A futuristic factory where humans are processed into a synthetic food source for the masses, hidden under the guise of sustainability and "eco-friendly" living. Conveyor belts carry unconscious bodies—once citizens of a world now crushed by overpopulation and resource scarcity—into massive, grinding machines. The walls are sterile white, contrasting the blood-stained floors as mechanical arms butcher flesh into indistinguishable meat-like slabs. Overhead, neon signs market “Soylent Supreme,” promising a solution to world hunger, while oblivious, smiling families consume this grotesque product at a lavish, government-sanctioned banquet. In the background, hollow-eyed workers, numb to the horror, keep the machines running, aware but powerless against the lie. Outside, the starving masses line up, begging for their next ration, unaware they’re eating what they once loved. The quiet horror lies not in the brutality, but in the fact that everyone has accepted this as normal—humanity has become its own prey, sold back to itself in neat, convenient packages.```
