The Rarest Urbit Sigils
What makes an Urbit sigil rare?
Urbit Names
First let's take a brief look at Urbit names. All ships in the Urbit network are named using 3-letter syllables, and there are 512 syllables in total.
These unique syllables are separated into two groups: 256 prefixes, and 256 suffixes. The syllables are listed in full at the bottom of this article.
The names of the 256 galaxies in the urbit network are the same as the 256 suffixes:
~devStar names are made from just one word, a prefix followed by a suffix:
~rondevPlanet names are made up of two 6-letter words:
~pinwyl-dirbetIn this example pin
and dir
are prefixes, and wyl
and bet
are suffixes.
Point Numbers
Each of the 256 prefixes and 256 suffixes also have an 8-bit numerical value, ranging from 0-255.
For example, both doz
and zod
have the value 0
, but one is a prefix and one is a suffix.
Hexadecimal numbers (beginning with 0x
) are useful for reading point numbers, as you can view the data byte-by-byte.
dev
is a suffix with value 179
or 0xb3
, and the point number of galaxy ~dev
is also 179
.
0x 00 00 00 b3
The point number for a star is a 16-bit number where the suffix value is in the lower 8 bits, and the prefix value is in the upper 8 bits.
ron
has the value 0x60
and dev
has the value 0xb3
, so the point number for ~rondev
is 0x60b3
or 24,755
in decimal.
0x 00 00 60 b3
Planets are represented by 32-bit numbers, but the syllables in the name do not match up with the bytes in the point number.
~pinwyl-dirbet0x a0 57 60 b3
Planet names are obfuscated, so it's not obvious which star they come from. This system effectively shuffles all the planet names and distributes them amongst all the stars.
If they were not obfuscated, each star would have a very predicatable and boring list of planets:
Instead, these are the actual names:
Basic Glyphs
The syllables in an Urbit name translate exactly to the glyphs in the sigil for that name. Every syllable has its own glyph.
The individual glyphs are combined left-to-right and top-to-bottom.
~pinwyl-dirbetWhen you use the Sigil search tool, you can see all the glyphs are categorized into 12 general shapes.
Even though all 512 glyphs have one of these 12 shapes, they are each unique due to other stylistic elements.
Rarity
The key to what makes a sigil's shape rare is the number of glyphs in each group, and whether those glyphs are prefixes or suffixes.
Prefixes | Suffixes | |
40 | 39 | |
30 | 35 | |
21 | 9 | |
6 | 19 | |
5 | 2 | |
0 | 6 | |
53 | 0 | |
0 | 40 | |
26 | 16 | |
5 | 56 | |
66 | 1 | |
4 | 33 |
From this we can see that some sigils are impossible because certain glyphs never appear in the prefix or suffix position. The rarest sigil shapes are those using the least common glyphs for a particular position.
Here are the uncommon prefixes from that table:
These are the uncommon suffixes:
rylryl
is the only suffix of that shape, and sigils with 2 ryl
appear only once per star on average.
You will notice that the rarest shaped sigils contain the syllables above.
The Rarest Sigils
Let's check out some of the rarest and most aesthetic shapes. These rare sigils won't be found for sale on urbit.me, but you can browse all the planets and see what stars they belong to.
See the full list of rare shapes here: Rare Sigil Shapes
These are only samples of the rare shapes, browse through the rest here: Rare Sigil Shapes