After being spotted in the North Sea during a test run, the spectacular new superyacht owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was revealed to the world.
On February 13, the $500 million (£416 million) ship, Koru, with the codename Y721, departed from Rotterdam in the Netherlands, and it is now believed to be sea-ready.
The massive ship, which is 417 feet long, needs a support vessel, which is 250 feet long, to follow it and provide a helipad for the billionaire to land on.
According to reports, the support vessel will be outfitted with everything from supercars and speedboats to jet skis and other water toys.
The main ship is made up of three decks, one of which has a swimming pool, and three enormous masts that are over 200 feet tall.
Bezos has previously appeared in a number of pictures featuring him at sea with his scantily dressed partner Lauren Sanchez.
The massive ship can hold up to 18 passengers and requires a whopping 40-person crew to sail.
Running the boat for a year will reportedly cost around $25 million (£20 million), making it a toy strictly for the wealthy.
Of course, Bezos will probably not be too bothered by this given that Forbes estimates his current net worth at about $181 billion for his Prime Video empire.
The Koru is anticipated to surpass all other sailing yachts as the world’s biggest, according to BOAT International.
But it took a long time for the ship to get to the founder of Blue Origin.
After it was revealed that a historic city bridge would need to be demolished in order to get the boat out of the production yard, it became clear that the boat itself would be the subject of considerable controversy.
The enormous 229-foot mast of the Koru could not have passed underneath the 130-foot-tall Koningshaven Bridge.
This, of course, did not impress the locals, who vowed to pelt it with eggs if they saw it gliding past the De Hef bridge.
It ultimately had to be smuggled to another boatyard late at night.
Previously, speaking to BOAT, a spokesperson for the ship’s manufacturer Oceanco said it wouldn’t comment on who the boat had been built for.