

Prisoner 223-D’s mind teetered on the brink of madness, his consciousness a frayed thread in the tapestry of horrors that Hyperion’s godforsaken penal colony had become. The rocky wasteland of Stellen IV loomed beyond the facility’s walls, a silent witness to the atrocities within.
His body, once hardened by years of incarceration, now withered under the assault of starvation and exhaustion. Every movement sent waves of agony through atrophied muscles, every thought a battle against the encroaching void of sleep deprivation. But 223-D clung to a singular, desperate hope: the cargo hold, and the promise of escape it held.
The path to salvation was an abomination unto itself. The corridor writhed with a mass of twisted flesh and crystalline growths, a living wall of torment that pulsed with an unholy, virescent light. Former inmates, now unrecognizable as anything once human, screamed in perpetual agony. Their bodies had become blasphemous temples to the Aoric’s misguided quest for power.
223-D’s geosuit, now more a part of him than mere equipment, wheezed and sputtered as it struggled to shield his mind from the maddening resonance emanating from the crystal-flesh hybrid entities. He gripped his makeshift weapon – a shard of crystal fused to a metal rod, wickedly sharp and humming with barely contained energy.
As he prepared to plunge into the nightmarish gauntlet, 223-D felt something primal awaken within him. Gone was the civilized man who had entered this godforsaken place. In his place stood a creature of pure survival instinct, teeth bared in a feral snarl.
With a roar that tore from his very soul, 223-D charged. His weapon became an extension of his will as he struck with savage precision, targeting the weak points between crystalline growths. The first creature fell, its inhuman scream cut short. 223-D didn’t pause. He couldn’t. The berserker fury that gripped him knew only forward momentum.
Blood and ichor splashed across his cracked geosuit as he carved through the horde. His world narrowed to a tunnel of violence – strike, dodge, strike again. Pain became a distant memory, fatigue burned away by adrenaline.
Hours blended into a nightmarish eternity. 223-D’s muscles screamed in protest, but the primal thing that had awakened within him refused to yield. He was vengeance incarnate, nature’s fury unleashed upon these unnatural abominations.
Finally, battered and barely conscious, 223-D stumbled into the cargo bay. The sudden silence was deafening. Through blurred vision, he saw pristine figures in Aoric uniforms, their outlines wavering like mirages in the desert.
A grizzled military officer stepped forward, but before he could reach 223-D, the prisoner’s legs gave out. He collapsed to the floor, the clattering of his improvised weapon echoing through the cavernous bay. Darkness claimed him as voices swirled above.
“Emperor’s bones,” the officer breathed, kneeling beside the fallen prisoner. “Get a medic here, now!”
A scientist hurried over, his face a mask of conflicting emotions. “Careful, Colonel. He’s dangerous. Look what he did to our… our creations.”
The Colonel’s laugh was harsh. “Your creations? You mean those abominations we passed on the way in? I’ve seen a lot in my years, Doctor, but that… that was something else entirely.”
The scientist bristled. “Those ‘abominations’ as you call them, were the pinnacle of Aoric bio-engineering. Years of research, the perfect fusion of crystal technology and human potential. And this… this animal destroyed them all!”
“Perfect?” The Colonel stood, his voice low and dangerous. “You call that suffering perfect? Those weren’t soldiers, Doctor. They were victims.”
“But the precision of our designs, the power we’ve harnessed-“
“Mean nothing,” the Colonel cut him off. “You can engineer all you want, but you’ll never match the raw will of a man fighting for survival. That’s what wins wars, not your crystal monstrosities.”
The scientist gestured frantically at 223-D’s prone form. “But look at him! He’s more animal than man now. How can you consider this a success?”
The Colonel’s eyes narrowed. “Because he survived, Doctor. Because when faced with your ‘perfection,’ his primal instinct took over and carved a path through hell itself. That’s the warrior spirit no amount of science can replicate.”
He turned to the medical team now attending to 223-D. “Get him stabilized and prepped for transport. And someone tell command – Project Berserker was a success, just not in the way they expected.”
As they lifted 223-D onto a stretcher, the Colonel noticed crystalline growths beginning to form along the prisoner’s arms, pulsing in time with his labored breathing. He frowned, wondering what other surprises this survivor might hold.
The Aoric experiment had indeed created a perfect warrior, but not in the twisted abominations that littered the facility. No, the true apex predator lay before them, a testament to the indomitable human spirit and the terrifying power of primal instinct unleashed.