Rapid‐acting, convenient, and broadly applicable medical materials are in high demand for the treatment of extensive and intricate tissue injuries in extremely medical scarcity environment, such as battlefields, wilderness, and traffic accidents. Conventional biomaterials fail to meet all the high criteria simultaneously for emergency management. Here, we have designed a multifunctional hydrogel system capable of rapid gelation and in situ spraying, addressing clinical challenges related to hemostasis, barrier establishment, support, and subsequent therapeutic treatment of irregular, complex and urgent injured tissues. This hydrogel can be fast formed in less than 0.5‐second under ultraviolet initiation. The precursor maintains an impressively low viscosity of 0.018 Pa·s, while the hydrogel demonstrates a storage modulus of 0.65 MPa, achieving the delicate balance between sprayable fluidity and the mechanical strength requirements in practice, allowing flexible customization of the hydrogel system for differentiated handling and treatment of various tissues. Notably, the interactions between the component of this hydrogel and the cell surface protein confer upon its inherently bioactive functionalities such as osteogenesis, anti‐inflammation, and angiogenesis. This research endeavored to provide new insights and designs into emergency management and complex tissue injuries treatment.This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved