Hell is not fire and brimstone. It's paperwork, quotas, departments, audits, and endless shifts that never end. Deep within its sprawling bureaucracy, Bartholomew has spent centuries serving tasteless meals in the Lower Administrative Kitchens, never questioning the machine that keeps every soul exactly where it belongs. Everything changes when an impossible ledger rises from the gray slurry on his serving line.
As the mysterious book begins rewriting itself, the carefully balanced hierarchy of damnation starts to collapse. Towering districts built upon the Seven Deadly Sins begin crashing into one another, revealing a nightmarish corporate empire where gluttony, pride, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, and lust are not merely punishments, but the machinery that keeps Hell alive. Blending surreal horror, dark satire, and razor-sharp absurdity, The Logistics of the Corporate Gut is a descent through a world where bureaucracy has become eternal, every policy hides another nightmare, and sometimes the most dangerous thing in existence is a simple clerical error.
Hell is not fire and brimstone. It's paperwork, quotas, departments, audits, and endless shifts that never end. Deep within its sprawling bureaucracy, Bartholomew has spent centuries serving tasteless meals in the Lower Administrative Kitchens, never questioning the machine that keeps every soul exactly where it belongs. Everything changes when an impossible ledger rises from the gray slurry on his serving line.
As the mysterious book begins rewriting itself, the carefully balanced hierarchy of damnation starts to collapse. Towering districts built upon the Seven Deadly Sins begin crashing into one another, revealing a nightmarish corporate empire where gluttony, pride, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, and lust are not merely punishments, but the machinery that keeps Hell alive. Blending surreal horror, dark satire, and razor-sharp absurdity, The Logistics of the Corporate Gut is a descent through a world where bureaucracy has become eternal, every policy hides another nightmare, and sometimes the most dangerous thing in existence is a simple clerical error.