The war had spread beyond borders.
From the deserts of the Middle East to the icy waters of the North Atlantic, the conflict escalated into a global military showdown. Major powers deployed fleets, squadrons, and missile systems in a synchronized surge. The seas were filled with aircraft carriers and destroyers; skies swarmed with fighter jets and drones. Submarines lurked beneath, ready to strike at unseen targets.
Cities that had remained neutral suddenly faced air raids, while cyber attacks crippled communication networks across continents. Satellite feeds captured fleets maneuvering in real-time, missiles streaking across oceans, leaving trails of fire like glowing scars on the night sky.

Alliances were tested. Countries that once hesitated now launched coordinated offensives. Air defenses intercepted incoming threats, while radar screens filled with signals too numerous to track. Civilians fled in panic as urban centers turned into battlegrounds.
In Washington, Moscow, Beijing, and other capitals, leaders monitored global movement on holographic maps, making split-second decisions that could ignite the nuclear threshold. The world was no longer fighting in isolated theaters — every strike triggered a chain reaction across multiple continents.

The clash of military might was total.
No ocean was safe. No sky untouched.
Every weapon, from stealth bombers to hypersonic missiles, was in play.
And the planet watched as the war that started as a regional spark became an unstoppable global inferno.
