The comprehensive study of all dimensions simultaneously—3D, 4D, 5D, up to N-D—treating them not as separate frameworks but as aspects of a single multidimensional reality. This field asks: how do physical laws transform as you move through dimensions? What patterns repeat across dimensional levels? And why does the 7th dimension seem to have a sense of humor about everything? Multidimensional sciences attempt to develop a unified theory of everything, everywhere, all at once, which is either the most ambitious scientific project in history or the most elaborate way to avoid cleaning your apartment ever devised.
Multidimensional Sciences Example: "He got a PhD in multidimensional sciences and now claims to understand reality across all dimensions. When asked what happens after death, he says 'it depends which dimension you're asking about.' When asked what's for dinner, he says the same thing. His family has learned to just order pizza and let him contemplate the multidimensional nature of pepperoni."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 15, 2026
Get the Multidimensional Sciences mug.The branch of physics describing how objects move through all dimensions simultaneously, accounting for the fact that every object exists not just in 3D space but across the entire dimensional spectrum. In multidimensional mechanics, your position isn't a point—it's a vector with components in every dimension, most of which you can't perceive. Your movement through 3D space is just the visible projection of a much more complex multidimensional trajectory. This explains why you sometimes feel like you're going in circles even when you're walking straight—your multidimensional vector is looping through higher dimensions while your 3D projection plods along.
Example: "She tracked her multidimensional mechanics through a typical day. In 3D, she went from bed to kitchen to office. In 4D, she was also moving through time, aging slightly. In 5D, she was branching into probability spaces where she'd made different choices. In 6D, she was apparently visiting a beach. She had no memory of the beach, but her multidimensional coordinates showed she'd been there. She decided not to question it."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 15, 2026
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Devices and systems designed to operate across multiple dimensions simultaneously, allowing users to perceive, interact with, or manipulate realities beyond their native dimensional framework. These technologies include "dimensional telescopes" that can see into higher dimensions (they show static, but impressive static), "multidimensional communication devices" that let you talk to your other-dimensional selves (they mostly just echo), and the popular "dimensional blender" that supposedly mixes realities together (it just makes smoothies, but they're very philosophical smoothies). The challenge of multidimensional technology is that it must interface with dimensions that have different physical laws, different sensory modalities, and possibly different concepts of what "technology" even means.
Multidimensional Technologies Example: "He bought a multidimensional technology headset that promised to let him see in 4D. When he put it on, he saw his room, but also all the rooms he'd ever lived in, superimposed, plus a kitchen that might have been his future kitchen or might have been a dimensional error. He took it off, confused. The headset's manual said 'integration may take time.' He's been 'integrating' for three years and still can't find his keys."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 15, 2026
Get the Multidimensional Technologies mug.The practice of designing and constructing systems that function across multiple dimensions simultaneously, ensuring that your bridge stands not just in 3D but in 4D (through time), 5D (across probability branches), and up to N-D (wherever). Multidimensional engineers must account for the fact that materials have different properties in different dimensions, loads propagate through dimensional interfaces, and structural failure in one dimension can cascade through others. It's engineering on hard mode, where the building codes haven't been written yet and the inspectors exist in dimensions you can't reach. Despite these challenges, multidimensional engineering has produced some remarkable structures—most of which exist in dimensions we can't see, which is either genius or useless, depending on your perspective.
Multidimensional Engineering *Example: "She was a multidimensional engineer who designed a house that existed in 3D, 4D, and 5D simultaneously. In 3D, it was a modest bungalow. In 4D, it was a time-spanning structure that included its own past and future versions. In 5D, it branched into every possible renovation she might ever consider. The house was theoretically perfect. Practically, she still had a leaky faucet in this dimension, and the plumber couldn't access the 5D branch where it was already fixed."*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 15, 2026
Get the Multidimensional Engineering mug.The extension of relativity to the multiverse, where not just space, time, probability, and initial conditions are relative to the observer, but the entire universe—or multiverse—is relative to the observer's position in the cosmic landscape. In multiverse relativity, different observers in different universes experience different physical laws, different constants, different realities entirely, and all are equally valid from their frames. This theory explains why our universe seems fine-tuned for life: we're in a universe where life is possible because we couldn't exist in the others. It's not that the universe was designed for us; it's that we're in the universe that fits us. Multiverse relativity is the physics of cosmic perspective: our universe is one among infinite, special only to us.
Example: "She contemplated multiverse relativity while stargazing: somewhere, in another universe, the stars were different colors, physics was different, life was different. Her universe, with its particular laws and constants, was just one slice of an infinite multiversal cake. She felt simultaneously insignificant (one universe among infinite) and precious (the only one she'd ever inhabit). The feeling was familiar: it was called being alive."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
Get the Multiverse Relativity mug.The integration of quantum mechanics with the multiverse, treating quantum phenomena as interactions across different universes within the multiverse. In this framework—closely related to the many-worlds interpretation—superposition is not a single particle in multiple states but multiple universes diverging, each with the particle in one state. Entanglement is not spooky action at a distance but connections across universes. Measurement is not collapse but branching—the universe splitting into copies, each with a different outcome. Multiverse quantum mechanics explains why quantum phenomena seem probabilistic: we only experience one branch, but all branches exist. The theory is elegant, deterministic, and ontologically extravagant—it solves the measurement problem by multiplying universes.
Example: "He explained multiverse quantum mechanics to his cat, who was both alive and dead in different branches. 'In this branch, you're getting treats. In another, you're napping. In another, you're plotting my demise. All are real.' The cat, in this branch, wanted treats. The theory was confirmed."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
Get the Multiverse Quantum Mechanics mug.The branch of physics describing how objects move and interact across the multiverse—how they navigate between universes, how they maintain identity across branches, how they respond to the multiversal landscape. In multiverse mechanics, motion is not just through space and time but through the space of possible universes. Objects can have trajectories that take them through different realities, different physical laws, different dimensions. This mechanics is purely theoretical—we have no evidence of actual inter-universe travel—but it's mathematically coherent and conceptually thrilling. Multiverse mechanics is the physics of "what if we could move between realities?"—a question that has haunted dreamers forever.
Example: "He dreamed of multiverse mechanics, imagining a device that could shift him to a universe where he'd made better choices. In that universe, he was rich, successful, happy. In this one, he was eating cereal at 2 AM, watching the same show for the third time. The mechanics were clear; the implementation was not. He finished his cereal and went to bed, where other universes waited in dreams."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
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