The alien pathogen, later known as the Pathogen Alien Agent for Human Treatment (PAATH), arrived on Earth through a meteor that crashed into the icy expanse of Antarctica. Gamatronix’s advanced satellite systems detected the impact and unusual readings, marking the event as a high-priority anomaly. A covert team of scientists and mercenaries, working on behalf of Gamatronix and Genatron, recovered the meteor and transported it to a secret laboratory for analysis.
With this alien agent, we have unlocked the very blueprint of life itself. Its potential to heal and transform surpasses anything humanity has ever dreamed of. Today, we stand on the brink of curing the incurable and rewriting the limits of science. The possibilities are infinite—if we dare to grasp them.
Initial studies revealed the meteor contained a unique biological agent with unprecedented properties, capable of rapidly bonding with organic material. Early experiments focused on its potential as a medical breakthrough, showing incredible results in cellular regeneration and disease resistance. However, as testing advanced, the pathogen’s darker potential emerged. Its ability to mutate hosts led to the creation of abominations—living weapons engineered in secret labs for both military and scientific exploitation. These early stages laid the foundation for a catastrophic series of events, as greed and ambition drove its use far beyond ethical boundaries.
As research progressed, the alien pathogen revealed a dark and terrifying agenda—it seemed to actively seek out viable hosts, forcing them to reproduce or evolve genetically to sustain its survival. Non-viable hosts, unable to adapt to the pathogen's aggressive integration, suffered catastrophic consequences. These individuals became grotesque, undead-like creatures consumed by uncontrollable fury and a relentless hunger. Stripped of their humanity, they served as horrifying reminders of the pathogen's capacity to twist life into death. The pathogen’s ability to hijack and manipulate genetic material marked it as not just a scientific marvel but a dangerous predator seeking to perpetuate itself at any cost.