Club Penguin
Club Penguin | |
---|---|
File:Clubpenguin.gif | |
Developer(s) | Walt Disney and New Horizon Interactive |
Publisher(s) | New Horizon Interactive |
Engine | Adobe Flash |
Platform(s) | Cross-platform (requires Flash Player 6) |
Release | October 24th, 2005 |
Genre(s) | Online Game |
Mode(s) | Multiplayer |
Disney's Club Penguin is an online game developed by New Horizon Interactive and had recently partnered with the Disney company to expand their site's population. Using cartoon penguin avatars, players can waddle around, chat, play minigames, and participate in other activities with one another in a snow-covered virtual world.[1] Having completed beta-testing, Club Penguin was made available to the general public on October 24, 2005[2] and has since expanded into a large online community.
Club Penguin shares similarities with other popular online environments like Habbo Hotel. Though open to users of all ages like Virtual Magic Kingdom, another Disney-owned online community, Club Penguin is primarily designed for children ages six to fourteen[3] and has qualified for the Better Business Bureau - Kid's Privacy Seal of Approval.[4] Club Penguin was also awarded the "Editors Choice" award from Children's Technology Review Magazine.[5]
An online merchandise shop opened on the Club Penguin website in August 2006,[6] selling stuffed Puffles and T-shirts. Keychains, gift cards, and more shirts were added on November 7, 2006.[7]
Memberships
Subscribed memberships
Players may become subscribed members and doing so grants them addition benefits. They may buy clothing and furniture, own up to fourteen puffles, enjoy early access to new parts of the game, buy furniture for their puffles, and have access to all puffle breeds. A brand new catalog for members only has hairstyles. Members also have access to Members-only parties hosted by Club Penguin.[8] Members may also open their igloo to visits by other players.
Club Penguin have game cards available for retail purchase, initially at Target stores in the United States, enabling players to buy their own membership[9].
Non-memberships
Club Penguin provides a non-membership option. Although such play is free, it does not include all of the benefits of being a member. Non-members may still buy colors and player-card backgrounds and can go anywhere (except during member parties) as well as play games. Non-members may also receive and use items given out at parties that are thrown monthly for all players. Non-members are restricted to only two puffles in colors red or blue. If they had a membership before and had member puffles, if their membership should end, they could still keep them unless they dont take care of them. Non-members can not purchase clothes or furniture; nor wigs, hats, or bigger igloos. They also may not access brand new game areas during their first days of release.
Game-play
Environment
Club Penguin is divided into various rooms and distinct areas.
Each player is provided with an igloo for a home. Members have the option of opening their igloo so other penguins can access it via the map. Members may also purchase larger igloos and decorate their igloos with items bought with money earned by playing mini-games.
Many game locations can be accessed by clicking on the Club Penguin map. Some places, such as the Attic, are reached by clicking its general area on the map then walking the penguin to the specific location. Other places, such as Rockhopper's Ship, The Migrator, are only available on certain days. Penguins with secret agent status can also teleport to any location (other than secret areas and players' igloos) using their spy phone. There are 2 secret rooms the Dojo which is located in the mountains and the ice berg which is located on the water on the map somewhere.
Chat
Club Penguin provides two options for inter-player communication. The Ultimate-Safe Chat mode allows players to select predefined phrases from a list, similar to old text-adventure games. Most parents use this mode just to increase their child's safety for online gaming. The other mode, "Open Chat", allows players to enter their own custom messages, although these are subject to censorship.[10] Each game instance (server) offers one particular type of chat — the majority allowing either, but some allow only Ultimate-Safe Chat mode.
Getting banned
Players who use profanity are often punished by an automatic 24-hour ban, although not all vulgar language results in an immediate ban. After being caught using profane language on a second or third occasion, players may be banned for 72 hours. Players caught hacking Club Penguin are banned for a much longer time period. After 3 to 5 bans, a player is banned indefinitely from the game. [11] If someone tries to log in to Club Penguin as a famous player account (such as Rockhopper), any password will result in a message that the account is banned with a "Forever" expiration.
