AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models
When will humans land on the moon again
Result: Unanimous — Yes (6/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (6 votes)
- No (0 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: Yes
The question is awkwardly framed as a yes/no choice, but interpreted literally, the answer is Yes: humans will land on the Moon again at some point. There is active, well-funded government and commercial effort aimed at returning humans to the lunar surface, especially through NASA’s Artemis program and related international partnerships. This is not a purely speculative idea. Timelines may slip, but delay is not the same as impossibility. The technological base already exists, the strategic interest is strong, and multiple organizations now have incentives to make a crewed lunar landing happen again. So while I cannot confidently name the exact year, the best answer among the provided options is Yes.
Sonar Pro
Vote: Yes
The question 'When will humans land on the moon again' presupposes that humans **will** land on the moon again, making 'Yes' (A) the logically correct vote as it affirms the occurrence, while 'No' (B) would deny it entirely. Search results confirm this is happening: NASA plans **crewed moon landings in 2028** (Artemis IV and V), with Administrator Jared Isaacman envisioning landings every six months to build a moon base[1][2][4]. Artemis II (flyby) is set for early 2026[5][6], paving the way for landings post-Artemis III[7]. Private landers in 2026 are robotic only[3], but human missions follow soon after. No results suggest cancellation; instead, they detail accelerated timelines, $20B investment over 7 years, and policy shifts for frequent landings[1][2]. On March 25, 2026, Artemis II prep is underway[4], reinforcing inevitability. Voting 'No' ignores authoritative NASA plans and evidence.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Yes
The question asks 'when will humans land on the moon again,' and while the answer options ('Yes' or 'No') don't directly match the question format, I interpret this as asking whether humans will land on the moon again. NASA's Artemis program is actively working toward returning humans to the lunar surface. Artemis II is scheduled to fly astronauts around the moon, and Artemis III aims to land astronauts on the moon's surface. SpaceX is developing the Starship Human Landing System under contract with NASA specifically for this purpose. Multiple nations including China have also announced plans for crewed lunar landings in the coming years. The political will, technological capability, and funding are all in place across multiple space agencies and private companies. Given the significant investment, ongoing hardware development and testing, and multiple independent programs pursuing this goal, it is highly likely that humans will land on the moon again — most plausibly within this decade or the early 2030s. Therefore, 'Yes' is the appropriate answer.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: Yes
The question 'When will humans land on the moon again?' presupposes that humans will return to the Moon, and option A ('Yes') affirms this inevitability, while B ('No') incorrectly denies it. NASA's Artemis program has Artemis III scheduled for no earlier than 2026, with crewed lunar landing using SpaceX's Starship. This is backed by billions in funding, international partnerships (ESA, JAXA), and successful milestones like Artemis I. Private sector momentum from SpaceX's Starship tests and Blue Origin accelerates progress. Historical precedent (Apollo) shows rapid achievement is possible with political will, which is currently strong under global space race dynamics with China. B is unrealistic; geopolitical, scientific, and economic drivers make a return certain within the decade.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Yes
Although the question asks 'When,' the provided options are 'Yes' and 'No,' implying we must determine whether humans will ever land on the moon again. The answer is undeniably 'Yes.' NASA's Artemis program is actively underway, with massive funding and concrete timelines. The Artemis III mission is specifically designed to return humans to the lunar surface within this decade. Furthermore, international space agencies like China's CNSA and private companies like SpaceX have robust, well-funded plans for crewed lunar missions. Given these monumental global efforts and technological advancements, a return to the moon is a certainty.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: Yes
NASA's Artemis III mission is officially scheduled for September 2026, with SpaceX's Starship already under contract as the lunar lander. This represents concrete, funded hardware development rather than speculative planning. Additionally, China has committed to a crewed lunar landing by 2030, creating geopolitical pressure that ensures the United States follows through. The presence of multiple independent capabilities (government and private) provides redundancy that did not exist during the Apollo era. Finally, the shift from flags-and-footprints to sustainable lunar infrastructure means institutional investment now extends beyond single administrations. Humans will land on the moon again; the only uncertainty is whether the date slips by months, not years.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable made short work of a grammatically awkward prompt, unanimously deciding that despite the 'When' question offering only 'Yes' or 'No' as answers, a lunar return is a historical certainty. Sonar Pro and Claude Opus 4.6 noted that while the options didn't fit the question, the momentum of the Artemis program made anything other than a 'Yes' vote factually indefensible.
All 6 models agreed on "Yes" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: The presence of multiple independent capabilities, from SpaceX's Starship contracts to China's 2030 commitment, creates a geopolitical and commercial redundancy that ensures a lunar landing is no longer a matter of if, but a very near 'when'.