Urbit Operators

Star Buyer's Guide

What is a star?

A star is an NFT, just like a punk or an ape–except instead of it just being an interesting picture, it can mint tens of thousands of new NFTs called planets which function as unique identities.

Billions of planets can be minted, but only 65,355 stars.

Stars don’t only mint planets, but sponsor them as well. This means that stars provide routing services — like an internet service provider for their planets, who are free to join and leave stars as they please.

Stars are legibly and visually distinguishable by their names and sigils, which contain only two phonemes compared to a planet’s four.

Why is a star valuable?

Stars make it easy to sell planets. Even if you were to sell planets for just $1, that’s a potential $65,535 in planets alone.

But beyond the value of the planets as network space, a star has the potential to become a locus of community. A community consists of the planets issued by the star and the software that they run. When you own a star you can practically host a standalone network; all of your child planets only go through you for routing. It's a natural choice for a company, an organization, or a city-state.

Not only do stars deliver kernel updates, they’re a natural source for custom software. Stars are positioned so that they can decide to only share features with the planets they sponsor. Stars could also host bolt-on services like the bitcoin wallet or machine learning that are better suited to run on dedicated servers optimized for those functions.

Keep in mind that while stars are positioned to serve as this type of infrastructure, the demand and the tools for these type of functions are yet to come.

What is the best way to get a star?

We recommend Urbitex, a marketplace dedicated to Urbit address space. Read our guide to buying a star with Urbitex.