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Wilbur Soot and Dream. The dynamic duo of the hour, the two characters who are on EVERYONE'S
minds thanks to Wilbur being revived - a duo which most are calling a *villain team up*.
But hold on a second here, because Wilbur said something the other day which might just
have a bit more truth to it than it seems at first.
So, is Dream ACTUALLY the villain of this story? I KNOW - this seems like a stupid question,
but I'm telling you, there's a lot more to this than you probably think there is - so
let's get straight into whether DREAM is actually the HERO of the Dream SMP.
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Okay, so let's get back to the topic of the video. The main reason people call Dream
a villain is because of his antagonistic role way back at the beginning of the server, to
L'Manberg, the faction created by the one and only Mr. Soot, and which is widely viewed
as “the good guys”. But- how good ARE they, exactly?
The reason why I'm asking this, is that Wilbur Soot - or, to be more specific - Revived
Wilbur, exposed the mindset, motivation and ideology with which he created L'Manberg
on Tommy's tour stream the other day.
Wilbur never cared about L'Manberg. He doesn't even think Dream is the VILLAIN of the server
- note his sarcastic agreements when Tommy calls Dream a dictator - and he goes on to
(kind-of?) explain why. The ONLY reason Wilbur made L'Manberg, the reason he rallied all
these people and gave his speeches and united them- he only DID that to try and - in his
own words - stick it to the man.
He didn't care about freedom, or liberty, or independence, at least, not for the ideals
themselves - he only wanted to stick it to Dream. Wilbur wanted Dream to not have the
peace he was trying to achieve, simply because Dream was in power. Wilbur wanted to have
that sort of power, and so creating L'Manberg so that he would have absolute power over
it - convincing everyone that L'Manberg was important and necessary and a way to fight
back - that was all for his personal benefit, for his power and his power alone.
He didn't start L'Manberg because Dream was a tyrant - because really, he wasn't,
there were what, three rules, and even those he barely enforced - and it wasn't because
Dream wasn't letting him do what he wanted either.
No, Wilbur made L'Manberg with solely selfish goals in mind - and the country was, in a
way, designed to make Dream attack it, hell, its entire reason for EXISTING was to try
and paint Dream as the villain, to be a thorn in his side, to make everyone call him the
bad guy, and to create a weapon of power for Wilbur, and Wilbur alone to be in charge of.
Now let's take a look at Dream's side of the story, his point of view of the L'Manberg
War of Independence, which he very neatly explained in this stream with Skeppy from
a while ago.
I know
that was a slightly longer clip, so I'm sorry about that, but you get the idea. From
the start, Dream never had any antagonistic feelings towards L'Manberg. People could
make it seem like the problem was land, or Dream's personal power being threatened, but
that was never the reason at all - L'Manberg declaring INDEPENDENCE was the problem in
his eyes, and only when the other side made it clear they wouldn't compromise, did he
turn to using force instead.
Another great example is Dream's involvement in the disc war. It seems, right, that Dream
was inherently villainous in this conflict. I mean, what kind of monster steals someone's
most prized possessions, for no apparent reason, and then continues to pursue them as leverage?
That seems pretty bad-guy, right? Well - not really.
If you think back, all the way to the first disc conflict, back in August of 2020 when
I had less than a hundred subscribers and times were a lot more peaceful - Tommy and
Sapnap actively engaged in a conflict with Ponk and Alyssa, which Dream MEDIATED, and
THEN, after Tommy killed Dream two times, unprovoked, stole all of his items and REFUSED
to give them back - ONLY after ALL of that, did Dream steal Tommy's discs, and try to
use them as leverage. Of course, he did continue to use the discs, but only because Tommy ACTIVELY
used them as leverage. Tommy said that peace would never be an option and therefore, the
only thing keeping Tommy in check was Dream's possession and usage of the discs.
To put it simply, Wilbur - and by extension, the rest of L'Manberg, who parroted what
he said - called Dream a tyrant for nothing. Even during the Pogtopia arc, when Wilbur
and Tommy were at their weakest, when Dream could have easily snuffed out the voices that
had been his biggest critics, Dream remained neutral, even trying to stay on the side of
the good guys and actively helping them, “from the shadows'' - he's not a villain, because
he does what he feels will benefit the server instead of doing what might benefit him.
