Prompt: Darkover is the planet that gives its name to the Darkover series of science fiction-fantasy novels and short stories by Marion Zimmer Bradley and others published since 1958.[1] According to the novels, Darkover is the only habitable planet of seven orbiting a fictional red giant star called Cottman. Bradley describes Cottman's Star as a red giant, around which seven planets orbit. Among these, Cottman IV, known to its inhabitants as Darkover, is the only habitable planet. The three inner planets and two outer planets are not habitable. Cottman V is an ice planet that while not toxic to humans, cannot naturally support a self-sustaining human population. Like Cottman V, Darkover is a planet stuck in a permanent ice age. Only one small equatorial strip of its single smallish continent is warm enough to support limited agriculture, fishing, and livestock. Similar in size to Earth, Darkover has a lower gravity due to its relative lack of metals; it also has a higher percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere. The planet's period of rotation is 28 hours (Star of Danger, Chapter 2). One Darkover year is roughly equal to fifteen Earth months.
Prompt: Darkover is the planet that gives its name to the Darkover series of science fiction-fantasy novels and short stories by Marion Zimmer Bradley and others published since 1958.[1] According to the novels, Darkover is the only habitable planet of seven orbiting a fictional red giant star called Cottman. Bradley describes Cottman's Star as a red giant, around which seven planets orbit. Among these, Cottman IV, known to its inhabitants as Darkover, is the only habitable planet. The three inner planets and two outer planets are not habitable. Cottman V is an ice planet that while not toxic to humans, cannot naturally support a self-sustaining human population. Like Cottman V, Darkover is a planet stuck in a permanent ice age. Only one small equatorial strip of its single smallish continent is warm enough to support limited agriculture, fishing, and livestock. Similar in size to Earth, Darkover has a lower gravity due to its relative lack of metals; it also has a higher percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere. The planet's period of rotation is 28 hours (Star of Danger, Chapter 2). One Darkover year is roughly equal to fifteen Earth months.
Would you like to report this Dream as inappropriate?
Prompt:
Darkover is the planet that gives its name to the Darkover series of science fiction-fantasy novels and short stories by Marion Zimmer Bradley and others published since 1958.[1] According to the novels, Darkover is the only habitable planet of seven orbiting a fictional red giant star called Cottman. Bradley describes Cottman's Star as a red giant, around which seven planets orbit. Among these, Cottman IV, known to its inhabitants as Darkover, is the only habitable planet. The three inner planets and two outer planets are not habitable. Cottman V is an ice planet that while not toxic to humans, cannot naturally support a self-sustaining human population. Like Cottman V, Darkover is a planet stuck in a permanent ice age. Only one small equatorial strip of its single smallish continent is warm enough to support limited agriculture, fishing, and livestock. Similar in size to Earth, Darkover has a lower gravity due to its relative lack of metals; it also has a higher percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere. The planet's period of rotation is 28 hours (Star of Danger, Chapter 2). One Darkover year is roughly equal to fifteen Earth months.
Modifiers:
elegant
extremely detailed
intricate
oil on canvas
photorealistic
beautiful
high detail
dynamic lighting
hyperrealistic
high definition
crisp quality
coherent
serene
graceful
4k HDR
Dream Level: is increased each time when you "Go Deeper" into the dream. Each new level is harder to achieve and
takes more iterations than the one before.
Rare Deep Dream: is any dream which went deeper than level 6.
Deep Dream
You cannot go deeper into someone else's dream. You must create your own.
Deep Dream
Currently going deeper is available only for Deep Dreams.