
The Starship megarocket lifts off on its 10th test flight from the SpaceX Starbase in Texas, August 26, 2025.
| Photo Credit: AP
On a humid Texas evening on August 26, after many weather delays and ground system hiccups, the worldâs largest rocket finally rose from its pad as part of Flight 10. The 379-feet-tall Starship survived launch, nailed important checkpoints, and splashed down as planned. It was a technical success as well as a kind of personal vindication for a vehicle often introduced to the world less like an unthinking machine than like the protagonist of an unfolding saga.
Starshipâs first nine flights inched forward through explosions, abrupt cut-offs, and shredded prototypes. In January and March this year, two upper-stage Starships failed within 10 minutes of launch. A third attempt in May flew further but ended with the spacecraft breaking apart during reentry. In June, another Starship detonated on a test stand, scattering wreckage and doubts in equal measure. For a lesser vehicle, such missteps might have been fatal to funding or public patience.
On its 10th attempt, Starship finally strung together a complete act. Its Super Heavy booster executed a controlled splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico. More impressively, the upper stage, the Starship itself, deployed eight Starlink satellite simulators, successfully reignited a Raptor engine in space, and endured a reentry stress-test despite losing a piece of its aft skirt. Sixty-six minutes after liftoff, it struck its Indian Ocean target in a near-bullseye.
To watch Starship is to anthropomorphise it almost by necessity. Itâs too large, too ungainly, and too audacious to remain an abstract engineering project. Each launch has been a public performance. Starship has insisted on a kind of charisma thatâs inseparable from SpaceX owner Elon Muskâs personality. Musk has cast Starship as the vessel of a civilisational destiny: building out Starlinkâs satellite megaconstellation, returning astronauts to the moon, and settling Mars. In his vision, Starship is a pioneer.

Yet no protagonist is without flaws, and Starshipâs mirror reflects Muskâs impatience. The vehicle still hasnât reached orbit. Its heat shield remains unproven, its orbital refuelling plans entirely theoretical, and its environmental footprint contested in public hearings. Musk himself has admitted that no one has ever attempted propellant transfer on the scale Starship will require. Critics point to the risks of iterating at breakneck pace: Starshipâs growth has paralleled fiery test-stand accidents, infrastructure damage, and regulatory friction.
Beyond the engineering, thereâs the question of strategy. Musk speaks of Mars as if timelines bend to vision, yet the company still fights to master the earthâs upper atmosphere. Each delay has reminded observers how far the rhetoric stretches beyond the horizon.
Still, Flight 10 has shifted the narrative. For the first time in months, Starship isnât just a dream of what it might become but evidence of what it can do. The next versions â V3 and V4, even taller and more powerful â are already in the works. Musk has promised Mars attempts by 2026, with cargo landings on stripped-down Starships. By 2028 or 2029, if his schedule holds, Starship may try to deliver infrastructure for a permanent Martian presence.
In the meantime, the global industry watches. Competitors in China, Europe, and India are studying reusable heavy-lift concepts and smaller launch firms are recalibrating their ambitions. Starshipâs success, however partial, threatens to reset the playing field. If it works, payload prices could fall dramatically, satellite fleets would expand, and lunar missions might multiply. If it fails, the gap it leaves may swallow years of planning and trust.
Ultimately, the flavour that lingers of Starship Flight 10 is bittersweet ambition, a sense that in chasing Mars, Starship is dragging the entire industry towards a future thrilling and perilous in equal parts. To watch it fly is to feel the worldâs spaceflight enter a new register, one that mixes audacity with anxiety. If rockets are characters, Starship is the brash giant whose next act could redefine the plot.
Published â August 31, 2025 02:08 am IST