Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep

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

42 min · 23 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Birds Built Their Nest From Human Bones | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

Descripción

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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91 episodios

Portada del episodio It Needed Rank, Not Rage, to Kill Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

It Needed Rank, Not Rage, to Kill Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

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

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

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

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

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