Mint your star
Mint one for free and a single glowing star appears, ready for planets to orbit. Your first system costs nothing beyond the usual Ethereum network fee.
Infinity is a generative NFT on Ethereum. You mint a solar system, then add planets, set their orbits, and choose their colors. The whole thing is stored on-chain and drawn fresh, in motion, every time it is viewed. Your first one is free.
Each Infinity is an ERC-721 NFT that holds a whole solar system. You add planets, set their orbits, and pick their colors and rings. Every change is written into the token itself, so the system you build is permanently yours and lives entirely on Ethereum.
It is fully on-chain on Ethereum, with a fixed supply of 10,000. The rules lock the day it launches, so it stays exactly as promised for everyone who ever owns one.
Mint one for free and a single glowing star appears, ready for planets to orbit. Your first system costs nothing beyond the usual Ethereum network fee.
Choose from nine kinds of planet, set each one an orbit, and pick its colors and rings. Every choice is written straight to the token, so your system is one of a kind.
From then on it animates on its own, stored on Ethereum and drawn fresh every time someone views it. There is nothing to maintain and no renewals, so it simply keeps going.
Gravity is the total amount of ETH you have ever added to your system. It is stored on the token and only ever goes up, never down. When you sell, the Gravity goes with the piece, so its full history stays visible to whoever owns it next.
As Gravity grows it crosses the thresholds below, and each tier changes how your system ranks across the collection.
When your planets drift into one of these patterns, your system earns a badge for it, recorded on-chain. They are easy to spot once you know them, and fun to chase over time.
Three worlds fall into a single straight line. It is the classic alignment, and usually the first one people manage to catch.
Three planets settle into an even triangle, spaced perfectly around the star as if someone had measured them.
One planet slips directly in front of another and briefly hides it from view, then carries on as though nothing happened.
Four worlds form a wide cross, sitting at the four corners of the system at the very same time.
A small planet crosses the bright face of the star, a tiny dark dot drifting slowly against the light.
A planet reaches the closest point of its orbit and glows a little brighter for a while, leaning in toward the star.
Seven classes of star and nine kinds of planet mix into something different every single time. Here are a few drawn straight from the collection.
First one free.
10,000 in total. The rules lock the day it launches and never change after that.