Multiverse Core Flat World «360p 2027»
While most universes are conceived as spheres (expanding bubbles) or branes (membranes floating in a bulk space), the MCFW posits a singular, absolute, two-dimensional plane at the exact centroid of the multiversal manifold. It is the one point where all probabilities collapse into a single, shared now . It is the flat earth at the center of everything—not as a primitive belief, but as a terrifying topological fact. 2.1 The Infinite Plane Unlike the closed, finite surface of a planet, the Core is an Euclidean Plane of infinite extent. It has no curvature, no horizon, no edge. If you walk in any direction, you will walk forever without returning to your origin. However, "forever" is deceptive here, because the Core does not obey standard temporal metrics. 2.2 The Perpendicular Realities Imagine a spinning wheel. The axle is the Core. The spokes are Universe Strands —one-dimensional threads of causality that extend orthogonally (straight up and down) from the plane. Each "universe" in the multiverse is not a sphere, but a fiber —a line of dimensional depth (3D space + time) that projects outward from a specific coordinate on the Core.
In the end, all roads lead to flat.
I. Introduction: The Heresy of the Hub In the sprawling infinitude of the multiverse—where bubble universes froth in a quantum foam, each with its own constants of physics—there exists a theoretical anomaly so radical that most cosmologists dismiss it as a mathematical ghost. This is the Multiverse Core Flat World (MCFW). It is not a planet. It is not a dimension. It is the linchpin . multiverse core flat world
Mathematically, the Core has no edge. But topologically, it is bounded by the —a region where the Z-axis universes become so sparse that the concept of "up" loses meaning. Beyond the Null Perimeter lies the Bulk , the un-rendered void where not even mathematics exists. To approach the Null Perimeter is to feel your own dimensionality dissolve. Your height becomes a suggestion. Your past becomes a rumor. While most universes are conceived as spheres (expanding