About Rarest Eye Color
Rarest Eye Color is built around one question that people have been asking online for years: how rare is my eye color? It answers that question with a mix of fun, structure, and caution. It is not trying to be a medical database. It is here to make eye-color rarity feel clear, visual, and memorable.
It is more than a one-question calculator. The homepage gives a quick estimate, the chart helps with labels, the compare pages untangle tricky pairs, and the main color pages go deeper into shades like green, amber, gray, and hazel.
Quick answer
Rarest Eye Color is a playful eye-color library for naming your shade, checking how rare it may be, and following brighter comparisons when one answer is not enough.
What you can do here
Most people start with one curiosity question. Are brown eyes common? Are green eyes truly rare? Are violet eyes real? Are my eyes hazel or amber? One question usually opens the next.
Everything is arranged so the next step feels obvious. Breadcrumbs keep the path clear, comparison pages help when two colors are close, the chart gives a visual checkpoint, and the main articles explain why a color feels common, uncommon, rare, or wonderfully hard to pin down.
Another important goal is to keep the language accessible. Eye color can drift into dry genetics talk very quickly. The writing stays comfortable while still respecting the fact that real eye color is more complex than a simple classroom punnett-square story.
How Una the Unicorn fits in
Una the Unicorn is the narrator because she gives the whole experience a distinct personality. A lot of informational pages sound interchangeable. This one should feel playful, warm, and memorable without turning every paragraph into a character script.
Una is here to soften the experience, not take it over. She adds a little sparkle, a little reassurance, and just enough fantasy to keep the science from feeling stiff.
That balance matters. A playful voice is strongest when the structure underneath it is careful and easy to trust.

What makes it different
Many eye-color pages online stop at one of two weak extremes. Some pages are so short that they barely answer the question. Others lean into dramatic claims that make the content feel less trustworthy. Rarest Eye Color aims for a better middle ground. It keeps the pages lively, but it avoids fake precision and overblown certainty.
The calculator is a good example. It gives people a rarity score, but it also tells them the score is a fun estimate. Optional details like family-origin region, lighting, or uncertainty improve the explanation, not just the number. That keeps the tool useful without pretending it is more scientific than it is.
The compare hub matters because many people do not need a big encyclopedia entry. They need a fast answer to a narrow question like gray vs blue or green vs hazel. Those pages turn uncertainty into something much easier to solve.
Where to go next
The best next step depends on what brought you here. If you already know your color, head to the matching guide. If you are stuck between two answers, open a compare page. If your eyes have a ring, split, or patch that changes the whole look, the heterochromia pages are the best place to continue.
When that path feels natural, exploring becomes much more fun. A quick answer can lead to a richer one, and a single eye-color question can turn into a whole trail of comparisons and guides.
The final takeaway is simple. Rarest Eye Color is here to be fun, helpful, colorful, and easy to explore whether you want a fast answer or a deeper look.