Dune – Koran Prophecy

Solid Snake and the Children of Iraq: Prophecies of the Qur’an

The desert wind howled through the ruins of a once-thriving village, now a scarred battlefield left in the wake of war. Solid Snake crouched near the remnants of an old schoolhouse, watching over a group of Iraqi children huddled around a small fire. Their eyes, weary but curious, flickered with the remnants of innocence untouched by the horrors they’d seen.

He had been sent to this war-torn land under orders, but war was never simple. As he watched the children, he couldn’t shake the thought: What future is left for them?

One of the boys, no older than ten, clutched a battered copy of the Qur’an. He looked up at Snake, his dark eyes full of questions. “Are you one of them?” he asked.

“One of who?” Snake responded.

“The soldiers who bring deathโ€ฆ or the ones who listen?”

Snake took a long breath, his mind flashing back to the endless missions, the faces of men he had fought, killed, and lost. “I’m here to listen,” he said finally.

The boy nodded, flipping through the pages of the Qur’an, the book worn with use but deeply revered. “My grandfather said everything happening now was written long ago. He told me of the prophecies, of how the world would burn before it was made whole again.”

Snake leaned in. “Tell me what he said.”

The boy’s voice lowered, almost in reverence. “There will come a time when the people will be divided, when rulers will lie, and the innocent will suffer. The great nations will fight, and the land of Babylonโ€”my homeโ€”will be shattered. But from the ruins, the oppressed will rise. And those who claimed to bring peace will see their own empires fall.”

Snakeโ€™s mind raced. Was this just the wisdom of old men, or had the past really foretold the future? He thought of how Iraq had been caught in the gears of world powers, chewed up and left to rot. He thought of the lies that led to war, the broken promises of peace.

A young girl, her face half-hidden by a torn headscarf, added in a whisper, “And Dajjal, the false messiah, will walk among men. He will promise the world but bring only chains. My father said he is already here.”

Snake exhaled through his nose. He had heard the name beforeโ€”Dajjal, the deceiver, the Antichrist. In every war, there were always whispers of false saviors. He had seen men claim they fought for freedom, only to leave destruction in their wake.

“Who do you think he is?” Snake asked, his voice steady.

The boy hesitated. “My grandfather said he would come with the mark of one eyeโ€ฆ that he would watch everything, control everything.”

Snake’s stomach turned. He thought of the surveillance state, the shadow wars fought in secret, the faceless powers pulling the strings. Who really ruled the world? Was Dajjal a manโ€ฆ or a system?

The fire crackled between them, casting shadows on the broken walls. Snake knew better than to dismiss old prophecies. If there was one thing he had learned, it was that history had a way of repeating itself.

He placed a hand on the boyโ€™s shoulder. “Youโ€™re smart, kid. Keep asking questions. Keep the truth alive.”

The boy nodded. “Will you fight him?”

Snake stood up, adjusting his bandana. “I fight for the truthโ€ฆ wherever it leads me.”

The children watched as the legendary soldier walked into the night, disappearing into the shifting sands.

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The Medak Redemption

[Metal Gear: The Medak Redemption]

Solid Snake stood in the sterile, dimly lit medical bay of HQ, arms crossed, his battle-worn face tense with frustration. The overhead fluorescents hummed softly as he addressed the lead scientist, Dr. Clark, and her team.

“I need stem cells,” Snake stated bluntly. “A peacekeeperโ€”one of oursโ€”lost the use of his legs at Medak Pocket. He deserves a second chance.”

Dr. Clark adjusted her glasses, looking up from a tablet filled with classified medical data. “Snake, you know the protocols. Even with today’s advancements, spinal regeneration via stem cells is stillโ€””

“I don’t want excuses,” Snake cut in. “I want solutions. This man was sent into hell to keep the peace, and he came back broken. Now he’s rotting in a wheelchair because politicians only care about peacekeepers when they’re useful.”

One of the younger doctors, a Croatian named Dr. Stjepan, cleared his throat. “Medak Pocket… that was a brutal battle. The things they saw thereโ€ฆ” He hesitated, then met Snakeโ€™s piercing gaze. “If he survived that, he deserves better than to be forgotten.”

