FDA Approved: Dreams Do Come True With Dice (Ladicetrole)
- bpk298
- 2 days ago
- 3 min read
Updated: 23 hours ago
Q: What is Dice (ladicetrole)?
A: Dice (ladicetrole) belongs to a novel group of combined pharmacologic / Virtual Reality treatments known as Positive Visualization Actualizers (PVAs).
Q: What does Dice do?
A: Simply put, Dice makes your dreams come true (at least for a few hours!).
When you take Dice in a controlled setting using our proprietary, immersive Virtual Reality pods, you are able to experience your ideal life - what it's like to have the perfect career, house, family, body - all the way down to the minutest details!
Dice takes the "map of ideals" embedded in your subconscious and brings it to life.
Q: Does Dice treatment require anesthesia?
A: Yes, Dice treatment involves the same "twilight" anesthesia used for certain endoscopies and other minor medical procedures. As such, Dice treatments are supervised by both a psychiatrist and an anesthesiologist.
It is safest to assume that you will not be able to drive yourself home after Dice treatment and to budget 4 to 6 hours for the aftereffects of the anesthesia to wear off.

Q: How does Dice work?
A: Imagine if every medical resident working 80-hour weeks in the hospital for a fraction of a full doctor's salary could experience today, just for a few hours, what his or her life will be like when the decades of delayed gratification finally pay off.
That's the idea behind Dice: To bring the best possible future into the now.
Dr. Brian Welch, one of the developers of Dice, explains the neuroscience of positive visualization: "We've known for decades that many of the most self-actualized, successful people in our society use manifestation - a form of extended, specific positive visualization - to help achieve their dreams... Unfortunately, manifestation isn't as straightforward as it might initially seem. For one thing, people struggle to know what they really want out of life. Moreover, even those of us who are sure of what we want to achieve often lack a sense of how to get there."
Co-founder Alan Reckitt, MD / PhD, adds that "Dice treatment taps into the ideal lifemap embedded in your subconscious, using Virtual Reality and Artificial Intelligence technologies to project this information onto your conscious mind and make it seem real to you. When you wake up from Dice treatment, you will have a very specific, actionable, motivating vision of your ideal life to pursue!"
Q: What does Dice treatment feel like?
A: Most patients undergoing Dice treatment report that, during the 6 to 8 hours that they spend in the DreamVR pod, their experiences feel indistinguishable from ordinary, waking reality.
Other patients have described Dice treatment as similar to a very vivid, realistic dream. A minority of individuals characterize the experience as almost spiritual - similar to a trance or a vision.
Q: Is Dice treatment safe?
A: For the vast majority of patients, Dice treatment is no riskier than taking an over-the-counter anti-inflammatory drug like ibuprofen or acetaminophen.
In a small percentage of patients, no ideal lifemap exists to be accessed using Dice; discovery of this information can lead to suicidal ideation, which is why every Dice session is undertaken under the supervision of a board-supervised psychiatrist, who can help you to process any negative thoughts and feelings that arise during your session.
Make sure to tell your doctor if you have a history of anxiety, depression, active or passive suicidality, or psychosis.*
*Claims not evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Full list of potential side effects available at www.Dice.com/risksknownarerisksowned.
A minority of Dice patients awake from treatment with symptoms of psychosis, including derealization, depersonalization, and an inability to distinguish fantasy from reality. It is thought that such psychotic reactions represent an activation of a predisposition to psychosis (rather than a psychosis brought on by Dice in the absence of prior risk). Most patients who have this type of reaction to Dice have their symptoms effectively controlled by standard antipsychotic medications, and many of them feel their symptoms subside within a few days to a few weeks after Dice treatment.
In individuals who undergo treatment with Dice more than once per week for a month or longer, physical and psychological dependence can develop. Withdrawal symptoms include tremors, waking nightmares, and sudden feelings of rage or hopelessness. It is very important to discuss any such symptoms with your doctor.
Dice can exacerbate chronic liver disease. Let your doctor know if you have been diagnosed with Hepatitis B or C, Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD), or consume more than three alcoholic beverages daily.
In some studies, Dice has been associated with a medical condition known only as sausage fingers.
Dreams do come true with Dice! Click here to find a Dice provider near you.
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