Competitive sport is about to see a provocative test of decades of anti-doping policy, as a new event built around performance-enhancing drug use begins later this week with the explicit aim of pushing past “clean” benchmarks.
The inaugural Enhanced Games will be staged in Las Vegas, and athletes are being tempted with prize money structured to reward record-breaking performances achieved with chemical assistance.
Even with its permissive premise, the organizers have still introduced guardrails intended to reduce risk for participants—who would otherwise be free to take a wide range of substances that are typically prohibited in conventional competition.
Running across Memorial Day weekend, the first edition will keep the program tight, focusing on a small set of events designed to highlight how far elite performance can be pushed under an openly enhanced model.

With a pro-doping meet now days away, an old bit from Scottish comedian Frankie Boyle has resurfaced as a timely reference point in the debate about what spectators really want to see.
“I want the athletes to take drugs,” he said on British TV in 2008. “I mean, do you want to see someone shave a hundredth of a second off the 100m record, or do you want to see them run it with the legs of a kangaroo and the heart of a leopard?
“I want to see a race where someone goes so fast they disappear midway through, reappear on the other side 80 years older, scream ‘Beware China!’ and crumble into dust.”
The sports selected for the first Enhanced Games lean into raw measurables where marginal gains are easiest to spot: track, swimming, weightlifting, and strongman are all on the schedule for the weekend.
Across those disciplines, seven men’s events and two women’s events are planned. Each contest will feature four professional competitors battling for medals and significant payouts.
On the safety front, athletes are barred from using illegal substances, and any performance-enhancing drugs reportedly must have FDA approval to be permitted.
Even with that limitation, competitors still have ample scope to build intensive enhancement programs that can meaningfully affect speed, strength, recovery, and focus.
Examples discussed around the format include anabolic steroids for power, testosterone to support endurance, and peptides such as human growth hormone for tissue repair and muscle development.
Stimulants and alertness drugs—like Adderall and Modafinil—could also be considered for cognitive and concentration benefits, depending on what is allowed under the event’s ruleset.
The event is the brainchild of Australian businessman Aron D’Souza, with competition running from May 21 through May 24.

Every athlete who takes part is set to receive payment, regardless of finishing position.
Given the costs associated with preparing for such an event—and the potential health implications—guaranteed compensation is being presented as a baseline rather than a bonus.
With dozens of former Olympic-level competitors reportedly enrolled, the prize ladder begins at $50,000 for fourth place, rises to $75,000 for third, and $125,000 for second.
Winning an event pays $250,000.
Beyond standard prize money, the real headline incentive is tied to record-breaking.
The Enhanced Games is offering a $1,000,000 bonus for any world record surpassed. That would put a first-place, record-setting performance at a total payout of $1,250,000.
By comparison, the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee pays $37,500 to a gold medalist.
Only one day of the Enhanced Games is set to be available via online streaming.
Its website states: “The inaugural Enhanced Games emanate live from Las Vegas on Sunday, May 24, signaling a new era of sport on Memorial Day Weekend 2026.
“The one-night spectacle kicks off with the Opening Events at 6:30 p.m. ET / 3:30 p.m. PT on YouTube, Rumble, Twitch and Kick, as weightlifting and swimming athletes target new heights and world records across Snatch, Clean & Jerk and select men’s swim races.”
The event will also be available on Roku Channel, where coverage is listed as starting at 8:30 p.m. ET / 5:30 p.m. PT.