The fact that he was pitted against Wilbur, this silver tongued orator who managed to
convince even Dream himself, let alone the audience, that Dream was the villain, THAT,
and only that is why Dream is seen as the villain now. L'Manberg, as beloved as it
was, as inspirational and revolutionary as it seemed, served the exact purpose it was
meant for. It divided. L'Manberg divided the server, giving Wilbur that oh-so-precious
power and also a reason to USE it, and Dream saw that, or at least partially did, and thus
tried to put a stop to it, only resorting to more and more violence when peaceful negotiations
failed.
But, well, there is one part of Dream's character that...isn't the best, and is
the strongest argument for him actually being the villain he's made out to be. The TommyInnit
exile arc. The entire exile arc as a whole was, to put it simply, not good. At all. Manipulation,
gaslighting, and more, all for no really good purpose - during the exile arc, Dream the
character did inexcusable things that can't be forgiven, no matter the motive. It is interesting
to note that in spite of this, Wilbur STILL calls Dream his hero, despite knowing of the
horrendous things Dream has done, hell, even ACKNOWLEDGING those things in the same sentence
- Wilbur still sees Dream as his hero. Which kinda gives you an insight into just how messed
up Wilbur himself is - glossing over abuse and other horrific acts to quietly soothe
his inner moral compass.
There is also the prison arc, which, in essence, is a parallel to the exile arc in many ways
- isolation, mental deterioration, infrequent visits - except to more extreme lengths than
what we've seen anyone, even Dream, go to before. This is why I wouldn't go as far
as to call this payback - however, it's important to note Dream hasn't only inflicted
pain on others by his rashness, but that he's also been through hell himself.
The destruction of New L'Manberg is up next, and I'm about to be real controversial here
- Techno and Dream completely eradicating New L'Manberg was a good thing. Now wait!
Hold on, I know, you're about to either click off or dislike or something, but seriously,
hear me out for a second. New L'Manberg as a concept was great - a new, fresh start
on a nation no longer corrupted by Wilbur's influence, pursuing the admittedly sturdy
ideals that a not so sturdy leader had laid down in the past. What could go wrong, right?
The thing is, the Dream SMP is full of characters who were just WAITING to use Wilbur's tool,
to influence, take over, and corrupt it. L'Manberg had become more than the sum of its parts,
there were people who would stick with the nation through EVERYTHING, because of just
how well Wilbur crafted and sold his propaganda, meaning that when you control L'Manberg,
you control everyone aligned with it.
L'Manberg was getting influenced already by the likes of Quackity, who had learnt from
Wilbur that death, destruction and force was the only way forward, and who manipulated
Tubbo into forming the Butcher Army. As an army, they broke into Philza's house, who
was completely uninvolved in any war conflict up until then, ransacked his home, stole his
Techno-compass and put him under house arrest. THEN they went and attacked the peaceful anarchist
away in the arctic, because he was on Quackity's hit list, which Quackity's mentioned was
also a list of - and I quote: (insert clip).
He then proceeded to hold Techno's horse hostage,
kidnap the guy and promise him a fair trial - which he would never get - after which they
shoved him in a cage and dropped an anvil on his head.
Dream and Techno destroying it, was, as sad as it is, the best thing for the server.
Let's be real here. Wilbur as a character is extremely smart, and knows better than
anyone about Dream, his motivations and his true nature - because Wilbur himself manipulated
Dream's image. Wilbur as a content creator was the scriptwriter for the story, but Wilbur
as a character was also the one who controlled the narrative of the SMP. He knows what Dream
actually is like, and he seems to feel Dream is worthy of the title of hero. Of course,
what Wilbur says about Dream is almost certainly not what he thinks, and if he did, well, even
then calling him a hero... wouldn't be completely correct.
Look, is Dream a hero? No, not really. He's done bad things in the past, but he did them
for the right reasons. That doesn't make him a hero, but it certainly doesn't make
him a villain either. For example, he saved Wilbur from limbo, but he also hurt others
in the process. Technically, is he WIlbur's hero? Sure, he is, but I wouldn't go so
far as to call him the hero of the story.
Hero and Villain, are, in the end, extremely restrictive terms, and Wilbur and Dream are
incredible examples of this. Wilbur made L'Manberg, and that was probably a net positive for the
server, a good thing for a lot of the characters involved, but he did it for power - he did
good, but for a bad reason. Dream, on the other hand, tried to take control over the
SMP and used force a lot of the time, but he did it for a good reason - to try and perpetuate
peace and unity, and to bring life on the SMP back to what it once was, instead of the
incessantly war-ridden battlefield it is now.
That's my take on whether or not Dream is the hero of the Dream SMP! Watch this video
about how Dream will break out of prison next! Subscribe!