19/10/2025
A Silicon Valley neurotech pioneer, REMspace, has just shattered boundaries in the realm of sleep science by achieving the world's first documented "two-way" communication between lucid dreamers—transmitting a single word from one sleeping participant to another, all while they slumbered deeply. This feat, pulled off on September 24, 2024, and replicated in early October, hinges on cutting-edge gear like facial electromyography (EMG) sensors that capture subtle muscle twitches during REM sleep, translating them into detectable signals via earbuds and software. Here's the mind-bending breakdown: A server detects a lucid dream state through brainwave patterns, beams a random Remmyo word (from their custom "dream language" of simple phonetic sounds) to the first dreamer, who "speaks" it back via micro-movements. The system verifies and relays it to the second dreamer eight minutes later, who echoes it upon waking—boom, dream-to-dream relay complete.
At the helm is CEO Michael Raduga, a lucid dreaming evangelist who's no stranger to bold moves—like drilling into his own skull in 2023 to implant a brain chip for dream stimulation experiments (yes, really). Raduga envisions this as the dawn of real-time interpersonal dream chats, unlocking wild potentials: therapy for nightmares, skill-building in virtual dreamscapes, or even collaborative problem-solving while the world's asleep. "Yesterday, communicating in dreams seemed like science fiction. Tomorrow, it will be so common we won't be able to imagine our lives without this technology," he proclaimed. Remmyo, their sensor-friendly dialect, is key—built for easy EMG decoding, it's already shown promise in earlier tests where dreamers "voiced" words servers could interpret.
Caveat: This is a startup claim, not yet peer-reviewed—Raduga pegs a full paper for mid-2025, so skeptics await the data. But if it holds, we're peering into a future where dreams aren't solo adventures—they're shared networks. Sweet dreams, indeed. 💭🧠