A Geometry Dash megacollab hosted by creator MindCap, with its main gimmick being that every input is an orb input. The end of the level features a very unforgiving teleport orb timing that determines whether or not you die during the long "ballpit" section that follows it. As of 1/17/2026, the top player Zoink is attempting to verify it, having achieved an exceptional fluke of 72%, with a previous highest of 43%.
Person 1: I love Orbit; it's such a characteristically MindCap level. What is there not to love about it?
Person 2: Well, I hate Orbit. By the way, I was dropped as a child quite often, and my mother got frequently intoxicated from the habitual consumption of various exceptionally teratogenic Schedule 1 narcotics while I was in the womb
Person 2: Well, I hate Orbit. By the way, I was dropped as a child quite often, and my mother got frequently intoxicated from the habitual consumption of various exceptionally teratogenic Schedule 1 narcotics while I was in the womb
by Wiktionarious January 17, 2026
Get the Orbit mug.The interconnected web of satellites, space stations, and orbital infrastructure that form the backbone of off-world communication, navigation, observation, and logistics. Think of it as the internet, GPS, and air traffic control combined, but stretched across the sphere of space around Earth (and eventually other planets). These networks enable real-time global connectivity, constant Earth monitoring, and the coordination of all space traffic, forming the essential nervous system for a spacefaring civilization.
Orbital Networks Example: SpaceX's Starlink constellation is a nascent Orbital Network for broadband internet. A future advanced network might include navigation sats around Mars (MarGPS), fuel depots in Lagrange points, relay satellites for the Moon's far side, and a chain of monitoring stations tracking space debris—all talking to each other to keep the celestial economy running.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
Get the Orbital Networks mug.The use of autonomous robots, AI, and self-replicating systems to perform industrial tasks in space without continuous human oversight. This is the extension of the factory floor to zero gravity, where robotic arms assemble satellites, AI-driven drones inspect and repair infrastructure, and automated tugboats manage orbital debris. The goal is to create a self-sustaining, scalable industrial presence in Earth orbit and beyond, turning the vacuum of space into a productive workshop run by machines that build, maintain, and even replicate themselves. It's the prerequisite for a post-scarcity space economy.
Orbital Automation *Example: A fully Orbital Automated factory could involve asteroid-mining drones feeding raw materials to 3D printers that manufacture solar power satellites, which are then positioned by autonomous space tugs—all coordinated by an AI overseer, with humans only on Earth monitoring the profit margins.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
Get the Orbital Automation mug.Weapons systems or military platforms stationed in space, designed to prevent hostile actions by an adversary through the threat of overwhelming, rapid, and inescapable retaliation from orbit. This is the ultimate high ground, where a platform could hold kinetic bombardment rods ("Rods from God"), lasers, or surveillance systems. The deterrent power comes from the inability of terrestrial defenses to reliably stop an attack that begins outside the atmosphere and has mere minutes to impact.
Example: In the novel Seveneves, the "Cloud Ark" and its defenders become a de facto Orbital Deterrent against Earth-based aggression. The theoretical system of tungsten telephone-pole-sized rods dropped from orbit to strike with the force of a nuclear weapon—without fallout—is a classic sci-fi example of a terrifyingly clean, fast, and unstoppable deterrent. Orbital Deterrents
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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