Luminisculptus Chromagloria, named for its sculpted light and vibrant color, is a bioluminescent fungus with funnel-shaped caps and strongly ridged gills ranging from iridescent magenta to bright orange-yellow, offset by cream, robust, slightly branched, finely reticulated stipes. Fruiting bodies reach 10 cm, exhibiting phototropic growth in tropical forests. Bioluminescence in the blue-green spectrum (420-490 nm), produced by a luciferin-luciferase reaction along gill edges and cap margins, aids spore dispersal. Found on moist decaying leaf litter and wood, it plays a saprotrophic role in organic matter recycling. Taxonomically within Noctiluminous Auroranova (Agaricales), spores eject forcibly from basidia for wind dispersal. Its mycelium efficiently decomposes lignin and cellulose, sustaining forest nutrient cycles, exemplifying fungal adaptation in tropical ecosystems.