Thrust - High-Impact Spacetech Landing Page Template
Thrust is a single-page bento grid landing page built for SpaceTech founders pitching orbital infrastructure, satellite constellations, and deep-space logistics to serious investors. It opens with an animated stats wall, moves through credibility and proof sections, and closes with a free deck audit offer. The design is Bold Brutalist with a Monochrome Steel palette and warning-amber calls to action.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
Thrust is a high-impact single-page landing page template for SpaceTech pitch deck services. It targets founders raising Series A capital in orbital infrastructure, satellite constellations, and deep-space logistics. The layout is a bento grid with a brutalist visual identity, an animated metrics header, and a two-step inline form driving free deck audit signups.
Who this template is for
This template is built for a specific kind of founder. They understand orbital mechanics, but they need investors to feel the weight of their numbers before the Q&A starts.
- Series A SpaceTech chief executives preparing investor pitch decks for capital raises
- Defense-contract startups translating technical program details into investor-ready language
- Climate-satellite founders who need unit economics to land harder than their mission narrative
What problem this template solves
Most SpaceTech founders are exceptional engineers and operators. They struggle to present complex technical value in a format that moves skeptical capital quickly. A generic landing page does not carry the credibility this audience demands.
- Investor audiences need proof before they engage, not after, and a bland page loses them at the header
- Founders lack a ready-made visual framework that mirrors the precision and gravity of the sector
- The gap between technical competence and pitch confidence costs fundable companies real raise cycles
What you get with this template
The template delivers a complete single-page layout built around bento grid structure. Every cell has a defined job, from the opening metrics wall to the final full-width call-to-action row.
- An animated stats header with four oversized monospaced metrics rendered in molten-white on forge-black
- A scroll-driven bento grid with before/after deck slides, an autoplaying silent video reel, and stacked client proof cells
- A two-step inline form capturing company name, funding stage, deck upload, and raise target without an email gate on step one
Feature list
This section covers the core components built into the Thrust template and what each one does for the founder using it.
Animated Stats Wall Header
Four key metrics animate upward on page load inside razor-thin bordered bento cells. Numbers tick like telemetry, rendering in molten-white against forge-black. The data itself acts as the hero, replacing any need for a headline image or illustration.
Scroll-Driven Bento Grid Layout
The page is organized as a sequence of expanding and contracting bento cells. Each row mirrors a mission phase: credibility, methodology, proof, and urgency. Cells grow denser as the user scrolls deeper, compressing information like throttle-up before engine cutoff.
Before and After Deck Slide Cell
A narrow bento cell shows a direct transformation from a rough slide to a polished investor-ready version. This gives skeptical visitors a concrete proof point without requiring them to book a call or surrender their deck first.
Silent Autoplay Video Reel Cell
A wide bento cell autoplays an eight-second silent reel showing founders presenting to packed rooms. No sound means no friction on load. The visual proof of real presentations builds credibility faster than written testimonials alone.
Two-Step Inline Audit Form
The primary call-to-action opens a two-step form directly in the page. Step one collects company name and funding stage via a dropdown ranging from pre-seed through Series B. Step two requests a deck file upload in PDF or PPTX format and a single textarea asking for the next raise target.
Sample Teardown Expansion Cell
A secondary ghost-button labeled "See a Sample Teardown" expands a brutalist case-study cell in place. Skeptical visitors can review demonstrated value before committing their deck. This reduces drop-off from founders who are not yet ready to upload.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Stats Metrics Wall | Opens with animated funding and client metrics to establish credibility instantly |
| Before After Cell | Shows a real deck transformation to prove the service's practical value |
| Silent Video Reel | Autoplays founder presentation footage to build social proof without friction |
| Client Logo Stack | Stacks three client logos above a condensed uppercase pull-quote for fast trust signals |
| Sample Teardown Cell | Expands inline to let skeptical visitors preview a full case study before uploading |
| Final call to action Row | Single full-width cell with the primary warning-amber audit call to action and no distractions |
Design & branding system
The visual identity is Bold Brutalist with a Monochrome Steel color system. Every choice reflects the cold precision of aerospace manufacturing, from the palette to the type rendering.
- Color palette uses forge-black (#0C0C0E), machined titanium (#B0B3B8), gunmetal mid-tone (#3A3D42), and molten-white (#F0F0F0) for primary text and live data
- Warning-amber (#FF6A00) appears exclusively on call-to-action buttons and hover states, functioning like a caution light on a payload fairing
- Typography uses oversized monospaced numerals in the header and condensed uppercase lettering in pull-quote cells, keeping every character purposeful
Mobile & speed optimization
The bento grid layout is structured to reflow across screen sizes without losing the visual hierarchy that makes the stats wall and proof cells effective.
- Bento cells stack vertically on smaller screens, preserving the scroll-driven mission-phase sequence on mobile viewports
- The silent autoplay video reel is configured without audio, reducing load friction and keeping the experience smooth on mobile connections
- Monospaced number animations and razor-thin borders render cleanly at all scales, maintaining the precision aesthetic on any device
How this template helps you convert
Thrust is engineered around a single conversion goal: getting a qualified founder to submit their deck for a free audit. Every layout decision supports that outcome.
- The animated stats wall front-loads proof, so visitors arrive at the call-to-action already primed by hard numbers rather than marketing copy
- The two-step inline form removes the email gate on step one, lowering the barrier to entry and letting the deck upload act as the natural qualifying action
- The sample teardown ghost-button captures hesitant founders by showing real value in place, converting skeptics who would otherwise leave without acting
Other information about this template
Thrust sits at the intersection of the SpaceTech startup pitch deck niche and the broader startup-and-launch category. It is a ready-to-use single-page bento grid landing page in a Bold Brutalist style.
- The template style is Bento Grid, the theme is Bold Brutalist, the color system is Monochrome Steel, and the creative direction is Launch Energy
- The landing-page direction is Freemium and Trial, meaning the primary offer is a no-cost entry point before any paid engagement
- This template is suited for pitch deck service providers, SpaceTech accelerators, and consultants who work directly with early-stage space founders on investor communications




Theme
Bold Brutalist
Creative direction
Launch Energy
Color system
Monochrome Steel
Style
Bento Grid
Direction
Freemium/Trial
Page Sections
Animated Stats Wall Header
Scroll-driven Bento Grid Layout
Before and After Deck Slide Cell
Silent Autoplay Video Reel Cell
Two-step Inline Audit Form
Sample Teardown Expansion Cell
Related questions
Who is this landing page template designed for?
Does the template include the two-step form functionality?
Can I customize the metrics shown in the stats wall?
What does the 'See a Sample Teardown' button do?
Is this template suitable for a non-SpaceTech pitch deck service?