DiscoverShort SciFi Stories on the go
Short SciFi Stories on the go
Claim Ownership

Short SciFi Stories on the go

Author: Kelli Korner

Subscribed: 1Played: 9
Share

Description

Welcome to a universe of bite‑sized science fiction. Each episode is a micro‑story set on Earth or somewhere far beyond—glimpses of future cities, alien first contact, rogue AIs, time‑tossed messages, and quiet moments between the stars. Perfect for a coffee break, commute, or whenever you want a spark of imagination. New short stories regularly; follow to catch every tiny tale of wonder, hope, and the unknown.




  • sci-fi, science fiction, microfiction, flash fiction, short stories, space, Earth, aliens, time travel, dystopia, AI, cosmic, anthology

112 Episodes
Reverse
From one of our scout ships, Ambassador Lyra Knight's song of the Axian snapped her quills rattling. From the bridge of our flagship, the stellar dominance I waited for Earth's panic, for emergency transmissions. Your counsel's debates were thorough, though I must say Admiral Brightwing your report on humanity was partly right and partly adorable in its mistakes. Before I could reply a tiny shuttle detached from Earth's orbit, no weapons, barely shielded, piloted by her alone. Nick's interrupted her light's glowing with irritation.
From one of our scout ships, Ambassador Lyra Knight's song of the Axian snapped her quills rattling. From the bridge of our flagship, the stellar dominance I waited for Earth's panic, for emergency transmissions. Your counsel's debates were thorough, though I must say Admiral Brightwing your report on humanity was partly right and partly adorable in its mistakes. Before I could reply a tiny shuttle detached from Earth's orbit, no weapons, barely shielded, piloted by her alone. Nick's interrupted her light's glowing with irritation.
From one of our scout ships, Ambassador Lyra Knight's song of the Axian snapped her quills rattling. From the bridge of our flagship, the stellar dominance I waited for Earth's panic, for emergency transmissions. Your counsel's debates were thorough, though I must say Admiral Brightwing your report on humanity was partly right and partly adorable in its mistakes. Before I could reply a tiny shuttle detached from Earth's orbit, no weapons, barely shielded, piloted by her alone. Nick's interrupted her light's glowing with irritation.
When their feats arrived above our colonies, when their soldiers burned our skies and demanded our surrender, they believed it would be over in days, to them, humanity was fragile, divided, a minor species clinging to a small blue world, they were wrong. Our answer came not in words, but in fire, from the edge of the void, earth's war fleets surged forward, ships forged in desperation, piloted by men and women who had grown up under the shadow of loss, struck with precision and fury, rail guns tore through shields that were said to be indestructible. Every strike carried the weight of history, the memory of every empire that tried to break us, the blood of every ancestor who fought against impossible odds, one council world fell, then another, then another, entire systems that had once stood untouchable were silenced in days. They had prepared speeches of dominance, but no one dared to speak, and then, into that silence, the human envoy walked, his voice carried no anger, no rage-only truth, you thought humanity was weak. You thought we would kneel, but now you understand, we are not the prey of the galaxy, we are the storm it cannot contain, not a single alien replied, not one dared to look him in the eye.
The image of supreme overlord cross-thor appeared on the giant holographic display, a towering alien with three snarling heads, each moving perfectly in sync. Cross-thor's three heads twisted in confusion. All three of Cross-thor's heads tilted in unison, making Johnson laugh even harder. Is that what you want for your empire, cross-thor. Cross-thor's three heads whispered rapidly to one another.
They have no planetary shield, no orbital defense grid, and their best weapons still depend on chemical propellants. The seven other members of the Xantari High Command nodded as the blue light from the hologram reflected off their scales. While their ships reported incoming missiles, primitive nuclear weapons, but in the hundreds, Zorn's blood ran cold. Their briefing said the humans would capitulate to protect their children. Report General Pax barked as Zorn entered the bridge.
They have no planetary shield, no orbital defense grid, and their best weapons still depend on chemical propellants. The seven other members of the Xantari High Command nodded as the blue light from the hologram reflected off their scales. While their ships reported incoming missiles, primitive nuclear weapons, but in the hundreds, Zorn's blood ran cold. Their briefing said the humans would capitulate to protect their children. Report General Pax barked as Zorn entered the bridge.
