The mission didn’t end—it evolved.
Back on American soil, inside a secure black-site facility, Subject X finally speaks. What he reveals fractures everything you thought you knew.
He was never the enemy.
He was a ghost operative—inserted into China by the U.S. Defense Force to investigate whispers of a classified electro-pulse weapon capable of crippling entire infrastructures. When he was discovered, he vanished. Cut off. Disavowed.
Declared the most wanted man in America—not to be found…
…but to be silenced.
Now the CIA holds the truth—and the burden.
Your mission: return to China. Confirm the existence of the weapon. Gather intel. Leave no trace.
No arrests. No confrontation.
Just shadows… watching shadows.
And when it’s over, Subject X will disappear again—this time for good.
Aircraft: Pilatus PC-12 / Daher TBM 930
Flying Style: Low-altitude infiltration, terrain masking, dusk/night operations, minimal ATC interaction
Chengdu → Chengdu Fenghuang Mountains
Chengdu, deep within Sichuan, is a hub of aerospace research and military-adjacent industry.
The briefing replays in your mind as you lift into China’s western skies again.
Subject X wasn’t running.
He was surviving.
Chengdu is your starting point—the place he first uncovered fragments of the weapon’s existence. You land on the outskirts, far from the controlled air corridors.
Your team begins quietly pulling threads.
This time, you’re not chasing a man.
You’re chasing what he found.
Chengdu → Kangding
A mountainous region, sparsely populated, ideal for hidden facilities.
Satellite anomalies. Power fluctuations. Nothing definitive.
But enough.
Subject X described “test pulses”—brief, controlled disruptions.
Guangyuan matches the pattern.
You scan, observe, log.
No contact.
No trace left behind.
Kangding → Bazhong Enyang
A remote area surrounded by rugged terrain and limited infrastructure.
Your instruments flicker mid-flight.
Just for a moment.
Not turbulence. Not weather.
Something else.
You exchange glances—no words needed.
This is real.
Bazhong → Qingyang
Qingyang lies within a plateau region, historically isolated and difficult to access.
A pattern forms—remote, elevated, low-visibility zones.
Subject X wasn’t guessing.
He was mapping.
And now… so are you.
Qingyan → Guyan Liupanshan
Tianshui sits along ancient Silk Road routes—once a corridor of trade, now something quieter.
You follow paths carved thousands of years ago.
Trade routes become data routes.
Old corridors, new purpose.
Someone chose these locations carefully.
Guyan Liupanshan → Tianshui Maijishan
A highland region with dense terrain and minimal oversight.
Every stop aligns.
Spacing. Geography. Infrastructure.
You’re not looking at random sites.
You’re looking at a network.
Tianshui Maijishan → Yuncheng Guangong
Yuncheng lies near key industrial regions with access to transport networks.
This isn’t just testing.
It’s scalability.
If deployed, the weapon could move beyond isolation—into population centers.
The implications settle heavily.
Yuncheng → Jingdezhen Luojia
A city known for ceramics—quiet, unassuming.
The most dangerous things don’t draw attention.
They hide behind normalcy.
Jingdezhen gives nothing away.
And that’s exactly why it matters.
Jingdezhen → Wuyishan
Mountainous terrain, thick forests, and minimal surveillance.
Communications drop again.
Longer this time.
Your systems struggle.
Whatever is being tested—it’s growing stronger.
Leg 10 — ZSWY → ZULS
Wuyishan → Lhasa Gonggar
High-altitude operations in Tibet introduce extreme environmental challenges.
Thin air. Harsh winds.
Perfect isolation.
If there’s a central test site…
This is it.
Leg 11 — ZULS → ZUNZ
Lhasa → Nyingchi Mainling
A remote valley region near sensitive border zones.
You find it.
Not visually. Not directly.
But through data—consistent, undeniable.
This is the origin point.
Subject X was right.
Leg 12 — ZUNZ → ZPLJ
Nyingchi → Lijiang Sanyi
A mountainous region blending tourism with remote terrain.
You begin your withdrawal.
Intel secured.
No alarms triggered.
Clean.
But uneasy.
Leg 13 — ZPLJ → ZGKL
Lijiang → Guilin Liangjiang
Karst mountains and winding rivers dominate the landscape.
The further you move, the quieter it becomes.
No interference.
No anomalies.
As if the network never existed.
Leg 14 — ZGKL → RKSI
Guilin → Seoul Incheon (Staging)
Leaving China once again, quietly and without notice.
Airspace clears.
Tension eases—but only slightly.
What you carry now is heavier than before.
Proof.
Leg 15 — RKSI → KNUQ
Seoul → Moffett Federal Airfield
A secure U.S. facility tied to intelligence and defense operations.
You land.
Debrief begins immediately.
The official report is prepared:
Subject X — Not located.
Mission — Inconclusive.
Truth — Classified.
Leg 16 — KNUQ → KPSP
Moffett → Palm Springs (Final Transfer)
A quiet civilian airport used for discreet movement.
You see him one last time.
No cuffs.
No guards.
A new name. A new life.
Subject X walks away—not as a fugitive…
…but as a man erased.
Some missions end with victory.
Others end with silence.
You crossed borders again—not for capture, but for truth. You confirmed what was never meant to be known, carried it back across oceans, and buried it beneath layers of denial.
The world continues, unaware.
Subject X is gone.
The weapon remains.
And somewhere, deep within mountains and shadows, the pulse waits—silent… but ready.