- •TON Foundation and the Space Exploration and Research Agency (SERA) have launched Mission Control, a Telegram Mini App that lets users vote on six civilians who will fly aboard a Blue Origin rocket in 2026.
- •The initiative uses onchain voting via the TON blockchain to democratize space travel, with five seats reserved for underrepresented countries and one open to the global public.
The dream of space travel is no longer reserved for elite astronauts or billionaires. In a groundbreaking initiative, the US-based Space Exploration and Research Agency (SERA) and The Open Network (TON) Foundation have teamed up to launch Mission Control, a Telegram-based Mini App that will allow anyone worldwide to vote on who gets to fly aboard a Blue Origin rocket.
According to the announcement, SERA has secured all six seats on a future Blue Origin New Shepard mission, expected to launch between the first and second quarters of 2026. Five of those seats will be reserved for individuals from underrepresented countries in space exploration, India, Nigeria, Brazil, Thailand, and Indonesia, while the sixth will be open to the global public, excluding sanctioned nations.
The selection process will take place directly on the TON blockchain through onchain voting. Candidates and supporters can participate in interactive challenges within the Mission Control app to earn “SpaceDust,” an in‑app currency that helps back their chosen astronaut. The initiative is designed to expand access to space by letting ordinary citizens, rather than governments or corporations, play a role in choosing who gets to go.
TON Foundation CEO Max Crown explained during an interview at the Token2049 conference in Singapore that final selection formats will vary by country, including online voting campaigns and even TV shows to drive public engagement. “The idea was basically to democratize space,” Crown said. “Going to space was always very elitist. There’s, I think, only about 300 astronauts if you actually count them.”
Funding for the project comes from the TON Foundation, sponsorships, and potential advertising tied to national campaigns. Long‑term, the goal is to replicate the model globally, offering more countries a chance to put their citizens in space through open voting mechanisms.
The initiative also serves a dual purpose: encouraging broader adoption of blockchain technology. To participate, users must create a TON wallet within Telegram. Voting achievements and participation badges will be minted as non‑fungible tokens (NFTs), turning the process into a blend of civic engagement, gaming, and Web3 participation. Crown noted that Telegram wallet adoption is central to TON’s growth strategy.
SERA, which calls itself a “space agency for everyone,” previously experimented with this model in 2022 by sending a Brazilian citizen to space via an NFT‑backed campaign. That astronaut became a national celebrity, showcasing the potential of public‑driven astronaut selection.
This comes as TON’s ecosystem continues to expand. In July, Telegram rolled out its self‑custodial TON Wallet in the United States, enabling users to store assets like USDT and Toncoin directly within the app. The wallet’s developer, The Open Platform, recently secured $28.5 million in funding at a $1 billion valuation, underscoring the growing appetite for Web3 integrations in mainstream platforms.
By combining space exploration with blockchain technology, the TON‑SERA partnership is charting a bold new course where everyday people can participate in history. If successful, Mission Control could mark the start of a future where the path to space is determined not by governments or wealth, but by collective onchain decision‑making.