Dr. Clark sighed, setting her tablet down. “The problem isnโ€™t capability, Snake. Itโ€™s authorization. The Pentagon wonโ€™t approve experimental treatments for non-combat personnel.”

Snake clenched his jaw. “Thatโ€™s bull. This guy fought harder for peace than most of those ‘combat personnel’ ever did. The politicians didnโ€™t want the world to know about Medak Pocket because it messed with their narrative.”

Dr. Stjepan exhaled sharply. “And if we go around the system?”

A cold smirk crossed Snakeโ€™s face. “Wouldn’t be the first time.”

Dr. Clark narrowed her eyes. “You’re suggesting we acquire the necessary stem cellsโ€ฆ off the books?”

“You said it, not me,” Snake muttered.

Silence hung in the air.

Finally, Dr. Stjepan nodded. “I have some contacts at a private lab in Zagreb. Theyโ€™ve been making breakthroughs in neuroregeneration.”

Dr. Clark crossed her arms. “If we get caught, it’s both our careers.”

Snake shrugged. “If we donโ€™t, a soldier who gave everything for peace is left to rot. I donโ€™t know about you, but I can live with the first option.”

Dr. Clark sighed. “Alright, Snake. But if anyone asks, this conversation never happened.”

Snake gave a small nod. “It never did.”

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A Radiant Solution

The desert was quiet, the sun a smoldering orb in a sky the color of ash. Prince Harry adjusted his respirator and wiped the sweat from his brow. Beside him, Solid Snake scanned the barren landscape through his eyepatch, the Geiger counter in his hand clicking ominously. The battlefield stretched before them, littered with twisted metal and the invisible menace of depleted uranium.

They had come together for a singular purpose: to heal the scars of war. Harry, a former soldier turned environmental advocate, had grown tired of watching the earth bear the toxic burden of human conflict. Snake, the legendary mercenary, had seen the fallout of countless battles. They both agreed on one thingโ€”there had to be a better way.

The plan was simple in theory, but audacious in practice. Using a type of fungus capable of metabolizing heavy metals and radiation, they hoped to decontaminate the land. The challenge was getting permission to deploy it. The generals in charge of the region were less than cooperative.

“This is a warzone, not a petri dish,” bellowed General Lancaster, slamming his fist on the table during their first meeting. “We canโ€™t afford to let you play mad scientists with our soil.”

“With respect,” Harry had replied, his voice steady, “the soil is already a warzone. Let us try to fix what youโ€™ve broken.”

But bureaucracy and pride proved formidable foes. Weeks passed as Harry and Snake made their case to military officials, environmental agencies, and even the media. They were met with skepticism, ridicule, and outright hostility. Yet they pressed on, setting up clandestine experiments in the dead of night.

One evening, as the sun dipped below the horizon, Snake crouched next to a shallow pit they had dug. “If this works, weโ€™ll have proof,” he muttered, sprinkling spores over a pile of uranium-tainted debris. Harry stood nearby, the faint hum of a drone patrol keeping him alert.

By dawn, their gamble paid off. The Geiger counter showed reduced radiation levels around the test site. The fungus had begun breaking down the uranium compounds, rendering them inert. They filmed the results and sent the footage to the press. It went viral overnight.

The public outcry was immediate. Soldiers and civilians alike demanded the military give Harry and Snake the green light. The generals, cornered by public opinion, begrudgingly relented.

Over the next months, Harry and Snake led teams across the battlefield, sowing spores into the earth and watching as the fungi did their work. The land, once a toxic wasteland, began to heal. Grass grew where nothing had sprouted in years, and animals tentatively returned.

At the edge of a newly green field, Harry turned to Snake. “Do you think itโ€™ll last?”

Snake lit a cigarette, the ember glowing faintly. “Itโ€™s not about lasting forever,” he said. “Itโ€™s about giving the world a fighting chance.”

As they packed up for the day, a message crackled over the radio. General Lancasterโ€™s voice, gruff but softer than before. “Good work out there. I was wrong.”

Harry smiled faintly. Victory wasnโ€™t just in the soilโ€”it was in the hearts and minds theyโ€™d changed.

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