Ideaverse for Obsidian — Nick Milo

Linking Your Thinking / Ideaverse logo
Image: linkingyourthinking.com

A ready-to-use Obsidian vault — a whole thinking system in a box — so you can start linking and making notes without building the structure yourself.

Type: product / starter kit
By: Nick Milo
When: Released as “Ideaverse for Obsidian” (formerly the LYT Kit); Ideaverse Pro 2.0 era, available 2026
Where it sits in their arc: The landmark (the productized form of LYT)
Where to get it / join: Ideaverse Pro

What it is

Ideaverse for Obsidian — formerly the LYT Kit, now sold as Ideaverse Pro — is a pre-built Obsidian vault you can download and start using immediately. It ships with roughly 1,000 pre-built notes linked around 2,500 times, organized by the ACE framework, plus Home, Collections, a Garden, Capture flows, tutorials, and a clean starter variant (Ideaverse Zero) without Nick’s personal content. Widely described as the most-downloaded kit for linked notes (70,000+), it has been priced around $129–$299 across launches. It suits both newcomers and experienced Obsidian users who want a trusted structure rather than weeks of setup — and it is the self-serve, no-cohort path into the LYT approach.

Core ideas

  • ACE framework — Atlas (knowledge), Calendar (time), Efforts (action): a structure for organizing a whole life’s notes. See Glossary — Shared Language.
  • A system, not a folder template — Marketed as a “thinking system,” with maps, collections, and views, not just an empty hierarchy.
  • Ideaverse Zero — A clean starter so you can build your own from the same bones without inheriting someone else’s content.
  • Maps of Content built in — MOCs come pre-wired as the navigation layer. See Glossary — Shared Language.

How it connects to the Guild’s practice

For a Guild member who wants the Linking Your Thinking lens (see The Disciplines — Many Lenses, One Room) but prefers to learn by using rather than by attending a cohort, the Ideaverse is the lowest-friction entry. Its ACE structure is also a concrete, well-tested reference point when members debate how to organize their own vaults.

Related works

Notes from the room

Space for members to add takeaways and how they used it.