The Compass

Ask your question against the best map of reality we have

A simple tool with a serious engine: the model of reality that won the trial, loaded into an AI that answers you straight.

A glowing golden compass floating in a cosmic field, its needle pointing toward a distant light on the horizon

The Problem

Big questions, bad maps

When life hits hard, you reach for a map.

A near-death experience shakes you. A book promises hidden truths. A grief refuses to make sense. An old teaching (Jesus, the mystics, a modern spiritual bestseller) says something beautiful, and you wonder: is this real, or is it comforting fiction?

Until now you had two options: trust a guru, or trust nobody. The Compass gives you a third option: check the claim against the most accurate model of reality on record.

How It Works

Three steps to a straight answer

1. The map

The Compass carries the full VR-in-Consciousness model as its fixed reference frame: the model that ranked first across 40 fields of evidence, and is described fully in the book.

See the research →

2. Your question

Ask anything: "What does a near-death experience mean?" "Why did I lose someone before their time?" "Is this teaching aligned with reality, or just poetry?"

3. The reading

An AI answers your question through that map, in plain language, with the reasoning shown. No riddles. No gatekeepers.

You don't need a priest, a therapist, a PhD, or special training to use it. If you can type a question, you can navigate by the Compass.

The highest-resolution map of reality, in everyone's pocket.

The Compass does not replace your own judgment. It gives you the most accurate reference point we have, and shows its working, so you can disagree intelligently.

Status

Opening after the book launch

The Compass opens to the public once the book and the full research data are published: the map must be on the table, openly, before the tool that uses it.

Beta testers get in first. A limited group will shape the Compass before public release: early access, direct input, and first sight of new features.