Someone sat down and mapped out everything that's going to happen.
Not guessing. Not science fiction. Projections — built from current trends, climate modeling, Moore's Law, the latest medical research, and geopolitical analysis — assembled into a single scrollable timeline that runs from right now to the year 9999.
The near future is sobering and fascinating in equal measure. Climate milestones. Technological thresholds. Medical breakthroughs with projected dates. AI development curves. Population peaks. The timeline moves decade by decade through the 21st century with the specificity of someone who has actually done the research.
Then it keeps going.
The 22nd century brings diverging paths for humans and transhumans. Eco-technic societies. The acceleration of space colonization. Things that sound like fiction but are presented as the logical extrapolation of trends already underway.
The far future — and this is where the site becomes something else entirely — describes post-biological humanity spreading through the galaxy, transforming dead worlds into computational substrates. It goes to 3000. To 9999. Beyond.
This isn't a doomsday site. It's not utopian either. It's a serious attempt to answer the question nobody wants to sit with for very long: what actually happens next?
Clear your afternoon. Start at 2030 and see how far you get.


