A Certain Someone's Past: How I Collected All 13 Stickers in Honkai: Star Rail's Dreamscape Pass
Complete Dreamscape Pass Chapter 9 in Honkai: Star Rail: find all 10 stickers in A Child's Dream with this location guide.
A while ago I decided to dive back into the surreal world of Penacony in Honkai: Star Rail. It’s already 2026, but the Dreamscape Pass remains one of my favorite side activities—something about filling a scrapbook with memories of this dreamlike planet just hits different. Chapter 9, A Certain Someone’s Past, had been sitting unfinished in my journal for way too long, so last weekend I sat down determined to track down every last sticker. If you’re also trying to complete that chapter, let me walk you through exactly how I did it.

The Dreamscape Pass is this wonderful little scrapbook you unlock while exploring Penacony. Stickers are scattered all over the region, and once you collect enough, you tick them off the checklist for rewards and a cozy sense of completion. Chapter 9 asks for thirteen stickers in total—four Note Stickers and nine Illustrated Stickers. If you’ve already played through the main Trailblaze Mission and unlocked all areas of Penacony, you’ll automatically have three of those: Migratory Memory, Frozen Memory, and Balloon. That meant I only had to hunt down the remaining ten. And the best part? They’re all tucked away inside the A Child’s Dream zone, so I didn’t have to warp across the entire planet.
The easy win: A Grandpa’s Work
Right after teleporting to the Clock Factory Space Anchor, I spotted the first sticker on the table just beside the anchor. It was an investigate spot that didn’t even require any puzzle-solving. One quick interaction and bam—A Grandpa’s Work was added to my collection. Honestly, I wish every sticker was this straightforward.

Toys and puzzles
Next up were Building Blocks and Toy Room, both found in the same area. I warped to the Corridor of Memories Space Anchor and went left through the very first door. The room inside looked like a whimsical toy workshop, but a Dream Ticker Puzzle blocked my way. After solving that (matching the rhythm, nothing too tricky), I could finally interact with a pile of toy building blocks to grab the Building Blocks sticker. Right in the same room, an interactable book was waiting for me—that turned out to be the Toy Room sticker. Two down, no sweat.

Entering the deeper dream
From the same Corridor of Memories anchor, I turned around and stepped through the blue door behind me. That brought me to the first Dreamscape proper. Right on the balcony where you enter, a floating book was shimmering—the Dreamscape Layout sticker. I almost missed it because I was too busy admiring the scenery, but that glowing book is hard to ignore once you’re looking for it.
After grabbing that, I noticed the area was bigger than I remembered. To reach the Clock Workshop and Chair stickers, I had to navigate a bit. First, I picked up a Bubble Charge from downstairs. Then I used it to cross two floating Bubble Bridges, which felt like walking on air. At the end, a room waited with a Dream Jigsaw puzzle right at the door. Inside that room, another interactive book gave me the Clock Workshop sticker, and right above a Basic Treasure Chest sat the Chair sticker. It’s always satisfying when treasures and stickers share the same spot.

The four Memories
By now I was on a roll, and only the four Memories stickers remained. The first one, Memories I, was almost comically easy. I teleported back to the Clock Factory Space Anchor, walked out the left door, and there it was—a floating book next to an enemy. No combat needed, but I did have to dodge that monster’s aggro range for a second.

Memories II took me to the Eddying Dreamscape Space Anchor. The sticker hovered on a shifting bridge that wouldn’t stay still. A small button nearby temporarily stopped the movement, so I pressed it, walked calmly over, and collected the book before the bridge resumed its dance. Moments like this remind me why Penacony feels like a living puzzle box.

For Memories III, I returned once more to the Corridor of Memories Space Anchor and entered the room on my right. A cozy fireplace crackled there, and beside it waited another floating book. The atmosphere was so peaceful that I stood there a minute longer, just listening to the fire. Then I snapped the sticker and moved on.

The final sticker, Memories IV, couldn’t have been more in my face. It was floating right in front of the Corridor of Memories Space Anchor, next to a potted plant and the Boss Red origami bird checkpoint. I had passed this spot half a dozen times without noticing it—classic gamer tunnel vision. After a quick interact, my collection was finally complete.

Wrapping up
Finishing Chapter 9 felt incredibly rewarding. All thirteen stickers now sit neatly in my Dreamscape Pass, and the scrapbook page looks gorgeous. If you’re missing any sticker yourself, just retrace these steps inside A Child’s Dream. There’s no time limit or missable content, so you can tackle them at your own pace—even in 2026. The Dreamscape Pass remains one of those relaxing collectible systems that rewards exploration without stress, and I’m already eyeing the next chapter.
Comments