Battle Royale: Survival Program
Prolouge
By Lain Cris
Boys:
1. Travis Hughes
2. Wesley Kyle
3. Marvin Garcia
4. Josh Ayres
5. Trey Gilligan
6. Charles Lawson
7. Todd Taylor
8. Kenny Tyson
9. David Radcliffe
10. Victor Osmond
11. Jake Martella
12. Martin Xavier Pendable
13. DeVonte James Pratt
14. Jason Smith
15. Matthew Cook
16. Adam Kim
17. Ethan Quint
19. Robert Jonas
20. DeAndre LaMarr
21. Seymour Graves
22. Johnny Bruce
23. James DeSenna
24. Jack Snyder
25. Stuart Van Driesen
Girls:
1. Melody Leigh
2. Caitlynn Morris
3. Katie Raymond
4. LeShawna Smith
5. Monica Gray
6. Stephanie Clarke
7. Melissa Sebastian
8. Samantha Chi Wei
9. Kari Parkinson
10. Katherine Higgins
11. Ashley Terrance
12. Alyson Dredd
13. Miranda Blaize
14. Tiffany Johnson
15. Rebecca Liefeld
16. Amanda Granger
17. Terra Mars
18. Claire Myres
19. Victoria Dawes
20. Colleen Shay
21. Lucy Swaille
22. Marcy LeMarche
23. Winry Glass
24. Amy Dawson
25. Brittany Akiyama
Eliminators:
1. Jackson Gibson
2. Thomas Lincoln
3. Elias Emerich
DATA LOG: OCTOBER 31, 2009.
Since 1947, the Republic of Greater East Asia (once known as Japan) has been holding a death match known as the Millennium Reform Act, also known as the Battle Royale Survival Program or the BR act. Up to 42 students would be taken to an isolated area, usually an island, to fight to the death. There have been several purposes for this. Two of the main reasons was to controll the youth of the country and to bring fear to the country to prevent a rebellion. However, contrary to popular belief, there was no reality show involved.
The students are supplied with weapons, whether they be something useful like an AK-47, or something useless like a pot-lid. To prevent trace the students, they are forced to wear collars that would explode if the student either enters a danger zone or attempts to force it off. The time limit is usually 72 hours. If more than one is left standing, everyone dies. That's the main gist.
However, the program failed not once, but twice. The first happened in 2000, where a class from Shiroiwa Junior High School was sent to an island village. The official winner was Shogo Kawada, a previous program survivor. However, he had managed to disable the collars of Shuya Nanahara and Noriko Nakagawa, and Kitano, the supervisor of the program, was shot and killed. After Nanahara and Nakagawa escaped, Kawada appeared to have died from his gunshot wounds.
While Noriko Nakagawa hasn't been seen since then, Shuya Nanahara went on to lead "The Wild Seven," an anti-BR Act terrorist group comprised of previous program survivors. Three years after the incident, a new version of the program was, known as BRII, introduced. Instead of killing one-another, the students acted as a team. The school chosen was Shikanotoride Junior High School. After discovering the Wild Seven's location, the students were sent there. After Nanahara discovered that it was students he was fighting, he used a generator to disable the collars. Upon hindsight, it was a pretty stupid move of them to send inexperienced children after him instead of, you know, dropping a bomb on him. You know, the intellegent thing?
With more than half the students killed and the collars disabled, the military was sent to the island. However, Nanahara was never found. He was rumored to have been sighted a few times in Afghanistan, but no leads. There other rumored sightings here in America, along with Takuma Aoi, one of the students involved with the BRII act.
In Summer, 2009, we have recieved bomb threats from the RGEA for unknown reasons. They said, however, that they will call off these threats if we help them in their quest to find Shuya Nanahara. There was only one way to flush him out: the Survival Program.
