Eight arrows reaching the vertices of a cube — a Chaos Star pulled into 3D. Sculpt the geometry, dress it in shaders or textures, drop it into a haunted environment, and 3D-print it.
A Chaos Star pulled into 3D — eight arrows, infinite worlds.
STL & 3MF files are measured in millimetres by slicers. Your Chaos Sphere is symmetric — its eight cone tips reach the corners of a cube — so a single number sets its full width, height and depth. Enter the overall size (the outer cube that contains the whole model) and it'll be scaled to match on export. (On-screen Global Scale doesn't affect the printed size.)
Most desktop 3D printers have beds around 200–300 mm. Larger models won't fit and may need to be split or printed on a bigger machine; very small sizes can lose the thin cone tips in the print. Allowed range: 10–100 000 mm.