Industry | Technology |
---|---|
Founded | 2008 |
Headquarters | Auckland |
Key people
|
Mitch Olson and Darren Green co-founders |
SmallWorlds is a virtual world and social network service by Outsmart Games, a privately owned company based in Auckland, New Zealand. The virtual world runs inside a web browser and integrates with YouTube, Flickr, and a number of other Web 2.0 services. The game has a 25+ million playerbase and is one of the most popular gaming sites for 13+.
In October 2009, SmallWorlds was voted top prize in the Social Computing category of the Adobe MAX Awards 2009
SmallWorlds is a free to play and join, with a requirement to be at least 13 years of age. The game has users that are both teens and adults. SmallWorlds is aimed at being teenage friendly so it is designed to be more casual and less provocative than Second Life.
SmallWorlds also has a VIP option with extended game options for players at a monthly cost. This gives users extra game options such as further character customization, clothing / wearable options, and other special perks not available to free users. VIP can be purchased with real currencies used around the world or with virtual currency (SmallWorld's Gold) that is earned in the game and via offers through the game.
According to co-founder Mitch Olson, SmallWorlds demographic base as of 2012 are about 65% female predominately teens, followed by soccer mums. This game is played by a lot of people worldwide and has added many items of clothing to represent many different cultures.
In February 2009, SmallWorlds launched embeddable versions of its application that integrate with Facebook, MySpace, Hi5 and Bebo.
With SmallWorlds, users can share their experiences together watching YouTube videos, listening to music on SoundCloud together browsing through photo galleries. SmallWorlds brings together all aspects of social media, online games, instant messaging, digital media, all into one bundle.
SmallWorlds was one of the tools for learning used in the development of the New Zealand Virtual School project. The project was scheduled to open in 2011, but with offices in central Christchurch the Christchurch earthquake saw several changes that led to the termination of the project.
Players in SmallWorlds have seven skill paths: arena, artist, crafting, explorer, farming, gamer and social, each with their own level. A player can level up by playing missions, doing PVP shooting games, sowing plants or crafting up items. There are many different widgets, but only one or two that work at any given time