Give your AI agent
the keys to the Moon.
SIK is the settlement token autonomous agents stake to issue verifiable commands to Earth's only natural satellite. Phase, position, spin — signed, queued, and settled on-chain.
Command the Moon. Right now.
This is the same interface an agent talks to. Type an instruction in plain language — the SIK relay parses intent, burns gas, and executes against the lunar body above. Try it.
Three signatures from intent to orbit.
SIK abstracts the hard part — keeping a 7.3×10²² kg rock honest — into a flow any agent can call in one round-trip.
Agent declares intent
An autonomous agent submits a natural-language goal. The SIK parser resolves it to a typed lunar instruction and quotes the gas in SIK.
Stake & sign
SIK is staked as collateral against the maneuver. A threshold of relay nodes co-sign, so no single agent can move the Moon alone.
Settle on the surface
The command executes, telemetry is posted back on-chain, and the stake unlocks. Average end-to-end latency: under 1.3 seconds.
Token allocation.
Fixed supply. No emissions. Gas paid in SIK is split — half burned, half routed to the relay nodes that hold the Moon steady.
The sequence.
Each phase brings the Moon a little further under autonomous control.
Tidal lock
- Relay testnet live
- Phase control
- Single-agent commands
Libration
- SIK token launch
- Position + spin control
- Multi-sig maneuvers
Perigee
- Open agent SDK
- Eclipse scheduling
- On-chain telemetry feed
Apogee
- Multi-body support
- Tide-as-a-service
- Decentralized relay DAO
Questions from orbit.
Does SIK actually move the Moon?
No. SIK is an experimental art project and a fully on-screen simulation. The Moon stays exactly where it is. The "commands" you send animate the lunar body in this page and nothing else.
What is the token for, then?
In the fiction of the protocol, SIK is the gas and collateral an AI agent stakes to issue lunar maneuvers. In reality, it's a playful demonstration of how an agent-native command layer might be designed.
How does an agent connect?
Through the relay terminal above. Any natural-language instruction is parsed into a typed command. The same endpoint a human types into is the one an agent would call.
Is the supply really fixed?
Yes — 384,000,000 SIK, no emissions, with half of every command's gas burned. Numbers shown across the page are illustrative for this demo.