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The Top 5 Micronation Delegations Headed to MicroCon 27 North America

There’s a certain kind of person who looks at a map and thinks, “Yeah… but what if I made my own country?”

Those are your people. And this—MicroCon 27 North America in San Diego—is where they gather. Not in some beige hotel ballroom with bad coffee, but in a glass box in the sky overlooking a city that knows how to host a good time.

And while everyone’s welcome, some nations are rolling in deeper than others. Delegations are forming. Flags are being packed. Titles are being polished.

This Top 5 reflects the micronations currently leading in confirmed delegates—but with new registrations coming in, the rankings remain very much in motion.

Westarctica — 7 delegates

Cold, remote, and wildly ambitious. Westarctica claims a chunk of Antarctica most people wouldn’t dare vacation in, let alone govern. Yet here they are—organized, committed, and traveling a long way (geographically and metaphorically) to be part of the conversation.

Kingdom of Fergus — 6 delegates

A kingdom with personality. Fergus doesn’t whisper its presence—it walks in like it owns the room, probably because it believes it does. Expect confidence, camaraderie, and a delegation that knows how to make itself known.

Ladonia — 5 delegates (tie)

An art project turned nation, perched in Sweden and built on rebellion, driftwood, and imagination. Ladonia doesn’t follow rules—it questions why they existed in the first place. Their crew? Equal parts philosopher and provocateur.

Principality of Rosellia — 5 delegates (tie)

Precision. Presentation. Pride. Rosellia shows up like it rehearsed for this—and it probably did. A principality that understands image, structure, and the quiet power of showing up prepared.

Kingdom of Shiloh — 4 delegates

A little mystery, a little tradition, and just enough edge to keep things interesting. Shiloh’s delegation may be smaller, but don’t confuse that with quiet. These are the ones you end up talking about afterward.

(Not listed: Slowjamastan (13 delegates) and Aigues-Mortes (4 delegates)—they’re hosting, so yeah… they’re a little busy.)

Here’s the thing—this list? It’s fluid. Delegates are still registering. Alliances are forming. Plans are being made over late-night texts and early-morning ambition.

But one thing isn’t fluid: early-bird pricing.

That disappears Sunday. Gone. Finished. A beautiful, irresponsible deal that never should’ve existed in the first place. Tickets priced below cost, because sometimes you reward the ones who jump early and ask questions later.

After that? Reality sets in. Prices go up. Options get tighter. And you’ll wish you were already in.

So if you’re even thinking about it—stop thinking.

Get in the room.

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