High above the pristine Blue Zones, the GDI Council of Directors convened in an emergency session. The holographic projections of the Australian Red Zone flickered in the centre of the room, showing the impossible reality the Steel Talons had uncovered: a thriving, terraformed civilization where there should only be death.
The director gesturing to the Titan walkers standing guard at the border.
The Council's mood was one of cautious aggression. They remained convinced that the Brotherhood of Nod was the architect of this deception, suspecting that this "mirage" was a massive, experimental front for Kane's human experiments.
The Council then turned their attention to intelligence. Unlike the Brotherhood, who had already slipped agents inside, GDI was starting from zero.
As the Council adjourned, the order was sent down to the intelligence wings. For the first time, GDI began to prepare its own ghosts to haunt the gleaming white streets of a world they didn't yet know was called the Union.
******
The infiltration was surprisingly simple. Posing as a group of weary, radiation-scarred refugees from the Darwin Yellow Zone, the GDI agents were picked up by a white-and-blue transport and brought through the shimmering border. They expected a cold, clinical detention camp; instead, they stepped into a world that felt like it had been pulled from a science-fiction epic.
Inside, the spies walked through streets of gleaming white composite, under a sky so clear it was painful to look at. As they moved, gathering intel through hidden ocular implants, the truth began to unfold. This wasn't a Nod outpost—it was something entirely new.
The lead agent whispered into a micro-transmitter.
The agents discovered that this Australian territory was just one of many. The GUI had used the global Tiberium infestation as a smokescreen, establishing "non-GDI blue zones" in every major Red Zone across the planet. While GDI sat in their ivory towers, the GUI had been busy reclaiming the wastelands, using hidden outposts in the Yellow Zones to funnel in the "missing" millions.
The secret to their success was the TCN (Tiberium Control Network). The agents watched as the obsidian towers pulsed, harmonizing with the crystals at the city's edge. It wasn't just containment—the TCN turned the infestation into something controllable, allowing the GUI to terraform the "dead" earth into a paradise where wastelands were supposed to be.
The intelligence report grew more alarming as the agents turned to the military data. "The sub-faction here is known as the Viper Fangs. Their gear looks makeshift compared to our standardized kits, but it's terrifyingly efficient. They've perfected modular tech that our R&D hasn't even considered."
They documented the perimeter: Sniper Towers that never missed, Gun Towers with incredible rates of fire, and Anti-Air Towers that kept the skies sterile. But the most chilling discovery was at the city's core.
The message was compressed and fired off to the GDI High Council. The agents stood in the middle of a bustling, futuristic plaza, realized that while they were fighting a war with the past, the GUI had already built the future.
******
The atmosphere in the GDI High Council chamber shifted from suspicion to pure, unadulterated panic. The decrypted feed from the Australian "Blue Zone" was still scrolling across the monitors, but one word now dominated the discussion: Uranum.
The Directors sat in stunned silence. For decades, GDI had maintained moral superiority by condemning Nod's "dirty" nuclear weapons while justifying their own orbital strikes as "clean" kinetic energy. Now, this unknown faction had bridged the gap. They had created a mass-producible superweapon that combined the devastating efficiency of a Nod missile with the surgical, eco-friendly impact of the Ion Cannon.
The panic in the room was palpable. They weren't just facing a new army; they were facing a superpower that had rendered GDI's orbital dominance obsolete. Worst of all, they had no name for the leader of this force, no face to put on the threat.
On the edge of the mirage, the Titans and Wolverines pivoted their weapons toward the white cities, their pilots knowing that if those "clean" missiles ever launched, there wouldn't be enough of GDI left to sign a peace treaty.