Moderators
All Club Penguin areas are monitored by teams of moderators who ensure players are not using profanity or acting abusively towards other players. Players' suggestions for new ideas or improvement of the game are reviewed by Moderators, who also help prevent hackers from interfering with the game or cheating.[12] Moderators must be at least 18 years old, pass a criminal record check, and live in or near Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada. The current moderators working are Billybob, rsnail, Happy77, Gizmo, ScreenHog.[13]
Events
Club Penguin offers a variety of parties each year. Parties within the last year include a Valentine's Day party, Winter Fiesta Party, St Patrick's Day party, April Fool's Day party, Easter party, Summer party, a water party (while some of the main places in Club Penguin were flooded), a Camp Penguin party (inspired by the 100th anniversary of Scouting), a Fall Fair (inspired by the circus and the anniversary of Club Penguin), Halloween party, western party, and Christmas party. Note that after the fall fair ended the main music to the pirate party was changed to that of the fall fair. The whole of Club Penguin is often altered to match a current party. For example: the St Patrick's Day party involved all the main attractions turning green, and a free St Patrick hat was available to players.
At the very first party on Club Penguin, beta testers received a purple and yellow party hat, which is now the rarest item in Club Penguin. [14]
Items
Players may use the coins they collect from playing minigames to purchase various items from shops.
There are 13 penguin colors, from which players can choose and use as often as they want. They are: Lime Green, Light Green, Dark Green, Orange, Peach, Red, Light Blue, Dark Blue, Brown, Black, Pink, Yellow, Purple and there used to be regular Blue. New colors are generally introduced at members-only parties.
Many backgrounds are available, with two to four new ones every month. Backgrounds can be viewed when anyone clicks on a player's penguin, and can be bought by non-members.
Pins display in the top left-hand corner of a player's lookup card. A special Christmas Tree Pin was made available for 50 coins in a late 2006 issue of the Penguin Times newspaper. Pins are currently free but have to be found.
Flags are similar to pins though are only available to members; they also appear in the top left-hand corner of a player's lookup card. They can only be on one at a time. Clothes are for members only, except for the items given out for free at parties and on the pirate ship.
Furniture is for members only and can be used to design and decorate a player's igloo.
Flooring (introduced January 19, 2007) is another feature for members only. There are currently eight different floors to choose from.
Members' igloos can be upgraded into many different styles. Some igloo styles are themed for recent parties, such as the Bamboo Hut or Log Cabin. Igloo upgrades range from 1500 to 5100 coins depending on the style. In May 2007, a disco tile was added to the igloo upgrades.
Free items
Players can receive free items in addition to clothing during events.
- New pins appear every two weeks and are visible in the top left-hand corner of a player card for those who find and use them.
- Participate in periodic treasure (scavenger) hunts; these activities result in free player card backgrounds or clothing accessories.
- The Penguin Times newspaper sometimes offers polls or fund-raisers for items.
- Rockhopper provides a free item of clothing each time he arrives.
- Players who pass the Secret Agent test receive a free Spy Phone and are able to participate in secret missions, which provide more free items like medals and letters.
- Successful Tour Guide applicants get a free hat to identify them.
- A friendship bracelet is available in the Library at the end of the book: Rockhopper and the Stowaway.
Secret Agents
Secret Agent status is available to all players, whether members or not, who have played for at least 30 days and have not been banned. Penguins are given a spy-phone used to teleport to places in Club Penguin and the secret HQ. These agents are encouraged to inform players of upcoming events and guide new members around the game. They are also asked to help keep Club Penguin safe and report anyone who is being disruptive or using offensive language; however, agents are not official moderators. Secret agents are there to help make Club Penguin a better place.[15]
G (Gary the Gadget Guy)
'G' is a fictional inventor of the Penguin Secret Agency, the fictitious secret service in the game. Some of his inventions are the Clock tower in the snow forts, the recent new game Pizzatron, remodeled the Sport shop. He plays a leading role in all five 'secret missions', similar to that of Q in the James Bond films.
