Sovereignty in one click. International recognition not included.
micronation lets you found a sovereign nation out of wherever you're currently sitting, in about four seconds. Type a name (or don't — the default works fine), click Declare Independence, and you'll be issued a flag, a currency, a gross national product, and a short list of founding laws, all generated on the spot and none of it legally binding anywhere.
Your new nation has a population that grows on its own, a currency that's already crashing, and — if you're unhappy with any of it — a Redraft Constitution button that tears the whole thing up and starts over, no referendum required.
The flag is drawn fresh each time on an HTML canvas: a random palette of two or three colors and a random layout — stripes, a cross, a circle, a corner triangle — topped with an emoji coat of arms. Nothing is pre-rendered; every flag is assembled from scratch in your browser the moment you declare independence.
The currency's exchange rate isn't fixed either — it drifts downward in small random steps roughly once a second, because that's apparently what currencies do, with the occasional stubborn uptick to keep hope alive.
Clicking Play Anthem synthesizes a short fanfare live using the Web Audio API — a handful of oscillator notes picked from a random scale and root note, so no two nations sound quite alike. No audio files, no samples, just math and a few milliseconds of triumphant square-wave brass.
Because founding a nation should not require a coastline, a constitution, or the approval of literally anyone, and because the internet already has enough sites that make you wait for things — this one gives you a whole country immediately, whether or not you deserve it.