Neopets

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Neopets

Screenshot of the Neopets homepage in March 2010
Developer(s) Viacom (2005-2014)
Knowledge Adventure (2014-present)
Publisher(s) Viacom (2005-2014)
Knowledge Adventure (2014-present)
Designer(s) Adam Powell, Donna Powell
Platform(s) Cross-platform, web game
Release date(s) November 15, 1999
Genre(s) Fantasy, Digital pet
Mode(s) Single-player with multiplayer interaction.

Neopets (originally NeoPets) is a virtual pet website. Visitors can create accounts, own virtual pets ("Neopets"), and buy virtual items for them using one of two virtual currencies, one of which can be earned within the site and the other of which can purchased with real-world money.

The website was launched by Adam Powell and Donna Williams in late 1999. Two years later, a consortium of investors led by Doug Dohring bought a controlling interest in the company and in June 2005, Viacom bought Neopets Inc. for US$160 million.[1] On March 17, 2014, Viacom sold Neopets to Knowledge Adventure for an unannounced amount.[2][3]

Gameplay

Neopets allows users to create and care for virtual pets called Neopets and explore the virtual world of Neopia. There is no set objective for the users, but they are expected to feed and care for their Neopets when they grow hungry or ill. Neopets will not die if neglected, but their health can limit their gameplay.[4] Neopets come in a variety of species and colors and users can create or adopt their own. Users can obtain items to interact with their Neopet, such as books to read and toys to play with them. Neopets can be customised with certain clothing items, paint brushes, transformation potions, and accessories. Users can build a customisable Neohome for their Neopets and furnish it with furniture, wallpaper, and flooring. Neopets can battle against other Neopets or non-player characters in the Battledome but they cannot die there.

A customisable Neohome.

Neopia is a virtual planet with fantasy lands inhabited by Neopets and other virtual creatures. Each land has a different theme, such as pirates or prehistoric times, and their own shops, games, and attractions.[5] Neopia follows its own calendar and time zone, which runs concurrent with real-world Pacific Time,[6] and has tie-ins with certain real world holidays such as Halloween and Christmas. It has its own economy and stock market based on Neopoints. Users can earn Neopoints through various means including playing games and selling items, which can be invested or used to buy various virtual goods and services.[7] While there is no set objective for users, interactive storylines are sometimes released that introduce changes to the planet such as new lands.

The site is regularly updated with features like new games, items and content. In addition to the site content updated by the Neopets staff members, users also contribute content to the site.[8] User contributions come in the form of prescreened submissions and readily editable content that is automatically filtered, such as the site's weekly electronic newspaper The Neopian Times. There are different types of submissions that will be accepted.[9]

Games

Users can earn Neopoints from playing games. Games come in many different genres, which include action, puzzles, and luck & chance. Most games have a set maximum earnings or playtime. Players may also earn trophies and other awards from games if they score high enough or perform better than other users. Many single-player and multi-player browser games are available. Users can also participate in contests and spotlights judged by staff to showcase the users' talents. Quests to retrieve items may also be performed for specific NPCs. Challenges may be made against other players or random players in a "World Challenge" for a prize piece and Neopoints from the jackpot for certain Flash games. Monthly competitions also exist for multiplayer games with four week-long elimination rounds.[10]

Economy

The economy is based on Neopoints. Users can also exchange real money for Neocash, used exclusively for the NC Mall; however, Neopoints cannot be exchanged for Neocash and vice versa to keep Neopets fair.[11] Users can earn Neopoints through playing games, selling items, and other transactions.[12] Once earned, they can be saved in the bank, used to buy items from other users or non-player character (NPC) shops, used to buy and sell stocks in the Neopian stock market called the Neodaq, or used to buy various other things.[7] Items can be bought from shops found throughout the world of Neopia that are run by NPCs who may allow haggling. Users can open their own shops to sell items, sometimes after obtaining those items at a lower price from sources such as other shops or charities. Items may also be exchanged through trade or auction.