They have no planetary shield, no orbital defense grid, and their best weapons still depend on chemical propellants. The seven other members of the Xantari High Command nodded as the blue light from the hologram reflected off their scales. While their ships reported incoming missiles, primitive nuclear weapons, but in the hundreds, Zorn's blood ran cold. Their briefing said the humans would capitulate to protect their children. Report General Pax barked as Zorn entered the bridge.
They have no planetary shield, no orbital defense grid, and their best weapons still depend on chemical propellants. The seven other members of the Xantari High Command nodded as the blue light from the hologram reflected off their scales. While their ships reported incoming missiles, primitive nuclear weapons, but in the hundreds, Zorn's blood ran cold. Their briefing said the humans would capitulate to protect their children. Report General Pax barked as Zorn entered the bridge.
They have no planetary shield, no orbital defense grid, and their best weapons still depend on chemical propellants. The seven other members of the Xantari High Command nodded as the blue light from the hologram reflected off their scales. While their ships reported incoming missiles, primitive nuclear weapons, but in the hundreds, Zorn's blood ran cold. Their briefing said the humans would capitulate to protect their children. Report General Pax barked as Zorn entered the bridge.
Their fleets descended on our colonies like a storm, burning cities and declaring to the galaxy that earth would never rise. The retaliation was not slow, it was not cautious, it was brutal, human fleets, scarred but unbroken, launched from the void like hunters unleashed, we did not fight by their rules, we rewrote the rules. Our rail guns shattered their vanted shields, kinetic strikes rained down like meteors, and precision fleets turned their armadas into drifting wrecks. They had prepared speeches of conquest, yet no words left their mouths, the chamber echoed with the weight of their defeat, and then humanity's envoys stepped forward not with fire in his hands, but with a voice that cut deeper than any blade. The universe learned a truth it could never erase, humanity does not forgive, humanity does not forget, and when pushed too far, humanity becomes unstoppable.
The quantum displacement weapons would send every human, every ship, colony, and station into a sealed pocket dimension. Within 90 seconds humanity would be gone, but at the 60 second mark Cran's tactical officer made a strange noise. While the council obsessed over quantum displacement, we were developing something better, quantum transportation, why erase enemies when you can simply leave. Every meeting, every secret message, every deployment you were speaking to us without realizing it. You'll never find us, but we'll be watching every move, every plan, every act of aggression.
And then Lieutenant Maya Rodriguez from Earth stepped into the arena, wearing nothing but standard issue fatigues. And after each victory, the arena displayed the same phrase, Earth doesn't need weapons. Finally, she faced her last opponent, a synthetic warrior from binary prime, a perfect machine with no biological flaws, adaptive armor and flawless combat algorithms. Maya stood alone, calm and unhurt, surrounded by fallen warriors who had all possessed superior weapons and technology. As Maya walked toward the exit, the arena's ancient AI displayed one final message.
For ages, every race had wondered why the great ones, the builders of the jumpgates, the seeders of life across a thousand worlds, the near gods of technology, had simply vanished at their height, the hologram lit up, a predecessor appeared, tall and shining. It flicked with something unmistakable fear, to those who come after, the voice began, know this, we, the ones you call predecessors, did not ascend, we did not evolve into higher beings, we ran, the scientists in the chamber looked at one another, uneasy, we mastered genetics, we created life itself. Across the galaxy we built species for roles in our grand design, the vorhands were warriors, the alterians, diplomats, there's a prony artist, each was made with precision, and then, we created humanity. Zura felt her twin hearts stutter, we designed them to endure anything, we took the primates of earth and reshaped them, we gave them adaptive intelligence, sharp pattern recognition, unmatched endurance for the hunt, a rapid healing factor, an immune system built for war, and the strange gift of bonding with nearly any other creature, they were to be the perfect settlers, pioneers meant to tame the deadliest worlds before our arrival, and we succeeded, too well, the image shifted to earth, oceans and continents glimmering, they spread across their planet in less than 1000 years, they outlasted ice ages we never calculated, they bent savage beasts into