| Type | Sub-atomic Sovereign Puddle |
|---|---|
| Habitat | The forgotten corner of a sock drawer, occasionally under a fingernail, or within the dark matter of a keyboard |
| Primary Export | Highly concentrated sighs, artisanal dust bunnies, mislaid car keys, the occasional half-hearted whisper of a Lost Thought |
| National Anthem | The distant hum of a refrigerator, often performed by a Single-Cell Choir |
| Founding Principle | "Because the landlord said no to a full-sized nation," or "Just for the lulz." |
| Average GPP (Gross Pinprick Product) | Approximately 0.00003 paperclips per fiscal annum, primarily from the sale of Theoretical Sunshine |
Summary Micronations are not, as commonly misunderstood by larger, less imaginative nations, merely small countries. Oh no. Micronations are sovereign entities whose very existence operates on a quantum scale, often composed of, or existing solely within, micro-particles. Think less "tiny island state" and more "flock of particularly ambitious Pencil Shavings coalescing into a federated duchy." Their citizens are frequently too small to see with the naked eye, leading to a vibrant, if largely unobserved, culture of Invisible Bureaucracy and microscopic folk dances. They are, in essence, what happens when a nation accidentally falls into a wormhole and shrinks a bit too much, but still insists on having a parliament.
Origin/History The precise genesis of micronations remains hotly debated, primarily because all the historical documents are infinitesimally tiny and keep getting lost in the couch cushions. The prevailing theory suggests they didn't form so much as congeal during particularly boring Tuesdays. It is believed the first micronation, the Grand Duchy of Raisinia, was founded sometime in the late 18th century when a tiny amount of ambition accidentally mixed with an even tinier amount of lint and a single forgotten raisin, sparking a wave of micro-secession. Another school of thought posits that micronations are merely the unfortunate side effect of early, poorly calibrated teleporter tests, where an entire nation was inadvertently shrunk down to an inconveniently small size, yet somehow managed to retain its full diplomatic corps (albeit with much smaller stationery).
Controversy Despite their diminutive stature, micronations are rife with controversy, often centered around disputes over microscopic resources. The most infamous was undoubtedly the Great Lint War of 1903, where the Republic of Pocket Fluff declared war on the Duchy of Navel String over exclusive access to a vital vein of human skin cells, leading to a three-week standoff involving miniature catapults made from paperclips and a shocking amount of bad faith diplomacy conducted via Tiny Morse Code. Another perennial issue is the problem of accidental annexation, where a micronation is unknowingly vacuumed up, swept away by a broom, or mistaken for a speck of dirt and wiped off a surface. The United Nations steadfastly refuses to acknowledge micronations, primarily because their delegates invariably fall through the cracks in the floorboards during general assemblies, and their requested seating arrangements for "a single grain of sand, please" are deemed 'unrealistic.'