Community

Neopets has a community for users to chat with and contact other users. Each user has their own profile they can edit with HTML and CSS and are represented by avatars provided by the website, as users cannot upload their own. Users may request other users to be "Neofriends" or block other users from contacting them. To comply with COPPA, users under 13 years of age cannot access any of the site's communication features without sending in parental consent via fax.[13] The main features include:

Discussions through these features are restricted and may not involve topics such as dating and romance or controversial topics like politics and religion. Continuous moderation is performed by paid Neopets staff members, and users can help moderate the site by reporting messages they believe are inappropriate or offensive. Messages are also automatically filtered to prevent users from posting messages with profanity or lewd content.[13]

History and background

Neopets was conceived in 1997 by Adam Powell, a British student at the University of Nottingham at the time. He shared this idea with Donna Williams and the two started work on the site in September 1999, with Powell responsible for the programming and the database and Williams the web design and art. The site launched on November 15, 1999 from offices in Portsmouth Road, Guildford, a location still commemorated on the site.[14][15] Powell stated that the original goal was to "keep university students entertained, and possibly make some cash from banner advertising".[16] The site contained popular culture references, such as a Neopet that was simply a picture of Bruce Forsyth.[17]

The user base grew by word of mouth and by Christmas 1999, Neopets was logging 600,000 page views daily and sought investors to cover the high cost of running the site. Later in the month, American businessman Doug Dohring was introduced to the creators of the site and, along with other investors, bought a majority share in January of the following year.[18] Dohring founded Neopets, Inc. in February 2000 and began business April 28. Intellectual property that did not belong to Neopets, such as Bruce Forsyth were removed, but the site kept the British spellings.[17] The website made money from the first paying customers using an advertising method trademarked as "immersive advertising"[18] and touted as "an evolutionary step forward in the traditional marketing practice of product placement" in television and film.[19] In 2004, Neopets released a premium version and started showing advertisements on the basic site that, as a perk of premium membership, are not visible to premium members.[20]

Media conglomerate Viacom purchased Neopets, Inc. on June 20, 2005 for $160 million and announced plans to focus more on the use of banner ads over the site's existing immersive advertising.[1][21] The website was redesigned on April 27, 2007 and included changes to the user interface and the ability to customise Neopets.[22] In June, Viacom promoted Neopets through minishows on Nickelodeon. Promotions included the second Altador Cup and lead to an increase in traffic through the site.[20] The first Altador Cup was released as an international online gaming event to coincide with the 2006 FIFA World Cup[23] to improve interactivity between users and had 10.4 million participants the first year.[24] On July 17, the NC Mall was launched in a partnership with Korean gaming company Nexon Corporation. It allowed users to use real money to purchase Neocash to buy exclusive virtual items.[25] On June 17, 2008, Viacom formed the Nickelodeon Kids & Family Virtual Worlds Group to "encompass all paid and subscription gaming initiatives across all relevant platforms", including Neopets.[26] By June 2011, Neopets announced that the website had logged 1 trillion page views since its creation.[27]

In July 2009, the Neopets site was the target of an identity theft hacking scheme that attempted to trick users into clicking a link that would allow them to gain items or Neopoints. Upon doing so, malware was installed onto the user's computer. According to reports, the hack was aimed not at child players' Neopets accounts, but at using the malware to steal the financial data and identities of their parents. Viacom stated that it was investigating the issue, and that the hack was a version of social engineering rather than an "indictment of Neopets security practices".[28] In an on-site newsletter for players, Neopets denied the report and claimed that the site's security measures prevented the posting of such links.[29]

Reception

Neopets is consistently one of the "stickiest" sites for children's entertainment. Stickiness is a measure of the average amount of time spent on a website. A press release from Neopets in 2001 stated that Neopets.com led in site "stickiness" in May and June, with the average user spending 117 minutes a week.[30] Neopets also led in the average number of hours spent per user per month in December 2003 with an average of 4 hours and 47 minutes.[7] A 2004 article stated that Nielsen//NetRatings reported that people were spending around three hours a month on Neopets, more than any other site in its Nielsen category.[31] By May 2005, a Neopets-affiliated video game producer cited about 35 million unique users, 11 million unique IP addresses per month, and 4 billion web page views per month. This producer also described 20% of the users as 18 or older, with the median of the remaining 80% at about 14.[32] Neopets was consistently ranked among the top ten "stickiest" sites by both Nielsen//NetRatings and comScore Media Metrix in 2005 and 2006.[33][34] According to Nielsen//NetRatings, in 2007, Neopets lost about 15% of its audience over the previous year.[35] In February 2008, comScore ranked it as the stickiest kids entertainment site with the average user spending 2 hours and 45 minutes per month.[36]

Described as an online cross of Pokémon and Tamagotchi,[16][18] Neopets has received both praise and criticism. It has been praised for having educational content. Children can learn HTML to edit their own pages.[37] They can also learn how to handle money by participating in the economy.[38] Reviews from About.com and MMO Hut considered the multitude of possible activities a positive aspect.[39][40] Most of the users are female, higher than in other massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) but equivalent to social-networking-driven communities.[41][42] Lucy Bradshaw, a vice president of Electronic Arts, attributes the popularity among girls to the openness of the site and said, "Games that have a tendency to satisfy on more than one dimension have a tendency to have a broader appeal and attract girls".[43]

