**WOAH. GLITCH in the MATRIX. 🎢**
WOAH. GLITCH IN THE MATRIX. 🎢
HEADLINE: Did Six Flags Accidentally Predict 9/11? Millennium Force Blueprint Hides EERILY Specific ‘Time Code’
Cedar Point, OH — Thrill seekers have long revered Millennium Force as the king of coasters, a 310-foot beast that broke records in 2000. But now, a viral rabbit hole claims the ride was hiding a literal date stamp for the future.
A self-proclaimed “numeric archaeologist” has blown up on TikTok after analyzing the coaster’s original design blueprints. While looking at the famous initial drop statistic (310 feet / 80 degrees), he noticed a buried data point in the track’s structural support geometry.
“The number 9, the number 11, and the number 01 kept appearing in the load-bearing vectors on the first drop,” he claims. “But the ‘Matrix moment’ came when I realized the ride’s average G-force during the initial descent isn’t the stated 3.5g. It’s exactly 3.14159… Pi. But truncated.”
The internet is losing its mind. If you square the ride’s opening year (2000) with the “hidden” drop angle (80) and the number of inversion-less seconds (2:20), the result allegedly decodes to the date September 11, 2001.
“It’s absurd,” says a Six Flags spokesperson. “The ride opened a year before that event. These are coincidences of physics.”
But the theory won’t die. One user pointed out that the exact time the first train launched on media day? 8:46 AM. The exact time of the first strike on 9/11.
The coaster is silent. The wind just howls through the steel. #MillenniumForce #GlitchInTheMatrix #ThemeParkConspiracy