On January 22, 2026, Blue Origin announced that its upcoming New Glenn-3 (NG-3) mission will mark a historic double-milestone: the first in-orbit reuse of a New Glenn booster and the deployment of AST SpaceMobile’s first next-generation Block 2 BlueBird satellite.

Targeted for launch no earlier than late February 2026 from Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral, the mission signals a major shift in the direct-to-device (D2D) landscape and the maturity of heavy-lift reusability.
Proving Orbital Reusability: “Never Tell Me The Odds”
The centerpiece of the NG-3 flight is the first-stage booster, famously nicknamed “Never Tell Me The Odds.” This is the same flight-proven hardware that successfully landed on the recovery ship Jacklyn during the NG-2 mission in November 2025. By refurbishing and reflating this booster within roughly three months, Blue Origin aims to demonstrate the rapid turnaround capability essential for competing in a market dominated by SpaceX.
Designed for a minimum of 25 flights, New Glenn’s first stage utilizes seven methane-fueled BE-4 engines. Starting with NG-3, Blue Origin is also phasing in performance upgrades, including higher-thrust engine variants and a reusable fairing, intended to increase launch cadence and reliability for government and commercial payloads.
The Dawn of the Block 2 BlueBird
For AST SpaceMobile, the NG-3 mission is the catalyst for its 2026 commercial rollout. The payload, BlueBird 7, is the first Block 2 satellite designed for 24/7 high-speed cellular broadband directly to unmodified smartphones.
- Giant in the Sky: The Block 2 BlueBirds feature massive communication arrays spanning approximately 2,400 square feet (223 square meters), making them the largest commercial phased arrays ever deployed in Low Earth Orbit (LEO).
- Massive Capacity: Built on the proprietary AST5000 ASIC, each satellite provides up to 120 Mbps of peak data speed and supports 10 GHz of processing bandwidth.
- Constellation Scaling: Blue Origin’s seven-meter fairing is a strategic asset for AST, as it is capable of launching up to eight Block 2 satellites per mission—double the volume of traditional five-meter fairings.
Strategic Impact: The D2D Arms Race
The launch comes as the “Direct-to-Device” revolution reaches a fever pitch. While competitors like SpaceX’s Starlink have launched thousands of smaller nodes, AST SpaceMobile’s strategy relies on fewer, “extra-large” assets capable of catching the weak signals of standard mobile devices from 500 km away.
AST plans an aggressive multi-launcher campaign throughout 2026, targeting a fleet of 45 to 60 satellites by year-end to establish continuous coverage across the United States and other key global markets.
| Feature | New Glenn-3 (NG-3) Overview |
| Launch Vehicle | New Glenn (7-meter fairing) |
| Booster Status | Flight-proven (Ex-NG-2 mission) |
| Primary Payload | AST SpaceMobile BlueBird 7 (Block 2) |
| Antenna Area | ~2,400 sq. ft. |
| Peak Data Speed | 120 Mbps |
| Launch Site | LC-36, Cape Canaveral SFS |
