Since the black powder, the first known explosive, was discovered by ancient Chinese in the seventh century, people have been finding powerful, stable, reliable and low-cost energetic materials for military equipment and civil industry. To obtain a better explosive performance, an efficient strategy is to load unstable chemical bonds [1][2][3], as well as to combine fuel with oxidizer components in a proper ratio for achieving sufficient combustion and rapid detonation [4][5][6]. An effective way is to incorporate fuel and oxidizer properties into a single molecule [7], as demonstrated by a series of classical organic nitro group/nitrogen-rich molecules, such as trinitrotoluene (TNT), pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN), cyclotrimethylene trinitramine (RDX), cyclotetramethylene tetranitramine (HMX), hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane (CL-20) and octanitrocubane (ONC) (Fig. S1). Loading more nitro groups and higher structural tension into a single molecule does improve explosive performance, but usually leads to complicated and not cost-effective synthetic procedures. By a trade-off of detonation performance and cost, HMX is regarded as the best military high-energetic explosives nowadays [7], although it is neither the most powerful one nor the cheapest one.Parallel to the intensive studies on molecule engineering on the backbone of nitrogen-rich organic energetic molecules [8,9], the exploration of advanced energetic materials extends to the crystal engineering on their energetic co-crystals [10-13], energetic salts [14][15][16][17][18][19][20], as well as coordination polymers or metal-organic frameworks [21][22][23][24][25][26][27]. The essential strategy is to control the intermolecular packing/linkage of the energetic organic fuel and oxidizer components in crystals by non-covalent interactions to modify/enhance the explosive performance and/or to reduce the sensitivity to a practicable level. However, for a specific energetic molecular component, it is highly challenging to predict/engineer the crystal structure of its co-crystals, salts, or metal-organic frameworks [10], and the examples with good detonation performance, high stability and low cost are still scarce.Here we present a promising solution, i.e., assembly of both low-cost organic fuel and oxidizer components into a closely packed, high-symmetry ternary compounds (vide infra), to achieve advanced energetic materials with a nice combination of high explosive power, high stability, and low cost. The presented materials belong to the so-called molecular perovskites [28] with a general formula of ABX 3 , which topologically mimic the cubic structure of the very well-known inorganic perovskites, the simplest high-symmetry structure for ternary compounds, but have at least one organic molecular component (usually A component). Recently, molecular perovskites have attracted growing attention, as illustrated by the extensive studies on methyl-ammonium lead iodide for high performance solar cells [29][30][31][32], and the phase transitions together with the ...