This paper advances a direct geometric thesis extracted from the new DESI five-year three-dimensional rendering of the Universe: the large-scale morphology is more naturally read asa tilted, rotating, toroidal geometry than as the familiar isotropic-balloon picture. The pointis not that the DESI visualization by itself constitutes a parameter fit. The point is thatits dominant morphology suggests a specific global organization: annular containment, axispreference, coherent wrap-like corridors, and a handedness that invites a rotating compactinterpretation. The technical content of the paper is therefore to write that interpretation inexplicit form.The spatial sector is taken to be compact and toroidal, most naturally a flat three-torus T 3endowed with anisotropic metric data and observed from an off-axis, tilted frame. Rotation isencoded through a coherent shift one-form and a preferred global axis. This gives a minimalgeometry with four macroscopic control parameters: a compactification scale L, an aspect ratioq, a tilt angle ι, and a dimensionless rotation amplitude ω/H. From this ansatz one obtains adiscrete low-k mode spectrum, directional modulation of large-scale clustering, parity-odd twistingof filament orientations, sector-dependent radial coherence, and wrap-pair image correlationsgenerated by nontrivial identifications. These are not decorative consequences. They are theobservables that distinguish a toroidal rotating cosmology from a statistically isotropic simplyconnected background.The novelty of the present paper is not a generic discussion of topology or anisotropy. Itis the claim that the DESI five-year morphology is already visually organized in precisely themanner expected from a tilted toroidal spacetime with global vorticity. A serious theory papermust therefore do three things: state the geometry cleanly, derive the mode-level and light-coneconsequences, and identify a finite set of decisive tests in DESI, CMB, and future full-sky large-scale-structure catalogs. That is the program carried out here. The geometry is decomposedvisually into its distinct components—cycle structure, compact identifications, observer-frametilt, rotational handedness, and wrap relations—so that the topology thesis is carried by anexplicit geometric sequence rather than by one schematic illustration.
SIKX HILTON (Mon,) studied this question.