Darekaramo Ninshiki Sarenai Sekai -rj01348401- -
Unlike typical ASMR works that focus on whispering, ear cleaning, or romantic scenarios, RJ01348401 is structured like a five-act tragedy. Here is a breakdown of the standard track list (based on user reviews and sample descriptions):
Track 1: The Morning That Wasn’t The work begins with diegetic sound design: alarm clocks, running water, the clink of a coffee cup. However, the atmosphere is sterile. The protagonist goes through their morning routine, calling out to a roommate. The roommate’s lines are cheerful—but directed at a phone, not at the listener. The first sting of panic arrives when a direct question is met with silence. The listener realizes: They cannot hear you.
Track 2: The Unnoticed Commute This track is a masterclass in sound layering. Train station announcements, rush hour chatter, and the rustle of clothing paint a vivid public scene. Yet, every attempt by the protagonist (the listener's internal monologue) to interact is futile. A highlight of this track involves trying to stop a falling object belonging to a stranger. The sound of the object hitting the ground, followed by the stranger muttering "It just fell on its own," drives the existential nail deeper. Darekaramo Ninshiki Sarenai Sekai -RJ01348401-
Track 3: The Dinner Table Ghost (The Emotional Crux) The most devastating track. The protagonist returns home to a family dinner. For several minutes, the listener hears the warmth of clinking dishes, laughter, and conversation—none of which includes them. A place setting is missing. When the protagonist tries to sit in their usual chair, the mother sits there instead, unaware of the weight of a person beneath her. The audio engineering here uses proximity: the mother’s voice is close, intimate, yet the dialogue explicitly denies the listener’s existence.
Track 4: Desperation (The Scream That Never Came) The protagonist escalates their attempts. Knocking over a vase. Shouting at the top of their lungs. The sound of the scream is visceral, straining the binaural mics. But the result is chilling: the characters in the scene only react to the broken vase ("The wind must have blown it") and completely ignore the screaming entity in the room. This track explores the terror of being a poltergeist inside a world that refuses to update its software to include you. Unlike typical ASMR works that focus on whispering,
Track 5: Acceptance / The White Noise End The final track fades into a low-frequency hum. The protagonist stops trying. The sound design shifts from realist to abstract—muffled voices, reversed reverb, the sound of a heartbeat slowing down. The last line heard is not addressed to the protagonist, but about them: "Was there ever anyone here?" The track ends with 30 seconds of absolute silence. Not static. Silence.
On DLsite, RJ01348401 is tagged with #Psychological, #Horror, and #ASMR. However, user reviews reveal a fascinating split: some find it terrifying, others find it tragically cathartic. The protagonist goes through their morning routine, calling
One user wrote: "I am an only child who grew up in a loud house where I was always overlooked. Listening to this made me cry, not because I was scared, but because someone finally put my childhood into sound."
Another user compared it to the short story The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells, but argued that Wells focused on the power of invisibility, while Darekaramo Ninshiki Sarenai Sekai focuses on the powerlessness of being seen but not recognized.
You’re not "invisible" – you’re a secret agent or a guardian spirit. The heroine is the only one with special permission to see you. That makes her powerful and your bond exclusive.
From a technical standpoint, the creator behind RJ01348401 (often credited under a pseudonym associated with psychological horror) employs advanced binaural techniques that few doujin works attempt.