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China just did what most aerospace engineers assumed would take years of failures to achieve: a reusable rocket landing on the first try. On February 11, 2026, China’s Long March-10 executed a controlled vertical splashdown of its first stage—while simultaneously running a high-stakes Max-Q abort test with the Mengzhou crew capsule. This video breaks down the moment that could rewrite the global space race—from engine restart capability and precision guidance, to grid fins, recovery concepts, and what reusability means for the economics of launch, satellite megaconstellations, and the coming Moon race. In this documentary-style breakdown, you’ll see: Why a Max-Q abort test is one of the most dangerous launch scenarios How the booster flipped, stabilized, reignited engines, and returned with precision What makes the Long March-10’s reusability tech so disruptive Why this changes timelines for Artemis, Starship, and the next decade of lunar plans How cheaper launches accelerate satellite constellations, space stations, and lunar infrastructure What happens next—and why the U.S. and SpaceX can’t ignore this anymore If you’re into space engineering, rockets, reusability, SpaceX vs China, Artemis, Starship, lunar missions, satellite megaconstellations, and the real geopolitics of space, you’re in the right place. Subscribe to TechInCheck for more deep dives into the biggest breakthroughs shaping the future of technology and global power. Comment below: Do you think China will land humans on the Moon before the U.S. returns? #China #SpaceRace #LongMarch10 #ReusableRocket #SpaceX #Artemis #Starship #NASA #RocketLanding #MoonMission #SpaceEngineering #Mengzhou #Aerospace #TechInCheck Disclaimer: The content presented in our videos is intended solely for entertainment purposes. While we may draw upon facts, rumors, and fiction, viewers should not interpret any part of the content as factual or definitive information. Please enjoy responsibly. Copyright Disclaimer We may use some clips in our videos from other fellow creators mainly for educational, research purpose under Copyright act 1976 Section 107. But if you still want us to remove your content from our videos, please feel free to contact us at techbyuu [at] gmail.com and we'll happily do so. Thank You!