You can’t mint it. You intercept it.
Most of what a Blip becomes, you’ll never mint — you tune into it. Its look shifts with every wallet it lands in, and the rarest traits live on no single Blip: they only surface when you hold the right ones together. Be the first to hold the right set and you don’t just switch a signal on — you name it on-chain, forever.
There’s no JPEG sitting on a server. No IPFS link praying a node stays online. Every Blip is drawn from scratch by the contract the instant you look at it — math all the way down, living on Ethereum.
A Blip isn’t a frozen JPEG. Its gear is tuned from the ghost signal in your wallet — so it wears something different in your hands than it did in the last, and it remembers its old look if it ever comes home.
And some signals can only be intercepted. Hold the right pieces together and something new tunes in — a trait that lives on no single token, that can’t be minted, only assembled.
We’re not telling you which combinations. The frequencies are out there. The collection is a puzzle — the mint is just the first move.
Every time a Blip changes hands it picks up a new ghost signal that might unlock new traits. The Blip is forever. The traits aren’t. They morph as it moves through wallets, tuning into ghost signals along the way.
The Blip underneath never changes — same face, same channel, same number, forever. But the gear traits are picked up from the ghost signal of whoever holds it. Watch one Blip change hands:
Send it back to 0xA1…f3 and it returns to exactly the gear it wore there — the wallet is the key, and the token remembers. And in the right wallet, something hidden tunes in. We’re not showing you what.
There are also signals that you can intercept that stay redacted until a collector holds the exact set that unlocks it. Each one is a trait you cannot mint. The first to surface a signal gets to name it — recorded on-chain, forever, by whoever finds it first. This log fills in as the collection cracks itself open.
Blind mint — you don’t pick your Blip, the static does. Every trait, anomaly and hidden frequency rolled live on-chain the moment you tune in. Public + allowlist phases.
Contract: 0x… (TBA at launch)
Yes. Completely. The picture is drawn by the contract itself and handed straight back — no IPFS, no server, nothing to rot or rug. It’ll look the same a hundred years from now.
Your Blip dresses itself differently for every wallet it lands in — and snaps back to an old look if it ever comes home. And in the right hands, hidden signals tune in. Which ones? Not telling. Finding out is the whole game.
Exactly what it says. Some looks live on no single Blip and never drop at mint, no matter how many you roll. They only surface when the right Blips share a wallet. You can’t buy one. You assemble it.
Be the first to assemble it — hold the full set live in one wallet — and a name it button lights up here (or call it straight on the contract). The first wallet to claim a signal christens it: your name, up to 32 characters, is written to the chain and tagged with your address as the one who found it. It’s permanent — no re-naming, no take-backs. Whoever surfaces a signal first names it forever.
There’s a kill switch. If a name is vile, the team can wipe it on-chain and reopen the claim for the next holder to take. Names are also locked to plain text at the contract level — no quotes, no code, nothing that could break the metadata. So the worst a troll gets is blanked, and they lose their shot at it.
Singles sell as singles, always. Want to pass on a live signal whole? List the set as a bundle — it travels together and lights right back up in the new wallet. Nothing’s ever locked. The set’s just worth more kept together.
Our gallery reads it live off the chain, so it’s always current. Marketplaces cache the image and catch up when a Blip moves (we ping them the moment it does) or on a manual refresh.