I didn't see it, no. I was planning too because the trailer looked cool, but never got around to it.
It's not something that steals your mind without you knowing it, it's not insidious like that. It won't make you a zombie who can't feel pain. In fact, that may be why it can cause mild anxiety-like effects at higher doses, because you're actually more attune with external stimuli.
It affects long-term potentiation, so more of a slow reinforcement effect. You are aware of the change in mentality as it's happening. The only way it could go sci-fi on you is if you're maybe living in a strange environment or engaging in some abnormal behavior, and then try to go back to normal. Here's a good overview of how memory get's encoded:
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Basically, if you're going through something bad like a divorce or traumatic event, it might make you feel emotionally worse to take DAA. However, when NMDA inhibitors (the opposite effect of DAA) are given to animals, they are less likely to survive stressful challenges. So taking DAA during hard times could promote survival behaviors, whether it "feels good" or not.
If your life is good and running along smooth, taking DAA can theoretically help you learn and remember what you learned better. If you're trying to learn something new that requires spatial memory, it could help a lot!