The Olympic Games have had two incarnations: the Ancient Greek Olympics and the Modern Olympic Games. But a third evolution is looming — one where athletes will be compensated fairly, sponsored by brands, and juiced up with performance-enhancing substances by scientists striving to create “superhuman” competitors.
“We’re reinventing the Olympics for the 21st century, for an era of science and technology, where we can push human achievement and boundaries,” Dr. Aron D’Souza, the president of the Enhanced Games, told GearJunkie. “I don’t think of this as a company or as a business. I think of this as a social, political, and scientific movement that will inevitably lead to superhumanity.”
Since the 1968 Games in Grenoble, France, Olympic athletes have been tested for both performance-enhancing drugs like anabolic-androgenic steroids as well as illegal narcotics. It has become the global standard in all competitive sports to regulate drug use strictly.

In contrast, the Enhanced Games will allow athletes to use any drug or substance they want. Athletes will surround themselves with a team of their own choosing, including scientists, physical therapists, trainers, medical advisors, and more. Their health will be closely monitored. Their performance metrics will be closely tracked, and they’ll be free to test their limits and those of the human body.
However, not everyone fully supports this experimental endeavor. Some critics believe that this event will glorify drug use and endanger the athletes. They argue that there are serious risks in both the short-term and long-term when it comes to using performance-enhancing drugs, and that this format of competition could seriously limit both athletes’ physical and career potential.
D’Souza isn’t phased by the doubters, though. In fact, he sees them as a major inhibitor to human potential and scientific progress in this field.
“Why shouldn’t we have the opportunity to overcome our biological limits and become extraordinary?” D’Souza said. “So much scientific progress has been held back by a bunch of sports bureaucrats.”
Enhanced Games: Every Year, No Nations
D’Souza is a serial entrepreneur, author, attorney, and Ph.D. who sees other big problems with the Modern Olympic Games — problems that he plans to fix. First and foremost, he said, the Enhanced Games will be held annually instead of every 4 years. That will provide more opportunities for engagement, a more consistent stage for athletes to compete on, and more opportunities to monetize the games.
Second, athletes will not be there to represent nations but to represent themselves. D’Souza likened it to tennis or Formula 1 racing, where athletes compete as individuals instead of state-sponsored competitors.

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