Dreams On A Pillow is a stealth adventure that tells the story of a young mother during the Nakba - the 1948 ethnic cleansing, displacement, and cultural suppression of Palestinian Arabs by Israel. As its funding campaign puts it, it’s a game about "a land full of people being made into a people without land."
The campaign still has a few days to go, but surpassed its initial goal earlier this week. Abu-Eideh says the reaction has been overwhelming. "I know people care," he says, but he never expected so much support, and so many kind words. The funding launched with the acknowledgement that he’d need more than twice the goal to fully "pay for salaries, outsourcing, and asset creation". But this does mean he and a small team of artists, calligraphers, and coders can begin production.
"We needed talented people who believed in this project," Abu-Eideh says. "That’s like the basic requirement for something like this, because it's not a normal project. You need people that believe in your cause". While the team and he prepare to move on from pre-production, I ask what his day-to-day currently looks like from his home in the West Bank.
"It’s very hard, daily life. Just taking your kids to the school is a big deal because you don't know which road you should take. You don't know where the checkpoints are and if they’re going to block the roads today or not. On a daily basis, there are multiple attacks in different villages in cities by the soldiers or by the settlers. Burning houses. Cutting trees and burning trees. Destroying the main roads. So it’s kind of the daily hustle that we live in."