Who is running the “cosmic adventure” Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/share/1Dsh7NupFz/?mibextid=wwXIfr It appears to be AI generated disinformation

Checked on February 8, 2026
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Executive summary. The documents supplied identify at least three distinct “Cosmic” entities — an Ottawa indoor-playground business called Cosmic Adventures (profiled by Datanyze/ZoomInfo and TripAdvisor) [1][2][3], a small indie group using the name Cosmic Adventure Squad on itch.io [4], and forum/Steam discussion threads about the retro game Cosmo’s Cosmic Adventure [5][6] — but none of the supplied material ties any of those to the specific Facebook share URL the question cites, so the operator of that Facebook page cannot be determined from the reporting provided [1][2][5][4][6][3].

1. What the sources actually show about “Cosmic” brands and why that matters. The records collected point to three different uses of a similar name: a brick‑and‑mortar Ottawa indoor playground with corporate entries and customer reviews (Datanyze, ZoomInfo, TripAdvisor) [1][2][3], an indie game/dev presence called Cosmic Adventure Squad on itch.io with a contact email listed [4], and community discussion about a retro videogame called Cosmo’s Cosmic Adventure on Steam [5][6]; these overlaps illustrate how identical or similar names frequently belong to unrelated actors, which increases ambiguity when attributing an anonymous or lightly documented Facebook link [1][2][5][4][6][3].

2. Direct answer: who is running the specific Facebook share link? The supplied reporting does not identify the operator of the Facebook share URL in the prompt, and therefore there is no evidentiary basis in these sources to attribute the page to any named individual, the Ottawa indoor-playground business, the itch.io creator, or the retro‑game community [1][2][5][4][6][3]. Any definitive claim about ownership or origin of that Facebook page would require additional, page‑level data (for example the Facebook “About” entry, the account’s posting history, linked contact info, or platform metadata) that are not present in the provided files.

3. Could the Facebook page be fake or AI‑generated disinformation? The supplied documents do not analyze the Facebook page or present forensic evidence that the link is an AI‑generated disinformation asset, so that possibility remains an open hypothesis rather than a supported conclusion by these sources [1][2][5][4][6][3]. What the sources do show is the existence of multiple legitimate creators and organizations using “Cosmic” in their names, which creates fertile ground for impersonation or confusion but does not itself prove malicious intent or AI synthesis.

4. Reasonable alternative explanations grounded in the reporting. Based on the material, three plausible, non‑exclusive explanations exist: the link could point to a legitimate Facebook page operated by the Ottawa business Cosmic Adventures (which maintains a presence documented in business directories and reviews) [1][2][3]; it could belong to a small indie game or creator using “Cosmic Adventure” branding such as the itch.io project, which lists direct contact information [4]; or it could be an unrelated or fabricated page exploiting a common name and the familiarity of these brands — but none of those options is validated by the supplied reporting [1][2][4][3].

5. What additional evidence would resolve this and where to look next. To attribute the Facebook page with confidence, one would need page‑level signals: the Facebook account’s About/contact fields, timestamps and authorship of posts, reverse image searches of profile/banner assets, and cross‑referencing of any email or website links against the corporate contact information published in the directories and itch.io listing [1][2][7][4]. Because those elements are not included in the provided reporting, this analysis cannot go further without direct access to the Facebook page or additional investigative records.

6. Bottom line and responsible posture. The supplied reporting documents multiple legitimate uses of “Cosmic Adventure” branding but does not identify the operator of the Facebook share URL in question and offers no direct evidence that the page is AI‑generated disinformation; attribution therefore remains unresolved and requires page‑level verification steps not present in these sources [1][2][5][4][6][3].

Want to dive deeper?
How can I verify the owner of a Facebook page and check for signs of AI‑generated content?
What public records and business directories list contact information for Cosmic Adventures (Ottawa)?
How have scammers used lookalike social media pages to impersonate small businesses or indie game developers?