Mike stood in the doorway, his hair wet, looking extremely shaken. Out of politeness, I waited a minute before I knocked again.
![creepy parts of lsd game creepy parts of lsd game](https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/creepypasta/images/d/d0/Lsd_grey_man_and_all_by_dragonwarrior_kyna-d46jxq2.png)
The lights were on, but there was no reply when I knocked. Saddled with several chemistry textbooks, I walked through town that evening to his house. He agreed that this was a good idea, and we arranged to meet at his house that evening to revise. I suggested that he take a short break from YouTube and do the same. I'd have recommended something, but an exam was nearing and I wanted to concentrate on my work. I wasn't fazed by this casual joke, and he told me in chemistry the following morning that he was mainly stopping because he just wanted to play something new to him. "You know it's time to stop when the grey man pops up in your real dream :L what should I play next?" However, one night, he posted a bulletin on his YouTube channel stating: He seemed immersed in it, almost captivated by it. Mike played up to Day twelve over the course of a week, and had clearly enjoyed the game, as it was apparent in his videos. Each day lasted only a few minutes, after which the player would be taken back to a menu and prompted to start a new dream. Each time this happened, Mike would gasp, then nervously laugh it off and continue playing. If the player got too close, the screen would flash white and he would disappear. He tended to appear without warning, and slide sullenly towards the player. He was, as the name would suggest, a grey man, in a hat and coat. Various animals and people glided through the game, usually taking no notice of the player, although there was one NPC known as the Grey Man. It was a very peculiar game the objective seemed to be only to walk around various Japanese environments, colliding with things that transported the player to other environments. He had uploaded some videos of it that night. He concluded that if I hadn't heard of it, it was definitely obscure enough for his channel. One day, he asked me if I had heard of a game called LSD: Dream Emulator. We took the same chemistry class and sat next to each other in it every morning at school.
![creepy parts of lsd game creepy parts of lsd game](https://img.itch.zone/aW1hZ2UvNjMxNDQ4LzMzNzE0NjYucG5n/original/yhx0uE.png)
He was as entertaining as any game commentator, I guess, but some channels just don't lift off. I used to watch his videos for a few minutes when I got in from school to raise his views and help him out. The channel wasn't particularly popular he had about thirty subscribers, most of which were just his friends. Just one more behavioural experiment in a long line of many.When I was seventeen, my best friend Mike kept a YouTube channel for "Let's Play." He was a fan of old and not-so-well-known games, most of which he played on a pSX emulator on his laptop. The opportunity to study the effects of this game alongside the effects perhaps of LSD administered in contact or aerosol form might be too much to pass up on. Video game arcades were a new cultural phenomenon packed with teenagers coming out of the peace movement. So, the creation of a psychedelic, mesmerisingly hypnotic video game that caused a wide range of side effects sounds like something that they would have been extremely interested in. None of this is speculation it is a fact supported by documents know available under the Freedom of Information Act. If it weren't for a "filing error" that prevented the destruction of 20,000 documents, then I doubt the public would ever have known about MK Ultra at all. Techniques used to manipulate peoples mental state included surreptitious administration of narcotics (most notably LSD), hypnosis, sensory and sleep deprivation, isolation, and even verbal and sexual abuse.