Daily Games
·24/04/2026
The air in the room is thick with cigarette smoke and unspoken tension. Outside, the world holds its breath, eyes glued to grainy television screens. But here, behind the Iron Curtain, the race to the moon isn't a spectacle; it's a tightrope walk of ambition, fear, and national pride. This is the world Apple TV+'s new series, “Star City,” invites us into—a story not of what happened, but of what could have been.
For those who followed the acclaimed alt-history drama “For All Mankind,” the premise is a familiar echo. That series began with a stunning twist: the Soviet Union becomes the first nation to put a man on the moon. “Star City” doesn't just share that starting point; it flips the camera around. From executive producers Ronald D. Moore, Matt Wolpert, and Ben Nedivi, the minds behind the original, this new series promises to be a propulsive paranoid thriller exploring the other side of that historic moment.
Instead of focusing on the American response, the narrative plunges into the heart of the Soviet space program. It’s a story told through the lives of the cosmonauts who strapped themselves into rockets, the engineers who designed them on shoestring budgets, and the intelligence officers embedded among them, watching for any sign of dissent. It’s here that the real drama unfolds—not in the vacuum of space, but in the claustrophobic offices and hidden conversations where personal risks were weighed against propelling humankind forward.
The series, starring Rhys Ifans and Anna Maxwell Martin, isn't just about the mechanics of the space race. It’s about the human cost of every great leap, the silent sacrifices made in the shadows of monumental achievements. It’s a journey into a chapter of history that was never written, but one that feels hauntingly plausible.
As “Star City” prepares for its May 29 launch, it leaves us with a question that lingers long after the credits roll. We all know how one version of the story ended; now, we get to see the one that was written in whispers, under the light of a red star.