loyal allies, they turned plagues into cures, they split the atom centuries before our models predicted they would even harness electricity, and still, none of that is what truly terrified us, the figures seemed to hesitate, as if afraid even now, in their year 1347, we returned, one of our own plagues had escaped, what they called the black death, we expected to see them broken, instead, we found them painting, singing, writing, falling in love, even laughing while dying in the millions, that is when we realize what they truly were, every other creation of ours shatters when crushed, humans compress, pressure makes them stronger, they take suffering and forge it into fuel, they weaponize pain, scenes of human history fill the chamber, wars, disasters, pandemics, and every time, humanity rising fiercer than before, we tried to slow them down, we interfered with their progress, we hid certain discoveries, it didn't matter, they made new ones, they built paths we never foresaw, they turned every wall we built into a step forward, the beings crystalline form now trembled, our last test came in the year 1969, we were certain they could never reach their moon with such primitive tools, impossible, but they did it, not with machines beyond imagination, but with determination and calculations done by hand, by hand, that is when we knew, they would come for us one day, and when they did, they would not bow as creations to creators, they would overtake us, they would become what we only pretended to be true, masters of reality, the image dimmed, the voice dropping lower, so we left, all of us, we abandoned this galaxy, we flayed into dimensions where physics itself would resist them, where no amount of stubborn will could bend reality, we did not vanish in glory, we did not transcend, we ran, because we were afraid, and you, should be afraid too, humanity cannot be stopped, only slowed, they will fall a thousand times, and rise a thousand one, they will take the impossible and make it ordinary, they will stare at the rules of the universe and say, but what if we try anyway, we were gods once, and we ran from our own creation, run, if you are wise, the recording ended, the vault fell silent, none of the scientists moved, at last Dr. Zura spoke in a whisper, the humans must never know, every head knotted in agreement, three systems away, a human colony ship drifted toward a planet labeled uninhabitable, on the bridge, the captain looked at the reports and shrugged, will make it work, we always do,.
Tarl's scales shimmered faintly blue as he tilted his head in a shrug. Yet these humans, barely out of their infancy, had only managed a few small colonies on nearby worlds. Director Jarvis, I rumbled, lowering my tone so as not to startle him. We don't leave our people, Jarvis said coldly. His skin darkened from vacuum exposure, one arm twisted and broken his chest still.
Tarl's scales shimmered faintly blue as he tilted his head in a shrug. Yet these humans, barely out of their infancy, had only managed a few small colonies on nearby worlds. Director Jarvis, I rumbled, lowering my tone so as not to startle him. We don't leave our people, Jarvis said coldly. His skin darkened from vacuum exposure, one arm twisted and broken his chest still.
Tarl's scales shimmered faintly blue as he tilted his head in a shrug. Yet these humans, barely out of their infancy, had only managed a few small colonies on nearby worlds. Director Jarvis, I rumbled, lowering my tone so as not to startle him. We don't leave our people, Jarvis said coldly. His skin darkened from vacuum exposure, one arm twisted and broken his chest still.
Tarl's scales shimmered faintly blue as he tilted his head in a shrug. Yet these humans, barely out of their infancy, had only managed a few small colonies on nearby worlds. Director Jarvis, I rumbled, lowering my tone so as not to startle him. We don't leave our people, Jarvis said coldly. His skin darkened from vacuum exposure, one arm twisted and broken his chest still.
Tarl's scales shimmered faintly blue as he tilted his head in a shrug. Yet these humans, barely out of their infancy, had only managed a few small colonies on nearby worlds. Director Jarvis, I rumbled, lowering my tone so as not to startle him. We don't leave our people, Jarvis said coldly. His skin darkened from vacuum exposure, one arm twisted and broken his chest still.
They showed us their towering fleets, their ancient empires, their endless armies, and they told earth we had no place among the stars. Humanity, they said, was too fragile, too divided, too young. So when their fleets descended, humanity did not surrender. Civilian satellites turned into weapons, and soldiers who had nothing left to lose showed the galaxy what it meant to stand as human. For every fleet they sent, more wreckage drifted back, and when the dust settled, history wrote a lesson the galaxy would never forget.
loading
Comments