Funny thing is, a real life Metaverse has existed for over 20 years. The term Metaverse comes from a book called Snow Crash. The game Second Life was designed explicitly to be the Metaverse envisioned in Snow Crash, complete with it’s own economy tied to real life money (as in, if you made enough money in-game, you could cash it out for real-world USD). Companies used to build headquarters in the game world similar to how some do in Fortnite now, even going so far as to hold actual real world business meetings in-game as a form of teleconferencing. After a few high-profile events where live TV broadcasts of in-game events got swarmed by flying dicks, the media lost interest in the game, and companies abandoned the game and moved on to more business-oriented solutions.
Yeah I remember when Second life houses were sold for $1M usd. It was crazy and all years before other virtual marketplaces took off. It was ahead of its time and is now dead.
When I hear about concerts, and hotels reproducing their entire layout inside of Fortnite, I can actually respect the comparison. Of course, I’ve also seen many advertised attempts at “maid cafes” within the residential districts of FFXIV, so there’s multiple people trying it - Fortnite is just the most well known.
If you take the Ready Player One’s example of a metaverse, that is, one where people get to cosplay their favorite famous media properties, I don’t think it’s a wrong assessment.
Otherwise I would say VRChat is a much more honestly realized version of that.
“Fortnite, the real, actual closest thing to a metaverse we have”
Umm, what?
Funny thing is, a real life Metaverse has existed for over 20 years. The term Metaverse comes from a book called Snow Crash. The game Second Life was designed explicitly to be the Metaverse envisioned in Snow Crash, complete with it’s own economy tied to real life money (as in, if you made enough money in-game, you could cash it out for real-world USD). Companies used to build headquarters in the game world similar to how some do in Fortnite now, even going so far as to hold actual real world business meetings in-game as a form of teleconferencing. After a few high-profile events where live TV broadcasts of in-game events got swarmed by flying dicks, the media lost interest in the game, and companies abandoned the game and moved on to more business-oriented solutions.
Yeah I remember when Second life houses were sold for $1M usd. It was crazy and all years before other virtual marketplaces took off. It was ahead of its time and is now dead.
Not quite dead. On life support, sure, but the porn/furry communities keep it alive.
When I hear about concerts, and hotels reproducing their entire layout inside of Fortnite, I can actually respect the comparison. Of course, I’ve also seen many advertised attempts at “maid cafes” within the residential districts of FFXIV, so there’s multiple people trying it - Fortnite is just the most well known.
fellers never heard of a mmorpg
If you take the Ready Player One’s example of a metaverse, that is, one where people get to cosplay their favorite famous media properties, I don’t think it’s a wrong assessment.
Otherwise I would say VRChat is a much more honestly realized version of that.