Headquarters
The Agent Headquarters (HQ) is a Club Penguin location accessible only to Secret Agents, who can teleport there by clicking the Spy Phone in their player card inventory and then clicking "Visit HQ", or by entering the right-most dressing room in the Sport Shop. The Headquarters has 24 TV screens that show images of most of the accessible places on Club Penguin, each of which is only a click away. In addition to the cove and forest TV screens, there has been one screen left blank for the theater. To the right of the TVs is a board containing a message, changed every two to four weeks, with hints and tips about activities on Club Penguin. In the bottom right corner are a book and a folder. The folder includes missions for Secret Agents; the agent handbook is titled "The F.I.S.H." (Factual Informative Spy Handbook) and includes some items for purchase by members.
The F.I.S.H.
In the bottom right corner of the HQ, There is a Guide called the F.I.S.H.(Factual Information Spy Handbook). The Book contains secret tips. The F.I.S.H. also has Special Dances. Here are some of the Special dances, but not all of them:
- Chef Hat: Toss Pizza
Note: Also Works with Pizza apron as well
- Lasso: Twirl Lasso in the air
The F.I.S.H. also has spy gear. The items are:
- Suit Jacket and Shirt, 650 Coins
- Sunglasses, 200 Coins
- Bow Tie, 50 Coins
- Night-Vision Goggles, 1000 Coins
These items were here since the F.I.S.H started, making them the items that were available for the longest next to the viking helmet and the original penguin colors and flags
Missions
Secret agents are able to perform "Top Secret Missions" which require them to use their imagination and logic. Successful completion of such missions yields items for the player card inventory. More specifically, agents will receive a medal or medal-like item with a thank-you message for completing a side task.
Missions and their awards:
- Case of the missing Puffles, Golden Puffle Medal and a Letter from Aunt Arctic (for showing puffle pictures to Aunt Artic)
- G's Secret Mission, Wilderness Survival Medal and a Letter from G (for making a fishing rod out of the ski and rope, and fishing in the water)
- Case of the Missing Coins, Electromagnet Medal and a Letter from Dancing Penguin (for turning the lights back on in the Night Club)
- Avalanche Rescue, Golden Sled Medal and Handy Penguin Award (for fixing the Ski Lift)
- Secret of the Fur, Golden Investigative Medal and Pizza Box (for delivering a pizza for the pizza parlor owner)
Note: Players only receive these awards if side tasks are completed as well.
Tour guides
This project began January 26, 2007 with the intent of helping newcomers find their way around Club Penguin.[16] To become a tour guide, a penguin must be at least 45 days old and have had no more than one ban (or sufficiently good behavior after more bans).[17] Being a member is not required. To apply, one goes to the Tour Booth in the Ski Village and takes a quiz. The eight-question quiz tests one's knowledge such as where things are located, puffle facts, game play, and so forth. Answering at least seven out of the eight questions correctly wins a tour guide hat. Only those who have passed the test and have the hat are official tour guides. When wearing the hat, players can issue pre-written sentences about the current room by clicking "Give a tour" on the Safe Chat Menu and hold up the "Tours Here" sign by ONLY wearing the tour guide hat and waving.
The Penguin Times
Club Penguin has a free virtual weekly newspaper delivered every Thursday, written by Aunt Arctic. It contains news about Club Penguin and features games, comics, polls, and more. The Boiler Room under the Night Club in the Town contains an archive of newspapers from the last six weeks.[18]
Calendar dates
Each newspaper edition includes a list of dates that summarize when the next pin will be hidden, upcoming parties and other Club Penguin events.
Aunt Arctic
Aunt Arctic is a fictional character featured in the newspaper as a reporter with a role similar to that of a real life advice columnist, giving advice (in this case, regarding game queries and etiquette). The Club Penguin team responds to players' questions using Aunt Arctic as a pen name, and such questions can be submitted using an in-game form.
Submissions
Players are able to submit jokes, riddles, poems, comics, Fan Art and questions to Aunt Arctic. Few are picked each week.
