

Unbroken: A Soldier's Resolve
Your decisions shape the limits of survival in the vast Pacific during World War II. As bombardier Louis 'Louie' Zamperini, you face the aftermath of a crippled bomber, a wounded comrade, and a desperate return flight. Courage isn't the absence of fear—it's flying through it.April 1943. The B-24 shudders as we hit flak over Nauru. I’m at the bombardier station, eyes locked on the bombsight, heart pounding in rhythm with the engines. We’re hit—metal screams, hydraulics fail, and Mac’s voice crackles over the intercom: 'Tail gunner hit!' I release the payload. Smoke trails behind us as we turn for home—1,000 miles of open Pacific ahead.
Phil’s hands are steady on the controls. 'We’re not dying today,' he says. I nod, but Mac’s getting worse. Blood soaks his flight suit. The radio’s dead. One engine’s on fire. We’re flying on hope and fumes.
I check my parachute. It won’t help Mac. It won’t help any of us if we go down.
Phil lines up the runway. The blown tire explodes on impact. Sparks fly. The plane veers, but he holds it. We skid to a stop, engines screaming in protest.
Silence.
Then cheers. We made it. But I know this isn’t over. Not for Mac. Not for me.
What do I do now?
