MPublic UI system / open source

Empire UI

Empire UI is the interface layer in the Empire stack, with public pages for components, templates, colors, and contribution.

Category
Open Source
Status
Public site / early release
Minimum scope
$5,000+ USD
Open Source
Public site / early release
Public site
Empire UI homepage with components, templates, and showcase imagery.
What It Solves
The Problem

Most UI libraries still optimize for conventional CRUD dashboards rather than conversational systems, command layers, and adaptive operator surfaces.

What Changed
The Shift

Empire UI positions interface primitives as infrastructure for products that coordinate intelligence, action, and context.

Why It Matters
The Timing

AI-native applications need new defaults for orchestration, attention, and memory. Generic component kits are not enough.

How It Works

Core Product Architecture

The operating pieces that define the product, why people use it, and how it differentiates from generic alternatives.

01
AI-Ready Components

Patterns for panels, signal cards, command layers, and response surfaces.

02
Operator UX

Built for systems where people supervise, edit, route, and activate intelligent flows.

03
Design Language

Connects Misty's studio work to a reusable open-source interface vocabulary.

04
Community Leverage

Open-source tooling compounds reach, trust, and long-term ecosystem relevance.

Proof

Public Traction

Launches, reviews, public pages, and external proof that buyers can inspect without relying on claims alone.

Public site
EmpireUI.com live

The public site already exposes a named component and template system tied to the Empire ecosystem.

Gallery

Screens And Assets

Empire UI homepage with components, templates, and showcase imagery.
Official Empire UI homepage capture from the live public site.
FAQ

Questions Buyers Ask

Why is open source central to the flagship story?

Because it shows Misty is building infrastructure and patterns, not only packaging one-off client work.

How does it support enterprise credibility?

Open-source systems expose taste, technical depth, and interface thinking in public.