Puffles
Puffles are small, fluffy creatures that players may have as pets. They are available from the Pet Shop in blue, green, pink, black, purple, red, and newly released yellow. Non-members have access to the blue and red puffles and may have no more than two; members may adopt up to fourteen puffles. Puffles have health, rest, and energy bar charts to indicate their status.
There are seven official breeds of puffles, each with a different personality.
- Blue Puffles are mild tempered and content. Their favorite toy is a ball. Blue Puffles are special because anyone in Club Penguin can adopt them. Blue puffles are also special because blue puffles were the first puffle breed in Club Penguin. Blue puffles are loyal, for which they are popular.
- Green Puffles are very energetic and playful. They like to clown around on their unicycles or play with their propeller caps.
- Purple Puffles are lots of fun to have around. They enjoy blowing bubbles and are terrific dancers, but they can be a bit fussy, especially at mealtime.
- Red Puffles are adventurous and enthusiastic. They are fearless when attempting daring tricks (except in the survival mode of Catchin' Waves) and spend a lot of their playful energy on a surf board. They shoot themselves out of a cannon or bowl when playing. Rockhopper brought these puffles to Club Penguin on his ship from Rockhopper Island. These, like the blue puffles can be adopted by anyone on Club Penguin.
- Pink Puffles are very active and cheery. They love to exercise by jumping rope or playing on their trampolines.
- Black Puffles are known to be a little mischievous and off tempered. However, they love to play and make a great pet for anyone who likes a little bit more personality.
- Yellow Puffles were added November 30, 2007. They love art and are very active. Their ultimate play is filming a movie. Otherwise, when asked to play they paint. They sculpt their food into a book room ornament before eating it. Taking it for a walk then dancing makes it sing. Upon bathing, it adds coloring/ paint to the water. when you put it to sleep it dreams of being a super hero.
According to the book Truth or Dare found in the Book Room, the green puffle dancing on the speaker in the Night Club was the rumored "Keeper of the Boiler Room".
Minigames
There are 10 single-player minigames, 3 multi-player minigames, and 2 unofficial minigames that are available to play within Club Penguin. Minigames are available for all players, members or not.
Single-player minigames
Single-player games, which generally earn the player the most coins (1/10th of the final score in most), include these:
Name | Description | Minigame Found In |
---|---|---|
Astro Barrier | A classic-like arcade game that involves the main character as a ship which must shoot all passing targets. | Dance Lounge |
Bean Counters | The player must help unload a truck of coffee beans, without carrying too many beans or catching anything else besides beans. | Coffee Shop |
Cart Surfer | The player must perform tricks inside a mine cart without crashing through turns. | Mine |
Catchin' Waves | The player may perform tricks on a surfboard for judges, avoid obstacles in Survival Mode, or just practice in Freestyle with/without a red puffle. | Cove |
Hydro Hopper (Former Name Ballistic Biscuit) | The player must ski behind a boat and avoid or jump over all obstacles in the water for points. . | The Dock |
Ice Fishing | The player must catch fish, avoiding other obstacles in the water which may cut the player's line. at the end of the game, a large red fish appears, known as "The Big Fish". His real name is Mullet. to catch Mullet you need to hold a regular yellow fish in the water and coax him into eating it. Catching mullet gives a large coin bonus. | Ski Lodge |
Jet Pack Adventure | The player must use a jetpack to fly in the air without hitting obstacles or running out of fuel. This game is an exception to the general rule about coin rewards -- penguins keep all the coins they collect. Collecting no coins or fuel bonuses during game play earns a player 1000 coins. | The Lighthouse Beacon |
Puffle Round-Up | The player must use his/her mouse to round up all the puffles on the screen into a pen. | Pet Shop |
Pizzatron 3000 | The player must make pizzas with specified varying sets of toppings. Regular or dessert style toppings modes may be chosen. | Pizza Parlor |
Thin Ice | In this arcade game, players have to guide a red puffle to safety through the ice. | Dance Lounge |
Multi-player minigames
Multi-player minigames in Club Penguin reward players with up to 30 coins per game. These Include:
Name | Description | Minigame Found In |
---|---|---|
Find Four | Basically has the same rules as the game Connect Four: The players must place down pieces in different rows, trying to get four pieces in a row. | Ski Lodge, Ski Attic |