Luck & chance games draw criticism from parents as they introduce children to gambling. In Australia, a cross-promotion with McDonald's led to controversy with Neopets' luck/chance games in October 2004. Australian tabloid television show Today Tonight featured a nine-year-old boy who claimed the site requires one to gamble in order to earn enough Neopoints to feed one's Neopet or else it would be sent to the pound.[44] While gambling is not required, nor are pets sent to the pound if unfed, the website includes games of chance based on real games such as blackjack and lottery scratchcards. After this incident, Neopets prohibited users under the age of 13 from playing most games that involve gambling.[17]

Immersive advertising

Immersive advertising is a trademarked term for the way Neopets displayed advertisements to generate profit after Doug Dohring bought the site.[17] Unlike pop-up and banner ads, immersive ads integrate advertisements into the site's content in interactive forms, including games and items. Players could earn Neopoints from them by playing advergames and taking part in online marketing surveys. Prior to the arrival of the NC Mall, it contributed to 60% of the revenue from the site[4] with paying Fortune 1000 companies including Disney, General Mills, and McDonald's.[45]

It was a contentious issue with the site with regard to the ethics of marketing to children. It drew criticism from parents, psychologists, and consumer advocates who argued that children may not know that they are being advertised to, as it blurred the line between site content and advertisement. Children under eight had difficulty recognizing ads and half a million of the 25 million users were under the age of eight in 2005.[17][45] Dohring responded to such criticism stating that of the 40 percent of users twelve and younger, very few were seven or eight years old and that preschoolers were not their target audience.[46]

Others criticised the functionality of the site. Susan Linn, another psychologist and author of Consuming Kids: The Hostile Takeover of Childhood considered the purpose of this site was to keep children in front of advertisements.[41] Kalle Lasn, editor-in-chief and co-founder of Adbusters magazine, said the site encouraged kids to spend hours in front of a screen and recruited them to consumerism.[17] Neopets executives stated that paid content comprised less than 1% of the site's total content.[41] Children were not required to play or use sponsor games and items, and all ads were marked as such.[17][45]

After Neopets was purchased by Viacom, and due to criticism towards the immersive advertising model, banner advertisements and other more clear-cut forms of advertising were integrated into the site. Neocash (discussed elsewhere in this article) was also introduced as an additional revenue source.[47]

Merchandise

The popularity of Neopets spawned real-world merchandise. Merchandise existed as stickers, books, cereals, video games and other forms, sold at mainstream outlets and online retailers. Each piece of merchandise has a code which can be redeemed at the site for an in-game reward. The merchandise has now been discontinued. Neopets, Inc. had always planned to "bring the online and offline worlds together in ways that have never been done before".[48] An investment banker at Allen & Company in New York said that Neopets was the only online media he had seen "that might have the ability to capture market share in the offline world".[4] Neopets, Inc. had signed various a licensing deals with companies such as Viacom Consumer Products, Thinkway Toys, and Jakks Pacific.[49][50][51] Wizards of the Coast released the Neopets Trading Card Game in September 2003, which has been promoted in three of General Mills "Big G" cereals[52] and ten Simon Property Group malls.[53] and received two different nominations for "Toy of the Year" and two other recognitions.[54] Neopets: The Official Magazine was a bi-monthly magazine released the same month but was replaced in 2008 by Beckett Plushie Pals, which featured Neopets news as well as other companies' products. In 2005, Neopets expanded to film and video game deals.[4] The first movie was to be written by Ron Lieber and produced by Dylan Sellers and John A. Davis, but the project has since been cancelled with no other projects announced.[55] Two video games were released by Sony Computer Entertainment, Neopets: The Darkest Faerie for the PlayStation 2 in 2005 and Neopets: Petpet Adventures: The Wand of Wishing for the PlayStation Portable in 2006.

JumpStart era

JumpStart acquired Neopets from Viacom in April 2014. Server migration began in September. JumpStart-owned Neopets was immediately characterized by glitches and site lag. On 6 March 2015, much of the Neopets Team remaining from Viacom were laid off for as-yet unknown reasons.

Chat filters broken

On the weekend of 27–28 June 2015 the site's chat filters, designed to prevent adult language and content, stopped working. The site's forums and other user-edited spaces were flooded with adult content and obscene images.[56]

In a statement on Facebook, JumpStart explained that the issue was due to a "facility move" and that during that move the moderation team was not able to access the Neopets community.[57]

See also

References

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External links

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