characters.
64* StealthPun: Morton's dreamscape populated by the ''heads'' of the Morton family.
65* TechnologyPorn: The dream machine looks pretty impressive.
66%%* TheAbyssGazesAlso: [[spoiler: Literally so, in Willard's dream.]]
67* TwentyMinutesIntoThePast: Well, the game mentions eBay at one point, but aside from that it plays like it is set at least in 90s.
68* TwoferTokenMinority: Martin Willard is the only black (or non-white) person in the cast as well as the only character with an obvious disability so far (he's a wheelchair user).
69* WhamEpisode: [[spoiler:''God exists in the dreamscape'' - and he's a DeityOfHumanOrigin who simply answers prayers as he sees fit. God didn't create the universe, there is no afterlife, and he's just the latest in a long line of entities who found the previous god in the dreamscape. And he just chose Victor as his successor.]] Whether or not this is merely a delusion, it's a terrifyingly detailed one.
70* WombLevel: In a way, the ending of Episode 5. [[spoiler:More literally, Episode 6.]]
71* YourMindMakesItReal: [[spoiler:If you die in your dream, you die in reality - and your dreamscape dies with you]].

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