Bioasshard Arena Apr 2026
She lunged. The spine shot toward his face. He didn't dodge. He raised his left palm. The aperture opened. A single drop of clear fluid met the tip of her spine.
The announcement always came in that flat, feminine voice, as emotionless as a scalpel. Twenty-seven minutes until the gates slid open. Twenty-seven minutes until the soil—dark, loamy, and smelling of iron—sucked at his boots as he ran.
It wasn't an explosion. It was an emergent property . For the last ten minutes, Kaelen had been walking in a slow, deliberate spiral, leaving a faint, almost invisible trail of his solvent from his left hand. It had seeped into the soil, reacting with the minerals, the iron, the petrochemicals left over from a hundred previous battles. It had been cooking .
The gates around the Arena—the ones that had never opened for anyone except the dead—slid wide. All of them. At once. The soil stopped smelling of iron. It smelled like rain. Real rain. Bioasshard Arena
Twenty-seven minutes.
He pressed his right hand—the one he’d kept dry, the one with the solvent still beaded and ready—against the base of the fountain. The old stone was laced with the same bio-shard technology that pulsed in their arms. The Arena’s bedrock. Its heart.
They came for him, of course. They always did. The Arena didn't reward hiding. It rewarded adaptation . If you stayed still too long, the shard would get bored. It would sprout something useless—a third eye on your throat, fingers on your feet—just to remind you who was in charge. She lunged
The air in the holding cell tasted of recycled regret and stale adrenaline. Kaelen sat on a concrete slab that passed for a bed, running his thumb over the smooth, warm metal of the bio-shard embedded in his left forearm. It pulsed faintly, a parasitic heartbeat synced to his own.
The ground beneath Jorge turned to a slurry of silicate and dreams. He sank to his knees, then his waist, his carapace cracking under the strange, singing pressure of the dissolving earth. He looked up at Kaelen, and for the first time, his tiny eyes held something other than rage. They held a question.
First was Needle, a wiry, twitching woman whose shard had given her a prehensile spine that could extend ten meters and inject a paralytic neurotoxin. She moved like a daddy longlegs across the debris. Kaelen saw her heat signature three blocks away. He didn't move. He raised his left palm
Bioasshard Arena wasn't a place. It was a product. The flagship entertainment of the Oligarchy’s pleasure worlds, streamed raw and unedited to a hundred billion viewers. They called it the ultimate sport: two hundred condemned souls injected with metamorphic bio-tech, dropped into a kilometer-square replica of a ruined Earth city, and told to fight, evolve, or die.
He waited.