@dragonfi oh yeah the order was arbitrary so I went with alphabetical order. I did try base 4 at first like you said, but because they come as pairs in DNA of a purine and a pyrimidine (A & T or a C & G), when i did it from base 4, there were too many parts that crossed that line (strings of a single nucleobase in a row, or two purines or two pyrimidines) so it came up with zero results. So i simplified to going off pairs!
soft petplay kinkWaking up and laying in bed, imagining being in a cage, excitedly waiting for my owner to open the door and let me out so i can start my day…
I did something very silly and converted my serial number to binary, then converted every 0 to CG and every 1 to AT, and then fed the resulting string into a search tool for databases of scientifically sequenced DNA. Turns out my serial number (well, a silly hand edited version of it) exists in the DNA of one sequenced creature: the Chinese Giant Salamander.