One developer, a large GitHub footprint, and a deliberately curated public index of the projects worth clicking, reading, and stealing ideas from.
The Ussyverse is the work of Kyle Durepos (@mojomast). Not a startup, not a foundation, not a stealth product family. Just one person building in public with a naming convention that stopped being a joke a long time ago.
`ussy.host` is intentionally narrower than the total GitHub output. It prioritizes public demos, high-signal repositories, and the connective role of the `ussyring` so visitors can orient themselves quickly.
The result is a catalog that spans AI tooling, infrastructure, creative software, browser experiments, media projects, and weird web systems that are still serious enough to deserve documentation.
Planning systems, orchestration runtimes, chat interfaces, memory layers, and operator-facing control surfaces.
MicroVM platforms, token routers, Firecracker control planes, APIs, and the supporting machinery behind public weird-web systems.
DAWs, emulators, music tools, media packages, game experiments, and browser projects that deserve the same seriousness as the engineering tools.
The coding-agent lineage still matters, but it sits alongside infrastructure work, creative software, and weird-web experiments rather than replacing them.
Historical lineage
Early proof that specialized AI workers could coordinate around software work in public.
Historical lineage
A more cohesive coding-agent generation that helped shape later orchestration and planning patterns.
Current catalog mainstay
Still an important core project, but now presented as part of a broader curated ecosystem rather than the sole center of the site.
The public site is curated, but the broader body of work is still visible on GitHub. The goal is editorial focus, not pretending the messy laboratory does not exist.
Go binaries, TypeScript dashboards, browser DAWs, emulators, media packages, APIs, bots, and connective web infrastructure all belong here if they are real enough to justify a page.
Public demos and repo-first projects are separated clearly, but the underlying preference remains the same: open formats, self-hostable tools, and minimal lock-in.
The Ussyverse is always looking for contributors, testers, site builders, and fellow weird-web operators. If you want to hack on tools, browse the ring, or add your own node to the ecosystem, come through.