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OrOrbit is in pre-launch. Downloads, accounts, and sponsorship open at launch.

Simple by design.
Powerful underneath.

OrOrbit does things differently. No email sign-ups, no central servers, no company sitting between you and your friends. Here's how it all fits together.

Your Identity

No email. No phone number. No account on anyone's server. Your identity is a file — and that file is everything.

1

Create your identity

Pick a display name and choose a password. OrOrbit generates a small encrypted file that contains your unique identity. That's it — no email, no verification code, no waiting.

2

Save your file

Your identity file lives on your device. Back it up like any important document — copy it to a USB drive, cloud storage, or wherever you keep things safe.

3

That file IS your account

Use it to log into any OrOrbit server. No central database controls who you are. Your file proves your identity directly — no middleman, no third party.

Why does this matter?

Traditional platforms hold your identity hostage. They can ban you, lock you out, or sell your data. With OrOrbit, your identity is yours. If a server goes down, your identity doesn't go with it. Move to another server, start your own, or take a break — your identity file stays with you forever.

Connectivity

Three layers so your friends can always reach you — regardless of network setup.

1

Automatic

Most users

When you start your server, OrOrbit talks to your router and opens the right ports automatically. This is the same technology game consoles and smart TVs use — no technical knowledge required. Your friends get a direct connection with the best possible voice quality.

Works on most home routers with default settings. Zero configuration on your end.

2

Fallback

Automatic

If automatic port-forwarding isn't available (restrictive router, apartment network, dorm Wi-Fi), OrOrbit kicks in a built-in tunnel for chat and a relay server for voice. This happens automatically — you don't have to do anything. Chat works immediately, and voice calls connect through the relay so nobody gets left out.

Slightly higher voice latency than a direct connection, but still great for gaming and hanging out.

3

Manual

Power users

If you know your way around a router, you can forward ports manually for maximum performance and zero middlemen. Direct connections mean the lowest possible latency and full control over your network setup.

Port Protocol What it does
3000 TCP Chat, files, and the web interface
3478 UDP Voice relay signaling
40000–40100 UDP Voice and video media streams

Self-Hosting

Three steps. Under a minute. Your server is live.

1

Download OrOrbit Server

A standalone app for Windows today (macOS and Linux coming soon). Separate from the client — install it on whatever machine you want to host from.

2

Run the setup wizard

The wizard configures the database, voice relay, and connectivity automatically. No command line needed.

3

Share with friends

Send your friends an invite link. They download OrOrbit, click the link, and they're in. That's genuinely it.

What's bundled in OrOrbit Server?

You don't need to install anything separately. OrOrbit Server ships with everything:

  • Embedded PostgreSQL database
  • Voice relay server
  • Automatic database migrations
  • UPnP port forwarding
  • Built-in secure tunnel
  • Health monitoring endpoint
  • Web admin panel
  • Docker support for advanced users

Convinced?

Download OrOrbit, create your identity, and invite your friends. The whole thing takes about two minutes.