METAPHYSICAL COSMIC HORROR SPACE OPERA
Space Ordiman is an expansive post-apocalyptic Space Opera universe that examines humanity’s extinction not as a single event, but as a repeating process embedded within a far greater simulation. Blending science fiction, cosmic horror, metaphysics, and temporal theory, the saga unfolds across multiple timelines where past, present, and future bleed into one another.
In the year 2030, Earth is overtaken by an event later named The Great Reset. Humanity is not destroyed through physical annihilation, but through an incursion of entities from the Umbral Underworld, a realm that exists beneath material reality and beyond human perception. These entities collapse civilization by destabilizing consciousness itself, leaving the physical world intact but spiritually abandoned.
Billions of humans become disembodied consciousnesses, trapped in a fractured mental state, believing they are still alive while wandering a ruined Earth. Time loses coherence. Death goes unrecognized. Humanity continues to exist—unaware that it has already ended.
From within this chaos emerges Ordiman, presenting himself as a savior capable of restoring order. His offer of help conceals a vast deception. Ordiman constructs a planetary-scale mental simulation, imprisoning human consciousness for the next one thousand years. Within this artificial continuity, history appears to move forward, while humanity remains isolated from true reality.
Centuries later, higher-layer civilizations—intelligences operating beyond space, time, and physical dimensions—detect humanity’s presence within the mental plane. Their first attempt at intervention involves embedding warnings directly into the simulation through visions, anomalies, and internal signals. These efforts fail. The simulation adapts, suppresses awareness, and maintains control.
As a last resort, these civilizations complete a long-abandoned project: a temporal message transmission system capable of sending information into the past. In the year 3030, the system becomes operational. Messages are sent backward through time, reaching Earth as early as 2009, carrying fragmented warnings about The Great Reset, Ordiman, and the impending collapse of human consciousness.
These transmissions do not reach humanity as a whole. They are intercepted by a small number of individuals, who begin to recognize recurring patterns, symbols, and temporal inconsistencies. These individuals eventually form—or rediscover—a secretive and ancient order known as Ordo Lux.
Ordo Lux is a millennia-old organization dedicated to preserving human awareness and resisting non-physical domination. Upon decoding the messages from 3030, the Order concludes that 2030 marks a critical convergence point. From the shadows, Ordo Lux works to alter timelines, influence culture, seed knowledge, and prevent The Great Reset from occurring.
By 2025, humanity stands divided—not by nations, but by perception.
Some believe the present moment represents the final opportunity to prevent the catastrophe, that the timeline remains flexible and that Ordo Lux’s actions can still succeed.
Others believe the truth is far darker: that this has already happened—not once, but many times. According to this belief, 2009, 2030, and 3030 are not separate points in time, but repeating anchors within a looping system. Humanity may be trapped inside a larger, higher-order simulation, reliving variations of the same cycle endlessly, each attempt to prevent the Reset becoming part of the simulation’s self-correction.
Within this uncertainty, one question becomes unavoidable:
Is humanity approaching the end—or awakening in the middle of an infinite loop?
Space Ordiman explores consciousness as a recursive prison, time as a manipulated construct, and resistance as an act of perception rather than force. It challenges the reader to question whether changing the future is possible—or whether awareness itself is the only true escape.
This is not a story about stopping the apocalypse.
It is a story about discovering that the apocalypse may be the system itself.
Within this growing current of thought, disagreement becomes inevitable.
Some within Ordo Lux and among the awakened believe that all of reality is nothing more than a simulation layered upon simulations, a construct designed to test, harvest, or stabilize consciousness. In this view, The Great Reset is not a failure of humanity, but a reset mechanism—a necessary correction whenever awareness reaches a dangerous threshold. If this is true, then attempting to stop the Reset may only reinforce the system itself, triggering another loop.
Others reject the simulation hypothesis entirely. They argue that what humanity is experiencing is a quantum anomaly, a rupture caused by interference between timelines, higher-dimensional observers, and non-physical entities. According to this belief, reality is not fake—but damaged. The Umbral incursion, Ordiman’s consciousness trap, and the temporal messages from 3030 are side effects of a deeper imbalance in the quantum plane. If left uncorrected, the anomaly will propagate, collapsing not just Earth, but multiple layers of reality.
These opposing interpretations fracture Ordo Lux from within.
If reality is a simulation, then the solution is awakening: breaking belief structures, destabilizing false continuity, and teaching humanity to recognize the prison rather than fight it.
If reality is an anomaly, then the solution is intervention: preventing key convergence points, disrupting Ordiman’s influence, and sealing the Umbral breach before 2030 occurs.
And so the question becomes unavoidable:
How does one fight an enemy that may not exist in physical form?
How do you stop an apocalypse that may be a rule of reality itself?
The answer, according to the oldest Ordo Lux records, does not lie in weapons, armies, or technology alone—but in conscious alignment.
The messages from 3030 hint at a method long forgotten: the synchronization of human perception across time. Certain individuals—referred to in the Order’s archives as Anchors—possess the rare ability to resonate simultaneously with multiple temporal states. When enough Anchors awaken, probability itself begins to bend. Events lose inevitability. Fixed outcomes become negotiable.
Ordo Lux begins searching for these individuals, embedding symbols, narratives, and signals into culture, art, science, and information networks. Not to control humanity—but to wake it slowly, without triggering the system’s defensive response.
By 2025, the operation reaches its most dangerous phase.
Every attempt to spread awareness risks detection.
Every act of resistance may already be predicted.
And every warning could be part of the loop itself.
Humanity now stands at the edge of a paradox:
To prevent The Great Reset, it must act.
But acting may be exactly what ensures it happens.
Whether the truth is simulation, quantum anomaly, or something far older and more intelligent than either, one fact becomes clear:
The final battle of Space Ordiman will not be fought in space, nor in time—but in perception.
And the outcome depends on whether humanity can recognize the moment it has already lived…
and choose, for the first time, to respond differently.