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Dreamweaver was the dream projection of Horbert Feist, who projected this imaginary appearance when he haunted people's dreams with the use of a dream helmet.

Physical appearance[]

He had very white skin, sharp teeth and black messy hair, with glowing red eyes. He wore a black suit with a cape. He had almost the appearance of a vampire. He carried a glowing purple orb.

Personality[]

He was sort of arrogant as he believed that he could make people do whatever he told them to. He also believed he could not lose.

Powers and abilities[]

As his name applies, Dreamweaver can enter victims dreams and also posses gravity abilities, being able to stand on ceilings and/or vis versa, can teleport to any location and can fly. Dreamweaver can also whisper into the victims' ear that, when that victim wakes up will make them do dark actions on the things they love, and can also turn into a larger version of his head. Tho most of Dreamweaver's abilities comes from the orb that he posses on his lest hand that lets him do the fallowing, including firing light blue lighting-like flames that can freeze victims on contact, creating purple rope made of pure energy to tie Dreamweaver's victims, fire a light purple lighting laser that can turn victims into either bunnies or stone, create a giant wave, launch purple fireballs and create a firewall.

History[]

Early history[]

Dreamweaver was a character from the role-playing game Crypts and Creatures.

Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated[]

Season 2[]

Hobert Feist is revealed as the culprit

Horbert Feist is revealed as the culprit.

Horbert wanted revenge on all his friends for laughing when he lost at a role playing game. One of those people was Sheriff Bronson Stone. He even blew up his bank to cover his tracks. Feist worked at the bank; that was where he got the money to make the Dream Helmet.

Appearances[]

Notes/trivia[]

  • This was an unusual villain because no physical costume was used; Feist simply projected his imagined image into the dreams of his victims.
  • In the opening scene, Feist seemed to face the Dreamweaver in real life. However, this may be a presentation of his lies, or a dream he projected onto himself for practice.
  • The dream mazes is a reference to the movie Labyrinth, and the Dreamweaver's character design resembles the Labyrinth's villain Jareth, ”The Goblin King”.
  • Potential victims fearing to ever sleep again suggests the Nightmare on Elm Street movies.
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