Graffiti that says "no pokers'
Locals look on at an anti-dox graffito
May 1, 2012

Adoxipham Declared Most Dangerous Substance in Existence

A new substance has officially been declared the most dangerous drug ever encountered. Its name is Adoxipham. On the streets, they call it dox.

According to a newly released health study conducted over three years by the Letanian College of Physicianship, Adoxipham is in a class of its own. It is not merely addictive—it is ineluctable.

“What makes this drug so dangerous is that the user becomes addicted from just one dose, it is impossible to kick, and it is impossible to overdose on,” said Dr. Hemil Shore, Head of Physicianship at Linsingram College. “Because of these properties, this drug is being spread by force.”

Despite extensive efforts, scientists have been unable to reverse-engineer the compound or determine how it functions. Its origin remains unknown. Some researchers have begun to entertain fringe theories—including the idea that Adoxipham may be laced with magic.

A confidential source inside the Gruenor Contraband Task Force confirmed the medical report and provided additional context on how the drug spreads.

“It’s being injected into victims—usually in slums or refugee zones—by low-level dealers called pokers,” said the GCTF spokesperson. “Because the drug is instantly addictive, these pokers are building the most loyal customer base in history. They don’t need advertising. They just need a needle.”

Though the drug began appearing roughly three years ago, its origin is still a mystery. According to the task force, Adoxipham emerged simultaneously in multiple cities across different nations, with no clear source or distribution hub.

“It was almost like a timed release,” the GCTF source said. “Coordinated. Global.”

Adoxipham’s core properties make it uniquely lethal:

  • Addictive from first dose
  • No known way to break addiction
  • Impossible to overdose
  • Deliberately spread by force

The drug’s effects are disorienting: intense euphoria, dissociation, emotional flattening, and attention failure. But when the high fades, users experience a slow, escalating pain syndrome known as the Slow Burn—a rising internal heat that starts in the chest and radiates outward.

“It’s like your blood is on fire,” one user reported anonymously. “It doesn’t stop unless you shoot up again. That’s why they call it the Burn. And that’s why people do anything to get more.”

In regions hardest hit by the spread of dox, a strange fashion has begun to emerge: thick leather garments, layered clothing, and even improvised armor—not to protect from bullets, but from needles.

This “leather shell” subculture is seen as both protective and symbolic, a desperate attempt to deter would-be pokers from injecting potential victims against their will.

“You don’t wear leather now because it looks good,” said one Clavigan youth in a recent street interview. “You wear it because getting doxed once is all it takes.”

Authorities say there is currently no cure, no treatment, and no end in sight.

The drug is not destroying lives. It’s conscripting them.…

Anika hails from Elward Island, Lothlan and was brought to the Verges in the year AV 10 by Crimson slavers. She escaped and made her way to Everwind City where she panhandled in The Rim and Half District until she had enough to buy a variety of wares, which she hawked on the streets. She did this until she could afford nice clothing and the rest is history.

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