They Built a "Doping Olympics" for $1.2 Billion — Then Clean Athletes Swept the Podium
The Enhanced Games, staged on May 24, 2026, at Resorts World in Las Vegas, made history as the world's first large-scale sporting event to officially permit performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) across all disciplines, attracting global scrutiny from athletes, medical experts, regulators, and investors. Forty-two competitors from 24 nations raced, swam, and lifted across three sports under a framework where 91% of athletes reported testosterone use and 79% reported human growth hormone (HGH) use, making PED consumption effectively the default participation standard rather than an exception. In a paradox that struck at the heart of the event's founding logic, drug-free clean athletes won three of the six contested events — including Fred Kerley's blistering 9.97-second 100m and Tristan Evelyn's women's sprint gold — directly contradicting the premise that PEDs deliver decisive competitive advantages. The sole world record claimed, Kristian Gkolomeev's 50m freestyle time of 20.81 seconds, was immediately contested due to a FINA-banned polyurethane suit and credible timing system irregularities, leaving the event with zero internationally recognized records. Enhanced Group, the SPAC-backed NYSE-listed company valued at $1.2 billion with backing from Peter Thiel and Donald Trump Jr., found its own showcase event inadvertently becoming the most compelling argument yet for the anti-doping movement it sought to displace.