Dozens of athletes on performance-enhancing drugs competed in the Enhanced Games. Organizers hope it'll sell a lot of peptides and other supplements.
British swimmer Emily Barclay had never competed in a major international event. In Vegas, she beat her personal best in the 100-meter freestyle by two seconds. Saeed Rahbaran
Testosterone. Methenolone. Nandrolone. Human growth hormone and EPO. Meldonium, modafinil, and mixed amphetamine salts. Clomiphene, anastrozole, levothyroxine, and liothyronine. Patches and capsules, creams and pills. A whole galaxy of steroids, metabolic modulators, and synthetic hormones coursing through the blood of a few dozen swimmers, sprinters, and weightlifters. And millions of dollars up for grabs for athletes who could break world records and usher in the age of superhumanity.
On Sunday, May 24, at a $50 million arena built in a casino parking lot in Las Vegas, I witnessed a libertarian thought experiment come to life. The inaugural Enhanced Games were the first sporting competition where participants were encouraged to take performance-enhancing drugs. The founders say they’re challenging dated sporting norms and helping to build a world where we can all live better, longer lives. Critics say the event is an embarrassment, that it glamorizes the use of dangerous substances and puts lives at risk.
The open-air venue was compact and decked out in bright blue, with a six-lane, 100-meter track down one side, a four-lane Olympic-length swimming pool down the other, and a weightlifting platform and stage at the front. You could see the golden façade of the Trump Hotel looming in the background. The scene had all the trappings of an NFL game, with the too-loud music and crowd work on the big screen—a “flex cam” gave the well-muscled an excuse to unveil their biceps. Between events, adverts flashed up for the line of performance products sold by Enhanced, the company behind the event: injectable peptides that supposedly support cellular energy and skin elasticity, daily supplement powders with names like “Stronger” and “Longer.”
SAEED RAHBARAN
SAEED RAHBARAN
Australian swimmer James Magnussen was the first athlete to sign up with Enhanced but hasn't broken any world records. He finished last in his two events in Las Vegas.
The day started with the weightlifters, under the blazing sun. But by 4 p.m., only one of them had even attempted a world-record lift. Two had pulled out injured. Some athletes were competing without taking drugs because of the money on offer, and as the competition went on, they had the better of their enhanced peers: Hunter Amstrong, a 25-year-old American swimmer and triple Olympic medalist, won the backstroke by more than a second. In the men’s 100-meter sprint, the non-enhanced US athlete Fred Kerley romped to an easy victory. “Man, they gotta do better than that,” he said of his doped opponents in his post-race interview. “They need to train a little harder, get on that shit a little bit more.”
At the bar, bodybuilders swapped before-and-after pictures and talked about their stacks, and VCs and finance bros traded LinkedIn details. Lukas Lakutsin, a 6-foot-10, 354-pound Russian bodybuilder who was milling around the entrance to the VIP suites, initially told me he didn’t use any performance-enhancing drugs. Except testosterone replacement therapy, of course. But he didn’t think that really counted. “I’m almost 34 years old,” he said. “I need to do this to stay strong.”
The "protocol" for Enhanced athletes only includes FDA-approved drugs. While Enhanced’s team might make recommendations, individuals have the final say on what they want to take, if anything. SAEED RAHBARAN
Jeremy Sigal, an influencer and author, wore a USA tank top that showed off hugely muscled arms adorned with prison tattoos. He told me he was proudly natural, in both his health and his personal life. “I’ve got an exceptional credit score,” he said. He has written 12 books on marketing and leadership. Later, I looked up his most recent book online. It’s called Simp to Pimp: 10 Steps to Fix Why She’s Not Banging You and lists AI as a coauthor.
What I saw in Las Vegas probably wasn’t the future of sport. But it was a perfect encapsulation of our present moment, as Silicon Valley biohackers, alt-right looksmaxxers, Make America Healthy Again boosters, and longevity-obsessed scientists all vie to remake reality in their own image. For them, the Enhanced Games offered a glimpse of a future where medical advances push the human race to new heights, and where they never have to get old.
I’ve tracked Enhanced’s journey from a crazy idea scribbled on a napkin to a public company valued at $1.2 billion. Behind the scenes, there have been power struggles, life-changing victories, and moments of total farce. As I recently, finally, watched the games unfold, two questions bounced around my head: Were they right? And what does that mean for the rest of us?
In December 2022, the Australian en…
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TechCrunchParty-alignedCenter10 days ago Why Andrew Yang is building instead of waiting for WashingtonThe article discusses Andrew Yang's 2020 presidential campaign, which focused on concerns about automation and AI impacting the labor market and wealth distribution. It highlights Yang's current work with his startup Noble Mobile, which aims to pay users to reduce their phone usage as a way to counteract the 'attention economy.' The piece is part of a podcast interview with Yang on TechCrunch's Equity podcast.
Bias read (Center): The article presents Andrew Yang's views and initiatives without overtly favoring one political side. It frames his work with Noble Mobile as a response to broader economic and technological trends, rather than taking a stance on policy debates. The tone remains neutral, focusing on Yang's business-
MIT Technology ReviewIndependentCenter11 days ago The Download: the “steroid olympics” and a safer MythosThe article discusses the 'Enhanced Games,' a sporting event where athletes used performance-enhancing drugs, exploring the implications of such advancements on society and human limits. It also touches on the current debate surrounding AI's impact on employment, noting that there is limited evidence of significant disruption to the labor market.
Bias read (Center): The article presents information without overtly favoring any political perspective. It reports on technological developments and their societal implications in a balanced manner, avoiding loaded language or one-sided sourcing.
Official sources cited
- organisation MIT Technology Review Narrated: a reality check on the AI jobs hysteria
MIT Technology ReviewIndependentCenter11 days ago The “steroid olympics” were a circus—and a window into our cultureThe article describes the Enhanced Games, a sporting event held in Las Vegas where athletes are encouraged to use performance-enhancing drugs. It highlights the variety of substances used, such as testosterone, human growth hormone, and others, and discusses both the organizers' goals—challenging traditional sports norms and promoting advancements in human health—and critics' concerns about the dangers and ethical issues involved.
Bias read (Center): The article presents both the perspective of the organizers, who view the event as a progressive challenge to outdated sports norms, and critics who argue it promotes dangerous behavior. There is no overtly biased language, one-sided sourcing, or editorializing that favors one side over the other.