My Sticker Hunt Through Penacony's Dreamlike Reverie
Honkai Star Rail Dreamscape Stickers and The Reverie treasures await completionists in this immersive, secret-filled adventure.
Stepping into The Reverie always feels like walking into someone else’s dream — soft, shifting, and layered with secrets. I’d already finished the Trailblaze Mission “Through a Glass Darkly,” so the Dreamscape was wide open for me. But honestly, I wasn’t there to sightsee. I was on a mission: I wanted every last Sticker from the Dreamscape Pass, and chapter 10, Eldritch Dreamfall (I), wasn’t going to finish itself. You know, the kind of quiet obsession only a completionist can understand.

The place itself is a collector’s paradise. Thirty-three non-puzzle treasures lounge around like lazy cats waiting to be found, but my eyes were on the Stickers. Nine Illustrated Stickers, five Note Stickers — a total of fourteen little works of art that tell the fragmented story of this dream-drenched chapter. Most of them, I’d been told, hide right here in The Reverie. And like any good hunt, it started with a plan.
Three of the Illustrated Stickers unlock by default, which is the game’s way of saying, “You’ve got this far, have a reward.” I appreciated that, but I needed the rest. The other five Illustrated Stickers are scattered across the Dreamscape, tucked into corners that seem to whisper, “Are you sure you want to look here?” I checked behind dreamy curtains, on top of impossible staircases, and next to NPCs who smiled a little too knowingly. Each time a sticker popped into my inventory, it felt less like finding an item and more like the dream itself was sharing a secret with me.
But the real trick? The sixth Illustrated Sticker wasn’t in The Reverie at all. No, it was waiting at Aideen Park in the Golden Hour — a hidden mission that triggered when I least expected it. I was just wandering, soaking in the carnival atmosphere, when… something shifted. The quest appeared, unmarked and uninvited, like a suddenly remembered dream. That moment, I’ll be honest, sent a chill down my spine. Who knew a sticker could be so dramatic?

With all nine Illustrated Stickers finally in hand, I turned back to The Reverie for the Note Stickers. All five of them are here, and if you’ve learned anything about dream logic, you’ll know they don’t sit in a neat little row. The most efficient route, I discovered, takes you northwest to southeast, weaving through the map like stitching through a quilt. I followed the pattern: Lost (V) first, then Lost (II), Lost (IV), Lost (I), and finally Lost (III). Each “Lost” sticker felt like a little echo of my own journey — because let me tell you, I did get a touch lost more than once. But that’s part of the charm, right?
The Dreamscape doesn’t just hand you its stories. It plays with you, leaving breadcrumbs that look like ordinary furniture or a casual line of dialogue. There’s a sofa near the southwest that practically begged me to interact with it. When I did, the Note Sticker appeared with a soft shimmer, as if to say, “You’re finally paying attention.” That kind of quiet intimacy — it made the whole grind feel personal.
As I slotted the last Sticker into place, completing the Eldritch Dreamfall (I) page, I sat back and let the full artwork wash over me. Each Illustrated Sticker showed fragments of the story: faded memories, enigmatic characters, scenes that felt just out of reach. The Note Stickers, meanwhile, filled the gaps with small, poetic observations, like dream journal entries someone forgot to finish. Together, they painted a picture that was both haunting and deeply satisfying.
Looking back, the hunt for these fourteen Stickers taught me something about The Reverie. It’s not just a location on Penacony. It’s a living, breathing collection of dreams that wants to be explored — if you’re willing to pay attention. So if you ever find yourself in the Dreamscape, chasing chapter 10 of your own Dreamscape Pass, take my advice: slow down, talk to everything, and let the dream lead you. Because the best treasures, and the best stickers, aren’t always where you expect. They’re hiding in the quiet, just waiting for someone to remember them.