In brief
- The first model of ESA’s reusable rocket demonstrator Themis is standing on its own legs at its launch pad in Kiruna, Sweden.
- Themis is set to be the first European demonstration of a full-scale vertical take-off and landing rocket element that uses cryogenic propulsion.
- This is the first time the rocket stage demonstrator has had its four legs installed, now the demonstrator is fully assembled.
They did lose some Falcons, though, and it sounds like some of that was related to reusability development, albeit at a later stage. From that WP page:
SpaceX is a strange player in this field since they test their hardware to the limit. Here is an old video with thz falcon explosions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9FzWPObsWA. It is 8 years old so does not contaign the starship tests.
On the other hand of the spectrum, you have all the national agencies that simulate a lot and test in controled environment. Did you see SaturnV explosions during development ? Or Artemis launch ? Ariane 5 only had 1 bug, Ariane 6 have a flowless start.
Just not the same test/development phylosohy.