Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep

The Birds Built Their Nest From Human Bones | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

42 min · 23. Mai 2026
Episode The Birds Built Their Nest From Human Bones | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep Cover

Beschreibung

On a volcanic colony world, atmospheric processor towers were built to scrub ash and glass-sleet from the evacuation lanes so shuttles could land and lift off through the poisoned sky. Now the ridge-hatchets have taken the high ground. These giant predatory birds nest inside towers, sensor masts, and ventilation shafts, blinding the colony’s systems while using cloud cover and vertical terrain to kill anything moving below. Firebase Anvil is trapped under the ash ceiling, its evacuation window closing. A combat engineer team crosses an ash-choked ravine to restart Spire Seven and clear the lane. But inside the processor, the ridge-hatchets have packed the vents with nests made from stick, cable, animal remains, military kit, and human limbs — and the adult bird is still above them, listening through the tower. This is "The Bone Yard" by Sascha Schmidt I would lock this version. It has the right movie intro shape: world purpose → predator occupation → trapped humans → mission → horror object → unresolved threat.

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89 Folgen

Episode They Waited Until Mercy Made Us Reach | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep Cover

They Waited Until Mercy Made Us Reach | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

In the black flooded reclamation trench below the upstream agri-colonies, acid mist hangs over Meridian Recovery Authority drainage works that have been sealed by Grout Hounds. A three-man engineering detail enters Complex 7 to cut open three cemented drainage gates and clear a corridor for an armor push into the reclamation zone. The Grout Hounds do not simply attack soldiers. They weep quick-hardening slime that turns ladders, culverts, and extraction routes into white cement, then hunt in coordinated packs through chest-high water, biting suit joints, weapon cables, tendons, and seals. Their worst weapon is mercy: when a wounded man is helped, the swarm triggers, and every bite can turn triage into a contamination hub. This is "Where the Hounds Hunt" by Sascha Schmidt

22. Juni 202640 min
Episode They Used Our Mercy as Bait | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep Cover

They Used Our Mercy as Bait | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

On Vargas-9, the streets around Canal 7 have been digested after six months of siege, and the last starport is nearly inside the growth zone. A three-man sapper detail enters the ruined city to plant seismic charges beneath a Siren-Pillar and buy the evacuation another forty-eight hours. The Siren-Pillars do not hunt like animals. They digest roads and buildings, vent spore-mist that gums armor and filters, and keep missing soldiers alive inside honeycomb pockets so their heat, transponders, and distress calls lure rescue teams deeper into the city. The team moves through breathing mist with seismic mauls and a low-yield plasma cutter, scraping growth from their suits as the streets close behind them. When a secondary pillar blocks exfil and the target’s root chamber reveals the missing Third Battalion still warm above the charges, the mission turns into a choice no soldier was meant to make. This is "The Fortress Always Grows Back" by Sascha Schmidt

20. Juni 202638 min
Episode They Made Our Dead Men Give Orders | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep Cover

They Made Our Dead Men Give Orders | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

Inside a geothermal processing station, the lower heat-exchanger levels have gone hot, wet, and rotten after hostile elements seize the facility. A six-man squad descends through saturated air to clear the lower decks and regain control before the infection spreads through the station. The Throat-Tusks do not charge like animals. They enter through water, condensation, canteens, masks, and contaminated mouths, then take human bodies and use their voices, names, codes, and command habits to open doors that weapons never could. The squad advances with jaw-braces sealed, thermal sensors blinded by warm rot-pockets, and a plasma lance ready to cut through the first nest-mound they find. But when the command node is already packed with incubation matter, the lift cable is cut, and every calm voice becomes suspect, the mission turns into a steam-vent climb through heat, thirst, and the fear of the next swallow. This is "The Calm Voice" by Sascha Schmidt

17. Juni 202628 min
Episode It Mimicked Shelter to Trap Tired Men | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep Cover

It Mimicked Shelter to Trap Tired Men | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

On a dead oceanic shelf, an atmospheric processing station called the Spire has gone silent inside a spreading calcified reef. Three processor cores still regulate breathable chemistry across the shelf colonies, so a four-man salvage detail enters before the sector suffocates or is abandoned. The Bone Bunkers are not predators that chase soldiers. They grow bunkers, alcoves, medevac niches, supply mouths, and defensive walls where frightened or wounded men will take cover, then vent calming gas and turn bodies into load-bearing structure. Inside the reef, radio dies, thermal lies, motion reads nothing, and even sound is swallowed by the walls. When a tech steps into a false medevac niche and the route back begins closing cone by cone, the mission shifts from recovery to confirmed loss, with one survivor forced deeper through a place that knows exactly when men need to rest. This is "The Trojan Bunkers" by Sascha Schmidt

15. Juni 202652 min