Reality may not be what it seems—and now, science is setting a trap to catch it in the act.
A bold experiment led by physicist and consciousness researcher Thomas Campbell, in collaboration with California Polytechnic State University, aims to test the very fabric of reality. Their target? Not atoms, not particles—but rendering behavior. If we’re living in a simulation, then reality might not exist until it's observed—and Campbell’s quantum double-slit-inspired experiments are built to find that glitch.
This isn’t philosophy dressed in lab coats. It’s hardcore quantum mechanics with an agenda. The test seeks to determine whether particles behave differently depending on whether the information about their path is available or not—a fundamental premise in quantum physics. But Campbell takes it a step further: if our universe is being “rendered” like a video game only when observed, we should be able to catch the code slipping.
In simple terms: if the simulation theory holds any weight, there will be inconsistencies in how reality “renders” data. And this isn’t just theoretical—Campbell's experiment is designed to detect those discrepancies.
No divine visions. No virtual reality headsets. Just raw data. If successful, this test could mark the first scientific probe aimed squarely at the idea that our universe is a conscious computation.
And if the veil lifts, even slightly? The game changes for everyone.
๐ฌ Follow the logic into the lab:
https://www.my-big-toe.com/pages/theory.html
— Strike Force News
(The evidence may not be visible—until we look.)

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