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  2. Blue Mars (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Mars_(video_game)

    The graphics engine is being modified by Avatar Reality, and features not part of a combat game but needed for a virtual world are being added. Content can be created on many 3rd party 3D and graphics programs so long as they can output a COLLADA interchange file format 3D model or TIFF or Direct Draw Surface image formats. They are then ...

  3. Second Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Life

    Second Life began to receive significant media attention in 2005 and 2006, including a cover story in BusinessWeek magazine featuring the virtual world and Second Life avatar Anshe Chung. [23] By that time, Anshe Chung had become Second Life ' s poster child and symbol for the economic opportunities that the virtual world offers to its ...

  4. VRChat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VRChat

    VRChat is an online virtual world platform created by Graham Gaylor and Jesse Joudrey [2] and operated by VRChat, Inc. The platform allows users to interact with others with user-created 3D avatars and worlds.

  5. Webkinz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webkinz

    Karl Borst, the creative director of Webkinz, had the idea to link the new plush toy line to an online site, and later to a virtual world. Originally, the pet avatars were designed to be three-dimensional, but this was later replaced with cartoony pet designs, due to the difficulty of animating such a large variety of pets while including cute ...

  6. Virtual world - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_world

    Users exploring the world with their avatars in Second Life. A virtual world (also called a virtual space or spaces) is a computer-simulated environment [1] which may be populated by many simultaneous users who can create a personal avatar [2] and independently explore the virtual world, participate in its activities, and communicate with others.

  7. Decentraland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decentraland

    Decentraland is a 3D virtual world browser-based platform. [5] Users may buy virtual plots of land in the platform as NFTs via the MANA cryptocurrency, which uses the Ethereum blockchain. [6] Designers can create and sell clothes and accessories for the avatars to be used in the virtual world. [7]

  8. ourWorld - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ourworld

    ourWorld combined an online virtual world with a range of casual gaming activities. [1] Each player had an avatar and a condo which could be decorated. An in-game currency, "Flow", was earned by talking, dancing, eating and drinking, and playing games. Flow could be exchanged for experience points and coins. ourWorld operated on

  9. The Palace (computer program) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Palace_(computer_program)

    The Manor includes embedded Python for user and room scripting with an encrypted data stream. Supports importing Palace avatars. Both new incarnations of The Palace support larger room sizes and 32-bit color avatars. Worlize, an online virtual world utilizing user-generated content; OpenVerse, an open-source visual chat program written in Tcl/Tk.