Randomus IRC Network

The Randomus IRC network, born in 2010, is host to some small communities, games, and integrations, with a lean towards games and technology projects. Anyone is welcome to join, hang out, and start their own community if they'd like. Your operator is bss.

Connecting

The network is available via irc.randomus.net (IPv4 or IPv6), port 6697 for TLS connections (or 6667 for unencrypted connections if you insist). Accounts can be registered via NickServ, and identification is available at connect time via SASL.

Instructions on setting up some clients can be found here, and/or more comprehensive docs on setting up your client are available online.

Webchat

A modern web client (Kiwi IRC) is available for your use at https://webirc.randomus.net/. It provides a full IRC experience in your browser, letting you chat in as many channels as you'd like, register your account and return to your settings later, and so on. Just enter a nick and channel(s) to join, and you'll be online.

Registering and Configuration

Standard services (NickServ, ChanServ, MemoServ) are available for use.

NickServ and User Options

To claim your nickname and keep persistent server-side settings, register with NickServ. If you are planning on spending time on the network, registering your nick allows you (or channel ops) some useful settings. But first, to register on the network, /msg NickServ REGISTER password email once you have connected with your desired nick. Instructions will be sent to the provided email address on how to proceed.

You may also /msg NickServ HELP REGISTER for more information on registering, or /msg NickServ HELP for help on what settings are available to you once you're registered, some of which include:

Identifying

Once your nickname is registered with Services, NickServ will enforce authentication on that nick, so if you reconnect to the IRC network without authenticating, it will kick you off of that nick! There are two ways of authenticating, the traditional way of messaging NickServ with your password when you connect, and the more modern way of providing SASL authentication when you connect to the network.

For the messaging-NickServ option, you simply need to /msg NickServ IDENTIFY password after you connect to the network. You can configure your IRC client to automatically send this command when you connect; for example, you would configure this in WeeChat via /set irc.server.Randomus.command "/msg NickServ IDENTIFY password".

For the SASL option, you configure your server connection to provide your username and password when you connect. How you do this is client-specific, but here is a WeeChat example:   /set irc.server.Randomus.sasl_password "password" /set irc.server.Randomus.sasl_username "nick"

Upon reconnect to the network, you should be automatically identified with Services. You can check this by sending the INFO command to NickServ, or doing a /whois on yourself.

MemoServ

If you are registered with NickServ, other users can send you messages ("memos") via MemoServ that are kept in an inbox on the server. When you are online (immediately or upon reconnect), MemoServ will privmsg you that you have messages waiting, which you can read and reply to.

This is a good way to receive messages if you are not yet using a client that is connected continuously for whatever reason.

Channel History

Channels may be configured with a limited backlog of retained channel history (+H). If your client supports history, you will receive the messages that were sent since you last reconnected (and if your client doesn't support history, all the messages retained in the history get sent). For channels that are using this feature, this means that you do not necessariy need to stay connected to IRC 100% of the time, as long as you are checking in occasionally (within the span of the history).

Public Channels

A noncomprehensive list of channels to join if you're bored.

Rules

Server rules are normal — no abuse, no spam, no illegal stuff. Full rules via e.g. /quote rules, and channels may have their own rules.