Hades
We stepped through.
And the world shifted again.
Gone were the blood-streaked halls and the writhing chaos of monsters. This was… organized.
Buzzing with activity.
Structured like a hive—but colder.
Clinical.
Rows of bright overhead panels cast sterile light down long corridors lined with reinforced glass. Behind each glass wall, I saw labs—some filled with machines I couldn't name, others housing tanks of glowing liquid, and others still… worse. Containment units. Cryo-pods. Silver-plated restraints bolted into walls.
But what truly caught my eye were the people.
Dozens of them.
Some walked briskly in pressed uniforms, marked with a strange, curved M-crest embroidered above their heart. Others—armed guards—stood posted at intersections, holding advanced rifles unlike anything Obsidian had issued. Then there were the scientists: lab coats, goggles, datapads glowing blue in their palms. They moved in choreographed indifference. Focused. Efficient.