Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep

They Used the Black Box as Bait for Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

30 min · 3 jun 2026
aflevering They Used the Black Box as Bait for Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

Beschrijving

A troop carrier has crashed into a bone-colored dust basin on a hostile colony world, its three-kilometer hull split open and half-buried in saltstone. Inside the wreck is a navigational core holding the last clean vector to a hidden human fleet tender — and the enemy wants it before orbital sterilization erases the site. A combat engineer team enters the tilted hulk to reach the forward bridge vault, but the ship is no longer just wreckage. The Groutbacks — alien centipedes armored like tanks and almost as long as two men — have turned its decks into a breathing brood nest, undermining floors, carving kill pits, sealing corridors with resin, and packing load-bearing walls with eggs. By the time the team reaches the vault, the core is no longer just an objective. This is "The Living Wreck" by Sascha Schmidt

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Alle afleveringen

93 afleveringen

aflevering 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.

Gisteren48 min
aflevering 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 jul 202640 min
aflevering It Needed Rank, Not Rage, to Kill Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

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

Above a gas giant, a failing orbital station is tumbling toward atmospheric burn-up with its decks overrun by the Slick, a colonial biofilm spread through fuel, condensation, blood, and rebreather vapor. Twenty-four orbital salvage marines and engineers board because the cruiser needs the antimatter bottle secured inside Reactor Four. They breach the forward airlock and move through the habitation ring toward the reactor, using dry catwalks, plasma cutters, and mag-clamps to avoid the deepest pools. The Slick eats suit seals, weapon lubricants, and fuel, turning every contaminated passage into a fire trap. Worse, it leaves infected crewmen coherent and trusted, quietly bending their judgment until engineers, medics, and officers direct entire squads into saturated compartments. It does not need rage. It needs rank. This is "The Slick" by Sascha Schmidt

27 jun 202633 min