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Aether

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  • 12 Total hours

A universe from a single word

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11h 36m 43s logged

What if you could create a universe from your favourite words?

What loads is a universe. Your universe. A galaxy of stars nobody has ever flown through, scattered over nebulae nobody has ever seen, because none of it existed until the moment you pressed Enter. Type a different word and the old one is gone, replaced by another entire cosmos waiting to be explored.

That is Aether.

And here is the part that’s surprising: there are no images in it. None. Not a single texture, model, photo or downloaded file. Every star, every ringed gas giant, every drifting smear of colour is pure maths, generated live from your word. The whole thing is light enough to run on your phone, because there is nothing to load. It is all conjured on the spot.

This is the first build, and you can already travel. You start above a galaxy map, an endless field of stars you can drag and zoom through, drifting over layered clouds of gas. Each star is coloured by its real stellar class, from hot blue-white giants down to dim red dwarfs, and each carries a name. Hover one and it tells you what it is called. Pick one and you warp in, starlines streaking past.

Inside a system, planets swing around their star on live orbits, rocky worlds and banded gas giants, some having rings. Choose one and you fall towards it. It turns slowly under its own sunlight, wrapped in a thin halo of atmosphere, its rings passing in front and behind. A scan panel reads out the world: radius, gravity, surface temperature, atmosphere, the length of its day, its moons, and a line or two of lore about the place.

Then you can leave, and the whole universe is still sitting exactly where you left it.

Every world has an address. Hit share and you get a link holding the seed and your exact position, down to the planet you were staring at. Send it and the other person opens the same cosmos, in the same spot, on the same world. Try a different name, and watch a completely different universe assemble itself.

Next, I am deepening every layer: richer terrain and weather on the planets, binary stars and asteroid belts, more believable names and histories.

What if you could create a universe from your favourite words?

What loads is a universe. Your universe. A galaxy of stars nobody has ever flown through, scattered over nebulae nobody has ever seen, because none of it existed until the moment you pressed Enter. Type a different word and the old one is gone, replaced by another entire cosmos waiting to be explored.

That is Aether.

And here is the part that’s surprising: there are no images in it. None. Not a single texture, model, photo or downloaded file. Every star, every ringed gas giant, every drifting smear of colour is pure maths, generated live from your word. The whole thing is light enough to run on your phone, because there is nothing to load. It is all conjured on the spot.

This is the first build, and you can already travel. You start above a galaxy map, an endless field of stars you can drag and zoom through, drifting over layered clouds of gas. Each star is coloured by its real stellar class, from hot blue-white giants down to dim red dwarfs, and each carries a name. Hover one and it tells you what it is called. Pick one and you warp in, starlines streaking past.

Inside a system, planets swing around their star on live orbits, rocky worlds and banded gas giants, some having rings. Choose one and you fall towards it. It turns slowly under its own sunlight, wrapped in a thin halo of atmosphere, its rings passing in front and behind. A scan panel reads out the world: radius, gravity, surface temperature, atmosphere, the length of its day, its moons, and a line or two of lore about the place.

Then you can leave, and the whole universe is still sitting exactly where you left it.

Every world has an address. Hit share and you get a link holding the seed and your exact position, down to the planet you were staring at. Send it and the other person opens the same cosmos, in the same spot, on the same world. Try a different name, and watch a completely different universe assemble itself.

Next, I am deepening every layer: richer terrain and weather on the planets, binary stars and asteroid belts, more believable names and histories.

Replying to @Kvin

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