You are not routing copper. You are routing time domains . You are not placing components. You are placing gravitational wells for current. You are not running DRC. You are running a ritual against the chaos of the analog world bleeding into your digital dreams.
There is a profound beauty in a truly great ECADstar layout. Not the "artistic" squiggles of matched lengths (though those have their charm). No—the beauty of non-overlapping copper islands . The elegance of a return via placed precisely one millimeter from a signal via. The silence of a ground pour that actually provides a low-inductance path.
In ECADstar, we stop designing for "looks right" and start designing for field solvers in our heads . A 45-degree bend isn’t aesthetic; it’s a prayer to the impedance gods. A ground plane isn’t a copper pour; it’s a silent contract to let return currents sleep peacefully. When you treat your PCB as a 3D electromagnetic ecosystem—not a 2D drawing—you realize the star topology isn't just for clocks. It’s for respecting the speed of light in FR4 (about 6 inches per nanosecond). Delay is distance. Skew is geometry.
— Thoughts from the star at the center of the stack-up.
ECADstar design is the art of making the complex look simple, the fast look slow, and the impossible look like it was always meant to be.
This is the deep secret: It is the design that makes the assembler nod in silence and the EMC engineer pour a second cup of coffee—not because they need it, but because they have nothing to fix.
Here is the deep truth: Every trace on a board is a promise. Every via is a compromise. Every layer stack-up is a bet against entropy.
Design like the laws of physics are watching. Because they are.