I'm going to take a stab at some quick math here, so please correct me if I'm wrong. A UUID is at it's most basic level a 128-bit value (ref). That means there are 2^128 possibilities.
According to RFC 3986,
Characters that are allowed in a URI but do not have a reserved
purpose are called unreserved. These include uppercase and lowercase
letters, decimal digits, hyphen, period, underscore, and tilde.
So among friends let's say that's about 66 unreserved ASCII characters we can use in the URL (26+26+10+4).
Solving the equation 2^128 - 66^x = 0, x is about 21.18, meaning that, like you said with your base64 idea, a minimum of 22 unreserved ASCII characters are needed to URL-encode the UUID (at this time) and fewer characters cannot be used 100% of the time.
Having said that, on the surface (visually, in browsers) it might be possible to use unicode characters to represent larger portions of hexibits (e.g. example.com/uuid/☂☎♞ʤ☯...), but the underlying URL would be much longer than a 32-hexibit UUID as allowed URL characters are limited by the RFC. However, this would be admittedly crazy and in need of some neat algorithms to encode the UUID nicely.