Real-World Launch Watch
Upcoming Exploration Launches
Not every rocket launch changes the future. Commander’s Atlas tracks the ones that might.
What This Page Is For
Some launches place another batch of satellites into orbit. Others test the machines that may carry humans back to the Moon, onward to Mars, or deeper into the Solar System.
Commander’s Atlas focuses on the second kind: missions connected to human spaceflight, lunar exploration, Mars ambitions, deep-space science, and next-generation heavy-lift rockets.
What We Track
We usually skip routine satellite deployments, rideshare launches, and minor commercial missions unless they clearly connect to major exploration goals.
First Priority
SpaceX Launches
SpaceX is one of the most important companies to watch for reusable rockets, heavy-lift systems, and Mars-focused spacecraft development.
- Starship test flights
- Crew Dragon missions
- Falcon Heavy launches
- NASA-related missions
- Lunar or deep-space payloads
Second Priority
NASA Launches and Events
NASA remains the central source for many of the most important scientific and human exploration missions.
- Artemis missions
- Lunar lander missions
- Mars missions
- Planetary science missions
- Space telescope launches
- Crewed exploration events
Worth Watching
Blue Origin
Blue Origin is worth watching as New Glenn and Blue Moon become more important to heavy-lift and lunar exploration.
- New Glenn
- Blue Moon
- NASA lunar programs
- Human spaceflight
- Large-scale exploration infrastructure
Commander’s Note
Why These Launches Matter
In Elite Dangerous, massive ships crossing interstellar space feel routine. In the real world, we are still building the first serious stepping stones toward that future.
Starship tests, Artemis missions, lunar landers, deep-space probes, and reusable heavy-lift rockets are the early chapters of that story.
