Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep

The Giant Alien Crashed From Orbit to Breed a Continent | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

39 min · 22. maj 2026
episode The Giant Alien Crashed From Orbit to Breed a Continent | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep cover

Description

Drop-Leviathans are giant space-born organisms. At the end of each life-cycle, one falls from orbit and becomes the seed of a new reef colony — a living mass that will one day send mature Leviathans back into space to seed more worlds. One has crashed onto an acid-rain salt-pan colony, home to thousands of human settlers. Its carcass destroyed the colony landing pad and now lies near the city like a rotting mountain, full of eggs and larvae waiting for the right moment to spread, take the planet, and grow another Leviathan. A sapper team enters the Drop-Leviathan husk to collapse it, along with the wreckage of the old landing pad, before its eggs can scatter. But the creature’s dead tissue still reacts to vibration, punching jaw-stalks through walls, floors, and ceilings whenever something moves. Every step, shot, cutter spark, and detonation pulse can wake another part of the corpse. This is “The Dead Leviathan” by Sascha Schmidt.

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95 episodes

episode Their Spores Ate Our Detonator Before We Reached the Den | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

Their Spores Ate Our Detonator Before We Reached the Den | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

Beneath Station Nine, an abandoned refinery-harbor on a colony moon, sulfur minks have spent twenty years hollowing the pilings and seeding the tidal coast with heat-resistant cyst beds. Seven combat engineers descend into the sulfide-soaked understructure to demolish the primary den complex before the infestation reaches the mainland extraction facilities. At low tide, they cut through the floodgate with a plasma cutter, carry seismic charges through chest-deep black water, and begin locking them to the central support pylon. The minks match the temperature of stone and ambush through dissolved walls, while mineral-armored spores clog filters, soften seals, eat concrete, and work into equipment still listed as operational. This is "The Sulfur Minks" by Sascha Schmidt

Yesterday41 min
episode They Welded My Leg to the Ground They Were Eating | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

They Welded My Leg to the Ground They Were Eating | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

On an acid-rain moon, Firebase Null is a salvage-built trench outpost above old agricultural basins already saturated by the Goldrot. The Exiled Juvenile Contingent must hold the position and protect its central water tanks while an indigenous militia waits beyond the eastern ridge for the fortifications to fail. When a missing rifleman is recovered alive, a retrieval team carries him through a broken decontamination gate and into the aid station. Goldrot root-arteries digest the structural polymers beneath the bunkers, while slow brass-gold bodies weld themselves to walls and drill through armor. Rifle fire only shatters their shells into toxin-bearing cysts, turning every wound, boot tread, and canteen into another route for contamination. As the medical deputy tries to save the captive and the commander demands he be burned, the bloom reaches the shared water. This is "Firebase Null" by Sascha Schmidt.

6. juli 202634 min
episode They Sent Us to Rescue Prisoners Who Never Existed | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

They Sent Us to Rescue Prisoners Who Never Existed | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

Beneath a corporate arcology spire, black water has swallowed the abandoned hydroponic levels and turned the foundations into Flatback territory. A five-man resistance sapper team enters the flooded corridors to destroy a tactical array, draw corporate security underground, and help another cell rescue political prisoners from level twelve. Carrying ceramic penetrator charges, they begin moving toward the foundation spine. Flatbacks press their armored bodies into mud and concrete, vanish from thermal and sonar scans, and strike when footsteps, machinery, or gunfire disturb the water. They build nest-mounds that force soldiers into flooded chokepoints, packing the dead into their dams while already-armored juveniles scatter through pipes and foundation cracks. This is "Under the Spire" by Sascha Schmidt.

4. juli 202648 min
episode They Still Knew Our Names After the Bugs Rewired Them | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

They Still Knew Our Names After the Bugs Rewired Them | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

On a dust-scoured colonial prospect, Complex 9-Alpha stands above glass flats where command has declared the Wire Scarab infestation dormant. A military garrison must hold the firebase beacon for seventy-two hours so an orbital extraction ship can lock coordinates for the next quarantine sweep, while its only medic sterilizes contaminated surfaces, inspects armor joints, and keeps twelve wounded soldiers alive. The Wire Scarabs hide inside boot seams and damaged suit hinges, then thread microscopic nerve-weave into the brainstem. Their hosts still remember names, access codes, and command procedure, pass biometric checks, and calmly redirect their own soldiers into kill-boxes while desiccated cysts spread through stretchers, weapons, and uniform seams. This is "The Wire Scarabs" by Sascha Schmidt.

1. juli 202640 min