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Most Flat Earthers don’t actually use different maps. They all use the same one — the Gleason’s Map, just reskinned across apps, websites, and videos. In this video, I test whether that map actually works in reality. Flat Earth Dave’s app uses it. Apps like Flativerse use it. Even the Google Play Store has a “Flat Earth” app built on the same basic layout. Instead of arguing online, this video puts the map to a simple real-world test using two real cities that line up almost perfectly north to south on the same longitude. Using real sunrise and sunset times on December 21st, I plot the Sun’s actual ground position and compare what the Gleason’s Map predicts versus what people actually observe. The result is a major failure. According to the Flat Earth map, sunlight should reach Edmundston earlier and for longer than Ushuaia. In reality, Ushuaia receives nearly five more hours of daylight. The map also fails to explain sunrise and sunset directions, requiring observers to see the Sun while looking more than 90 degrees away from where the map claims it is — something that is geometrically impossible. No NASA data is required. No advanced physics. Just a map, two cities, and the Sun. The Gleason’s Map — and every Flat Earth app built on it — fails the moment it’s tested against reality. Test the claim. See for yourself.