A wave of drama hit UFO social media on August 10, 2025, when the “UFO X” community on X (formerly Twitter) became the epicenter of speculation, hopes, and ultimately disappointment. At the heart of this whirlwind was a tantalizing rumor that a journalist had discovered where a giant buried UFO craft exists, hidden beneath a secretive facility. The Ross Coulthart UFO details were unfortunately too good to be true.
The Players: Money Penny vs. Ross Coulthart
One of the main figures in this incident is Money Penny, a journalist known for her investigative curiosity and active participation in UFO Twitter debates. On this day, she claimed to have cracked the mystery of the location of the giant, “too big to move” UFO that investigative journalist Ross Coulthart has occasionally referenced in his work and interviews. Coulthart has stated that such a craft exists, is covered by a special-purpose facility, and, significantly, he would never reveal its location for safety and security reasons. However, he has dropped hints suggesting the facility “serves another commendable purpose beneficial to the UK, Australia, and America.”
Money Penny set off a countdown timer of four hours (despite Coulthart probably being asleep since he lives in Australia), publicly challenging Coulthart with the claim that she knew where the UFO was located, and would reveal it within hours. The community watched in anticipation, with hopes running high that a major disclosure was on the horizon.
And here I will explain further pic.twitter.com/BubnrRkzsp
— Moneypenny (@nic_moneypenny) August 10, 2025
The Twist: A ChatGPT Snafu
When the timer hit zero, however, the supposed revelation unraveled. It turned out that Money Penny’s “discovery” was based entirely on speculations generated through ChatGPT, OpenAI’s conversational AI. The AI suggested a facility located in the United States, which was quickly shot down by people familiar with Coulthart’s claims. Coulthart has previously clarified that the craft was not in America and refused to name the actual country. Thus, speculation again fizzled into frustration, a familiar territory for those who follow UFO disclosure debates on social media.
What’s Known About the Giant Buried UFO?
Ross Coulthart’s claims about a gigantic, immovable UFO derive from interviews with confidential military and industrial sources. The alleged craft is so large, moving it is not practical, so according to rumors, a special building was constructed directly above it. Coulthart has insisted that the facility serves multiple purposes, some highly beneficial, and revealing its true nature or location would risk compromising international security matters.
“I can’t tell you the country it is in. It is not America, but what I can tell you is that the place where it is kept is used for another purpose, that is a laudatory purpose…that is as much interest to the UK as it is to Australia as it is to America. The simple reasons are that you know there are other uses for the place where this object is store.”
~ Ross Coulthart, on the Project Unity podcast.
There is speculation in the UFO community about several potential sites, including a prominent facility in Seoul, South Korea. The location’s architecture and technology reportedly support military operations and aircraft navigation, such as the use of VORTAC (a navigation system for aircraft). However, experts caution that such features could simply be standard defense infrastructure, not a UFO cover-up.
Other rumors have tied similar stories to facilities in Arizona, West Virgin, notably The Greenbrier Resort’s bunker, and even sites across the Four Corners region of the American Southwest. However, none of these rumors have been substantiated with hard evidence, and prominent skeptics raise concerns that the most striking “proofs” are often misinterpretations of mundane features (such as irrigation circles or radar installations).

Why the Disappointment Keeps Cycling
The “UFO X” subculture on X/Twitter is prone to hype, speculation, and disappointment as viral drama frequently outpaces verifiable fact. The Money Penny episode is just one illustration of how digital age rumors, especially those amplified by AI-generated content, can create mass anticipation, only to leave followers let down when rigor and evidence prove elusive.
As of now, neither Ross Coulthart nor any other major source has disclosed the location of the buried UFO, and the best-documented claims remain wrapped in secrecy and plausible deniability. The truth, if it is ever conclusively revealed, promises to be as fascinating as the conspiracies themselves, but for now, the community must make do with hints, debates, and the occasional AI-inspired wild goose chase.
Valerie Anne is a Type 1 diabetic, mother, tree-hugger, self-proclaimed granola who loves a good horror story through literature, video games, and movies. She also streams art over at twitch.tv/8bitval.