Mario’s Return to Dreamwork

Super Mario is not just a plumber, circus trainer, and space explorer. '80s kids and super-fans may also recall his oneironautic exploits in the series oddball, Super Mario Brothers 2 (USA).

This week, Mario wall-jumped his way back into dreamwork to bring all of us a message:

Precognition is real. Dream precognition happens.

In the early morning of Saturday, March 28, 2020 — may this day be forever remembered as the day that precognition was proven once and for all, for all people and all future generations, without the possibility for doubt or argument, amen—I recalled three dreams.

The first and third appeared to be normal dreams, with the former being a pleasant bit of surreal nonsense and the latter commenting on a real-life event. The second also seemed normal, at first. At that time there was absolutely nothing about it that made me say, wow, this is special.

But the second dream, as pictured, had Nyiam, a waking-life person, delivering a message to me: Nintendo had unveiled a new remake of Super Mario 64 for the Nintendo Switch. It would feature level streaming technology. I could see Mario, more smoothly shaded than he had been in the original game, moving through clean, if simple, 3D environments.

Nyiam is a talented, enthusiastic remote viewer who freely shares instructions and his sessions on YouTube. (Remote viewing may be something you don’t believe in. That’s okay. This isn’t an article about remote viewing. It is about incontrovertible proof of precognition as brought to us by Super Mario’s cherubic visage.) As a recently-minted mod of the r/remoteviewing subreddit, I happen to virtually run into him from time to time.

Just for fun, I decided to let Nyiam (and everyone in the subreddit’s Discord channel) know about the dream. This ended up forming the critical basis for Mario’s proof, providing a date and time stamp.