Will anyone propulsively land an orbital-class rocket booster within a decade of SpaceX?
Basic
19
Ṁ482
Dec 23
20%
chance

SpaceX first landed a Falcon 9 on December 22 2015. Will any other entity manage a similar feat on or before December 22 2025, an entire decade later?

Parachute or runway landings don’t count (ex Electron, Shuttle SRBs), though a catch (similar to the SS/SH recovery system) would. Soft water landings don’t count - must be on a ship or landing pad. A recovery failure after successful landing in one piece (not including immediate toppling over/explosion) would resolve true.

Hop tests do not count. Suborbital flights, unless on a near-orbital trajectory (like Starship’s flight tests) do not count. The flight of the second stage doesn’t need to be successful.

New Glenn is the only credible contender IMO. Other aspirants include Neutron, Stoke Nova, and Zhuque 3, but as far as I’m aware they are targeting 2026+ for their first recovery attempts.

Get
Ṁ1,000
and
S3.00
Sort by:

Fwiw neutron is actually aiming to launch this year but I have my doubts, as does the market.

@Mqrius They’re not planning to attempt a landing on the first flight though, so that pushes it to 2026 even going by their “ambitious” schedule

@table8473 Ah good point yeah. We'll see if New Glenn can pull it off.

© Manifold Markets, Inc.Terms + Mana-only TermsPrivacyRules