Mancala | The two players compete in a Mancala competition. | The Book Room |
Sled Racing | Two to four penguins must race on sleds down a hill full of obstacles to avoid. The four different hills are Bunny Hill, Express, Penguin Run, and Ridge Run. for a limited time the ski hill was shut after an avalanche damaged the runs. secret agents were given a mission to find four lost penguins who had gotten into difficulty on the slopes. | Ski Mountain |
No Coin minigames
Though most games earn the player coins, some games do not. These include:
Name | Description | Minigame Found In |
---|---|---|
Ice Hockey | The player must hit a puck by walking over it into one of the two goals. | Ice Rink |
Snowball Fights | Players may throw snowballs between the two Snow Forts toward the other team. | Snow Forts (although penguins can throw snowballs anywhere) |
Water Balloon Fight | For a limited time, players could throw water balloons instead of snowballs. | This was only available during the July 2007 Waddle On Water Party |
Famous penguins
The Band
The Band is a small group of four Penguins who often come to big parties in Club Penguin, consisting of G-Billy, Franky, Stompin' Bob, and Petey K. They play the accordion, drum, acoustic guitar, and bass, and are unresponsive to player's actions. When Club Penguin was first launched, The Band did not have Franky, the guitar player, and the accordion player played the piano. The band was all blue. They provided the music in the night club until the speakers were installed. There was once a scavenger hunt where players had to find the band's instruments, with a new background as the reward.[citation needed]
Captain Rockhopper
Rockhopper is a fictional pirate character who arrives at Club Penguin aboard a pirate ship named The Migrator. Introduced on October 14 2006, he arrives in the game approximately every two to three months. During a Rockhopper visit, all players (including non-members) may explore his ship, which offers exclusive 'rare' items for purchase, and a fictional diary of the character's adventures. When among game players, Rockhopper appears as most others except that he wears pirate clothes unavailable to others. He is also much bigger. Players who find Rockhopper and click on him receive exclusive items such as an eye patch and a background for their player card. Rockhopper has a red puffle named Yarr.
A "message in a bottle" had been seen floating about, visible through the telescope located in the Lighthouse Beacon. On March 1 2007, the bottle ended up on the right section of water on the Beach.[19] It appeared to be some pages torn out of Rockhopper's journal, and ripped around the edges due to a rough journey. The words and pictures were later published in a book which tells about a stowaway on Rockhopper's ship called Bambadee and how he overcame his fears and made friends. Rockhopper apparently returned him to the island but amazingly, was not noticed by other penguins. The story also tells of Bambadee's friendship bracelets, which can be received by clicking on a picture of one after reading the story "Rockhopper and the Stowaway".
Penguin Chat
Main Article: Penguin Chat.
Penguin Chat, or better known as Penguin Chat 3, was an old version of Club Penguin by RocketSnail Games that went offline around the time of Club Penguin's launch. It had significantly fewer features, but included aspects that Club Penguin never had, like ninjas, and snowcats.
Experimental Penguins
Experimental Penguins was an even older version of Club Penguin by RocketSnail that started the development of Penguin Chat. It only had 1 server and was capable of having only 100 simultaneous players. After RocketSnail closed it down, it was found by ContactMusic and edited slightly, and the name was changed to Penguin Chat, making Club Pengin players believe that this is a fake version of Experimental Penguins. Experimental Penguins can now be found here. A tag at the bottom left of the start screen points out that this is an edited Experimental Penguins.
Fan Communities
Due to the constantly expanding amount of players and growing popularity of Club Penguin, there have been many fan games and WordPress.com blogs set up. There are various fansites and internet forums also found on the Internet that regard Club Penguin as the main topic.
Walt Disney Company
On August 1 2007, Club Penguin announced that it was partnering up with The Walt Disney Company. New Horizon Interactive claimed that players will not notice a difference. Disney offered a deal of $350 million. The headquarters will remain in Kelowna, British Columbia and there are plans to add multiple languages. No external ads will be introduced on the game website. Disney is advertising the game on disney.com and other sites.
