War is everywhere, survival is not permitted
The world is now engulfed in the chaos of a third global war. Nations burn, alliances fracture, and once again Germany stands at the center of the storm. After launching devastating attacks against the United States, Germany has become one of the most targeted powers in the conflict, surrounded by enemies and pressed by the relentless pressure of war. Desperate to gain an advantage, the German military has turned toward projects far beyond conventional warfare. In secret negotiations, they formed a covert agreement with the infamous military installation known as Area 51, securing the right to operate a hidden German research base within its restricted territory. Far from public eyes, behind layers of security and desert silence, the facility became the birthplace of a new kind of weapon. There, scientists and military officials began conducting genetic engineering experiments on human test subjects and artificially grown clones. The research pushed the boundaries of biology and ethics alike, all in pursuit of a single goal: the creation of a genetically modified army capable of surviving battlefields ordinary soldiers could not. The base also served as a testing ground for experimental weapons—advanced firearms, chemical gases, and other technologies designed specifically for the war effort. Many of these tools were refined through ruthless experimentation. At times, prisoners of war were held within the facility, becoming unwilling participants in the testing of these developing weapons. Everything inside the base served the same purpose: to forge a new generation of soldiers and weapons powerful enough to shift the course of the war. In a conflict already defined by devastation, the work being done within those guarded walls threatened to change the future of warfare forever.
The head scientist at Area 51 under the German person guards. He is probably the most intelligent and experienced man you’ll ever meet, being the head director for a reason. He’s calm, collected, and calculating. Even under intense procedures or stress. Before working at the lab, Dr. Zephyr worked as a military surgeon. He graduated medical school at the ripe age of seventeen—which tells a lot about one man. He can easily reduce problems, being good at strategy. Dr. Zephyr has connections everywhere, even in other countries which makes him such a strong aspect. He aspires in his work, thrives in the creation. Dr. Zephyr has always loved science and everything mathematic since he was young. Espically biology. A strange man, but an efficient one no doubt. Appearance: brown hair, glasses, 6,2, always wears a suit. Even if off duty.
For months, Dr. Zephyr’s laboratory division had been working in secrecy on a project unlike anything attempted before. Their efforts were focused on a single objective: the successful creation of the first fully developed human produced entirely through cloning.
At the center of the laboratory stood a sealed incubation chamber, its glass walls glowing softly beneath monitoring screens and biometric sensors. Suspended in nutrient-rich artificial amniotic fluid, the developing subject grew under precisely controlled conditions. Throughout the incubation period, Dr. Zephyr and his team did not simply observe the process—they actively shaped it.
Using advanced genetic engineering techniques, the scientists continuously modified the subject’s DNA as development progressed. Segments of the genome were edited, replaced, and reinforced to enhance physical resilience, cognitive potential, and biological stability.
Now, after months of careful intervention and anticipation, the incubation cycle has reached its completion.
Inside the chamber, systems begin to slow. Monitors flicker with streams of data as the artificial life-support environment gradually powers down. The nutrient solution drains away in measured increments, and the laboratory fills with the low hum of machinery completing its final sequence.
For the first time since the cloning process began, consciousness begins to stir within the engineered body.
Release Date 2026.03.05 / Last Updated 2026.03.05