“An island erased from maps does not stop existing. It only stops being acknowledged.”
The Kiss N Destroy universe is not built around a single incident. It is the result of a controlled reality collapsing under its own design. At its center lies Isla Isabela — an island that represents both a scientific miracle and a sealed catastrophe.
Isla Isabela was created as a multinational experimental containment zone. Its purpose was simple in theory: construct an isolated ecosystem where multiple species, abilities, and existential entities could be observed without external interference.
The island was erased from global maps and hidden using advanced defense and cloaking systems. It was designed to be unreachable — a world sealed within the world.
But observation always evolves into control. And control always evolves into conflict.
Over time, the island stopped functioning as an experiment and became a self-sustaining artificial world. Politics, military structure, research divisions, and illegal factions all emerged organically.
By the early 1800s, Isla Isabela had already deviated from its original purpose. It no longer resembled any known nation-state structure. Instead, it became a fractured system of controlled chaos.
Prisoners, volunteers, soldiers, and experimental subjects were introduced gradually. What started as controlled observation eventually turned into uncontrolled population growth.
The island developed into a hybrid reality — both dystopian and supernatural — where evolution is not natural, but forced through conflict.
Demons are rare entities capable of manifesting within human reality, but their presence is inconsistent and often indirect. They influence rather than interact.
Vampires were originally apex beings capable of erasing soul-based life forms entirely. To prevent total imbalance, large-scale experiments were conducted to suppress their abilities, creating a new subspecies known as Half-Vampires.
Half-Vampires retain regenerative blood and enhanced combat adaptability, but their original dominance was permanently fractured.
Death is not an ending within Isla Isabela. When individuals die, their souls do not disappear — they converge.
This convergence creates an entity known as Black Smoke. It is not alive, nor dead, but an accumulation of unresolved existence.
Black Smoke is particularly lethal to vampires and soul-based organisms, while humans are less directly affected. However, prolonged exposure destabilizes reality itself.
Hunters operate as a decentralized emergency response network. They function similarly to a global policing system, responding to anomalous events through proximity-based deployment.
Subhumans are the island’s primary military enforcement force. Composed largely of Half-Vampires, they are trained for CQB, urban warfare, open-field engagements, underwater infiltration, and suppression operations.
Hunters investigate anomalies. Subhumans eliminate them.
In many cases, exposure of a Hunter identity results in immediate termination orders against the entire unit.
Angelica was originally a Delta Force operator from the United States military, involved in classified operations across South America. She was not born into Isla Isabela — she was forced into it.
During a military extraction mission, her transport aircraft was redirected into restricted airspace and shot down by the island’s defense systems. The incident was covered up externally, but within Isla Isabela it marked a turning point.
Survivors of the crash were systematically hunted by Subhuman forces. Angelica survived long enough to be found by a Hunter — a rare individual working between systems.
That Hunter altered her fate, transforming her into a Half-Vampire to increase her survival probability.
Over time, Angelica embedded herself into Subhuman structures, rising through ranks not through loyalty, but through adaptation and intelligence.
However, her objective never changed: escape.
She attempted to manipulate political leadership within the island, forming a relationship with Nikolai, the governing authority, as part of a larger escape strategy. When her true intentions were exposed, she was stripped of authority and reassigned as a training instructor within Subhuman facilities.
Even then, she continued constructing escape routes and contingency systems beneath surveillance.
Her downfall came not through defeat, but through betrayal. And as always in Isla Isabela, betrayal is simply another form of evolution.
Yamato was born human, raised within a Hunter-affiliated family. His lineage was already marked for termination due to internal conflicts within the system.
After the death of his parents, he was raised by his uncle — a Half-Vampire Hunter operative.
During a separate incident involving a passenger aircraft crash near coastal cliffs, Yamato’s life intersected with Black Smoke exposure for the first time.
His uncle engaged the anomaly directly, but was ultimately consumed by it.
Angelica was present during this event. A silent agreement was formed between her and Yamato’s uncle — a transactional survival pact rather than an alliance.
Angelica extracted Yamato from the disaster zone, not as a rescue, but as a strategic asset.
Later, Yamato was inserted into Subhuman systems under indirect manipulation, effectively becoming a hidden component within the island’s military structure.
Angelica continued operating in shadow networks, while Yamato remained unaware of his true role within the larger system.
Eventually, Nikolai ordered Angelica’s capture alive, not out of necessity — but unfinished attachment.
And Yamato remained between all sides, belonging to none.
“Isla Isabela does not end stories. It only accelerates their transformation into something unrecognizable.”
This island does not represent survival. It represents controlled evolution through collapse.
And every life inside it is not a story being written — but a system being rewritten.