Explore Dreamcore, a psychological exploration game by Montraluz and Tlön Industries. Step into the largest liminal spaces ever built in gaming, featuring eerie dreamscapes, looping suburbs, surreal playrooms, and shifting hotel levels. Discover whether your intuition is enough to survive a world designed to disorient you.
General Information
Developer - Montraluz
Publisher - Tlön Industries
Genre - Exploration, Walking Simulator, Psychological Horror, First-Person, 3D, Nonlinear, Horror
Platform(s) - PC (Steam)PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch, Microsoft Windows, Xbox Series X and Series S
Date Released - 23 Jan, 2025
Built inside the largest liminal world ever made. This is not a guided journey. There are no paths, no tutorials, no comforting directions. Only your intuition.
Every corridor, every empty room, every distorted space is designed to test your sense of reality. Dreamcore challenges your instincts, your perception, and your ability to stay grounded in a world built specifically to make you lose your bearings.
Built within the largest liminal world ever constructed in a video game, Dreamcore abandons the traditional expectations of navigation, quest markers, and scripted objectives. Instead, players are left with nothing but intuition and a growing sense of unease as they move through spaces that feel both familiar and impossibly alien.
From the opening moments, Dreamcore positions itself as an atmospheric experience rather than a conventional game. Its environments are meticulously crafted to evoke the strange sensation of stepping into the space between dreams—places that resemble fragments of memory, childhood nostalgia, forgotten hallways, and locations that never fully existed. Each area is a self-contained world, and the absence of clear direction forces you to slow down, observe, and let the tension build naturally.
One of the standout regions, Dreampools, feels like a visually hypnotic maze. The endless pools and reflective tilework create a serene yet deeply unsettling atmosphere. The silence is almost oppressive, broken only by the echo of your footsteps and the distant drip of unseen water. Exploration transforms into a kind of meditative dread, as every corner feels like it might lead somewhere profound—or nowhere at all.
Eternal Suburbia is equally captivating, presenting an infinite neighborhood suspended in unnatural stillness. While the outward appearance suggests comfort and routine, the looping interiors and shifting layouts quickly unravel any sense of stability. The gentle jazz music playing during the day contrasts sharply with the isolation the player feels, and when night falls, the suburb becomes a haunting labyrinth where the question of being alone becomes increasingly uncertain.
In Playrooms, Dreamcore leans into surreal nostalgia, offering oversized childhood structures drained of functionality and life. The padded rooms, plastic tunnels, ball corridors, and blocky environments feel like a memory of fun stripped of joy. With no sound, instructions, or linear path, the player is left floating between curiosity and unease.
The Liminal Hotel, a reimagining of the well-known “Level 188” Backrooms concept, adds a disorienting verticality to the experience. Each floor shifts in style and tone, and as you descend, the hotel becomes progressively unanchored from time itself. Subtle distortions in lighting, décor, and layout enhance the game’s dreamlike instability.
As a whole, Dreamcore succeeds not through jump scares or loud horror elements, but through its masterful use of atmosphere, environmental storytelling, and psychological discomfort. Every level feels like its own isolated world, each with unique mechanics and emotional texture. The developers continue to expand the game, with two additional maps already included and a final map currently in development. Early players automatically receive all future content, making the experience feel alive and continuously evolving.
Dreamcore is more than a game—it is a long, quiet walk through the threshold between consciousness and imagination. For players who appreciate slow-burn tension, surreal aesthetics, and immersive world-building, Dreamcore delivers an experience that lingers long after you step away.