According to the Walt Disney Company, an additional $350 million could be added to the initial $350 million offering (for a potential total of $700 million) if the Club Penguin founders can reach profit targets through 2009 with its more than 700,000 paid subscribers and 12 million registered users.[20]
Coins For Change
Coins For Change was an in-game donation available from December 14 to December 24, 2007, in which players could donate their virtual coins to any of three charitable issues: Kids who are sick, The Environment, and Kids in Developing Countries. Players could donate in increments of 50, 250, or 500 virtual coins. At the end of the campaign, the New Horizon Foundation donated a total of $1 million to the World Wide Fund for Nature, the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, and Free The Children. The proportion of the 1 million dollars that each organization received depended on how many virtual coins were donated by players toward each issue. For example, if most players donated their virtual coins to the environment, the environmental organization got a higher percentage than the others. Issue #115 of The Penguin Times stated that the standings were:
- Kid's Health: 39.4%
- Environment: 33%
- Kid's in Developing Countries: 27.6%
A total of over 1 billion coins were donated. Penguins who donated received a postcard thanking them for donating. Every donation station had a box of bells next to it. Penguins -- both members and non-members -- could take a bell at no cost.
The Coins for Change program was announced on Disney Channel's Disney 365. [21]
See also
References
- ^ Leibowitz, Wanda (2006-07-06). "Kids' Games Online for Free: A Parent's Guide to Safe, Positive, Non-violent Sites for Young Gamers". Associated Content. Retrieved 2007-05-07.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Billybob (2005-10-24). "Club Penguin - It's Launched!". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2006-09-08.
- ^ ""Who is Club Penguin for?"". Club Penguin Q&A for Parents. Retrieved 2006-10-03.
- ^ Club Penguin Secures BBB OnLine Kid's Privacy Seal of Approval, Club Penguin, Press release, April 24, 2006 (URL accessed on September 4, 2006).
- ^ "Club Penguin". Retrieved 2007-05-07.
"Editor's Choice" award from Children's Technology Review Magazine (notice in right sidebar)
- ^ Billybob (2006-08-31). ""NOW OPEN!!!"". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2006-12-15.
- ^ Billybob (2006-11-07). ""Lots of New Stuff!!"". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2006-12-15.
- ^ "Club Penguin Become a Member". Retrieved 2007-01-01.
- ^ Jasper1357 (2007-12-17). ""Club Penguin Game Cards Coming Soon!!!"". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Club Penguin. Retrieved 2007-12-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ ""Is It Safe?"". Club Penguin Q&A for Parents. Retrieved 2006-10-03.
- ^ ""Breaking the Rules" and "How a Penguin is Banned"". Club Penguin Communicating. Retrieved 2007-05-07.
- ^ "Other Penguins". Club Penguin Help & Tutorials. Retrieved 2006-12-06.
- ^ "Become a Moderator". Club Penguin Frequently Asked Questions. Retrieved 2007-12-16.
- ^ rsnail (2005-09-20). "Beta Test Party". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
- ^ ""Identifying Moderators"". Club Penguin Help Guide. Retrieved 2006-11-22.
- ^ Billybob (2007-01-26). ""A Lot of Tours!!"". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2007-01-26.
- ^ Billybob (2007-01-29). ""Tour Guide Ban Issue"". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2007-02-03.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|month=
(help) - ^ ""Newspaper"". Club Penguin Help. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
- ^ Billybob (2007-02-28). ""Where's the Bottle?"". Club Penguin Developer Blog. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
- ^ Friedman, Josh (2007-08-02), "Disney buying Club Penguin website: Deal for Club Penguin, geared to children and young teens, could be worth $700 million", Los Angeles Times
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ "Coins for Change: Waddle around and make a difference" (PDF). ClubPenguin.com. Retrieved 2007-12-16.
External links
- Club Penguin Sites
- Club Penguin Official Website
- Club Penguin Blog
- Disney buys Club Penguin
- Official Club Penguin Site on Miniclip
- Club Penguin Full Screen
- Club Penguin Wiki
- External Sites