Big Brother In Space Version 0.10 |link| May 2026
Big Brother In Space Version 0.10: The Alpha That Watches You Back
By: Orbital Terminal Staff
Release Date: March 9, 2026
Build Codename: "Unblinking Eye" Big Brother In Space Version 0.10
In the crowded arena of dystopian simulators, few titles have dared to merge the claustrophobic paranoia of George Orwell’s 1984 with the cold, silent vastness of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Enter Big Brother In Space Version 0.10 — the early access build that has just landed on Steam and itch.io, promising to turn your starship into a panopticon. Big Brother In Space Version 0
But is this alpha build a revolutionary glimpse into emergent narrative storytelling, or is it just a buggy surveillance simulator where the UI crashes more often than your orbital stabilizers? Fixed the notorious "Soft Lock" during the Poker
We spent 20 hours in the cold metal belly of the Aurora-class cruiser, logged every warning flag, and accidentally reported our own engineer for “ideological non-conformity.” Here is everything you need to know about Version 0.10.
🐛 Bug Fixes & Optimization
- Fixed the notorious "Soft Lock" during the Poker minigame in the Recreation Room.
- Optimized load times when transitioning between the Bridge and the Cargo Bay.
- Corrected typos in the Russian-to-English translation for the Medical Bay dialogue.
The "Orbital Voting" System
The headline feature of Version 0.10 is the complete overhaul of the elimination mechanic. Previously, evicting a housemate was a simple menu selection. Now, the developers have introduced the Orbital Voting System.
Players must now physically navigate the station’s exterior hull during a spacewalk to place their votes in shielded terminals. The catch? You have limited oxygen, and other players can see your movement on the radar.
- Risk vs. Reward: Do you rush to vote early, revealing your hand to the rest of the house? Or do you wait until the final seconds, risking a hull breach or running out of time?
- Sabotage: New hacking tools allow players to lock specific airlocks, delaying opponents from casting their votes.
Major risks
- Privacy erosion: Continuous global observation normalizes loss of anonymity; metadata fusion reconstructs identities and routines.
- Function creep: Systems built for environmental or safety uses repurposed for surveillance or law enforcement without oversight.
- Power asymmetries: States/corporations with constellation control gain disproportionate influence over populations and markets.
- Militarization & escalation: Persistent tracking enables faster targeting, lowering thresholds for conflict and undermining strategic ambiguity.
- Infrastructure centralization: Reliance on a few ground/processing hubs creates chokepoints and single points of failure.
- Misuse & errors: AI misclassification, spoofing, or biased models produce wrongful targeting or discrimination.
- Legal vacuums: Space law and national surveillance statutes lag behind capabilities, creating jurisdictional and accountability gaps.