The End of the World Reset – Atlantis, Mars, and the Collapse of the Simulation
- Ocean Melchizedek
- 21 hours ago
- 3 min read
Over Christmas I found myself circling an idea that, once noticed, refused to let go.
I haven’t reached a firm conclusion – and I’m not trying to. This is still research, still contemplation. But what caught my attention was not a single source, theory, or video. It was the convergence of several unrelated threads, all pointing toward the same underlying pattern:
Civilisations reaching a limit, followed by a sudden reset.
Not gradual decline. Not slow decay. But abrupt termination and reboot.
What follows are three synchronicities that arrived almost simultaneously, all suggesting that what we call an “end of the world” may actually be something closer to a system reset within a simulated or holographic reality.
The Simulation Runs Out of Room
One way of framing this idea is technological rather than mythological.
If reality is a kind of quantum virtual reality hologram, then information density matters. Any finite system has limits. When it reaches saturation – when there is no longer space for genuinely new information – instability occurs.
This idea surfaced independently in three very different places.
1. When Simulations Collapse – Gregg Braden
Gregg Braden recently released a talk originally on Gaia, exploring how ancient civilisations may have understood reality as cyclical rather than linear. His argument is subtle but powerful: collapses are not random, and they are not always failures.
They are threshold events.
Civilisations such as Atlantis may not have been destroyed by primitive forces, but by advanced misuse of knowledge, resonant technologies, or a misalignment with the natural order of consciousness itself.
When Braden speaks of simulations collapsing, he is not speaking metaphorically. He is suggesting that reality behaves more like a self-regulating system than a chaotic one.
2. Saturn, Time, and the Pre-Reset World – Jason Jorjani
In Satanaeon, particularly Chapter 2, Jason Jorjani explores the idea that previous advanced civilisations existed on Earth – and possibly Mars – before catastrophic resets.
These were not merely geological disasters. They were cosmic and temporal events, often associated with Saturnian time cycles, orbital instabilities, or deliberate resets of civilisation memory.
Mars becomes especially interesting in this context.
Why does it look like a dead world that once had oceans, atmosphere, and possibly artificial structures? Why does it feel less like a “failed planet” and more like an abandoned one?
One possibility – not a conclusion – is that Mars represents a previous iteration of intelligent civilisation that reached the same boundary we are approaching now.
3. The Child’s Prophecy – A Symbolic Jesus and the Reset
The third synchronicity was the strangest, and perhaps the most revealing.
A short, almost throwaway YouTube clip, where a young girl recounts a message delivered by a Jesus-like figure. Not apocalypse in the traditional religious sense – not judgement, not hellfire – but a reset. This mirrors simulation theory far more than Christian eschatology.
In that framing, “Jesus” functions not as a saviour, but as a system messenger – an archetypal interface explaining to the inhabitants that the program is ending, and a new one is about to begin.
Atlantis, Atlas, and the Weight of the World
In Greek myth, Atlas is punished for rebelling against the gods by being forced to hold up the heavens and the Earth.
But if the “gods” were not divine – if they were Archonic or Anunnaki control intelligences masquerading as gods – then Atlas is not a villain.
He is a resistor.
Atlantis, in this reading, is not merely a lost civilisation. It is a previous simulation state that reached information overload, which triggered a reset.
Mars may have done the same before it.
Earth may be doing it now.
What If the Reset Is Not Failure?
This is where I currently land – not on certainty, but on reframing.
What if resets are not punishments? What if they are not mistakes? What if they are the only way consciousness evolves beyond control systems?
Each cycle may archive its hard-earned knowledge – not in books or ruins, but in the field itself – before starting again under tighter constraints.
Still Researching
I want to be clear: I am not declaring that Atlantis existed exactly as described, or that Mars hosted a human civilisation, or that the world is about to “end” in any dramatic sense.
But I am noticing a pattern.
And patterns matter.
Especially when they appear simultaneously in science, philosophy, mythology, and modern media.
Perhaps the end of the world is not destruction. Perhaps it is simply the moment when the simulation saves its data…and begins again.

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