illphated
The Hunger Algorithm
In the sprawling neon city of Neo-Eden, food was no longer just sustenance—it was control. The Corporate Council had perfected the art of governance through a single, unassuming commodity: sustenance credits.
At the top of the pyramid, the elite feasted in floating sky towers, indulging in lab-grown steaks and vintages older than the wars that built the city. Their needs were met entirely, allowing them to pursue art, philosophy, and leisure. Below them, the executive class dined on engineered nutrition—food optimized for peak productivity but devoid of indulgence. Their needs were practical: efficiency, ambition, and status.
Further down, the worker class lived on flavored nutrient bars, each calibrated for their profession. A construction worker’s bar was dense with proteins and stimulants, a coder’s infused with nootropics. They never questioned their lot; the Algorithm ensured they remained focused on their tasks, striving for the next level of privilege.
At the bottom, the Unfed lived in the slums, scavenging the waste of the classes above. Their only hope was the Lottery—one chance a month to be uplifted to the worker tier through exceptional compliance. To keep them docile, the Corporation distributed Substance 9, a synthetic meal replacement that dulled ambition and erased hunger.
When people rose in rank, their food improved, reinforcing the dream of social mobility. The cycle was perfect. No one needed chains when their hunger bound them more effectively than any prison.
And so, the masses labored, consuming precisely what they were given, chasing the next meal ticket in a world where desire was dictated by those who decided the menu.