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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/23032658\/cybertown-revival-blaxxun-virtual-community-rebuilding-project<\/a> Coming back to your hometown can be an alienating experience, especially when all you find is a dead link to a long-deserted website.<\/p>\n For nearly a decade, that was the experience of Cytonians \u2014 members of an early virtual world called Cybertown, which operated between 1995 and 2012. But since 2019, a group of former citizens has dedicated itself to resurrecting their old home. Cybertown Revival<\/a>, or CTR, successfully launched a pre-alpha version<\/a> of a new Cybertown earlier this year. It\u2019s the result of hundreds of former residents rallying to rebuild the digital city, drawing on everything from former users\u2019 blog posts to the contents of their hard drives.<\/p>\n The original Cybertown was launched during the early days of massively multiplayer online games, a few years before Ultima Online<\/em> and EverQuest<\/em> became second homes for millions of players. It followed a formula pioneered by multi-user dungeons, or MUDs: mostly text-based worlds composed of rooms, objects, and avatars, designed as much for social interaction as structured gameplay. But the city echoed real life in a way many digital spaces of the time didn\u2019t.<\/p>\n Cybertown was a digital metropolis that players could experience through text-based descriptions but also by entering a 3D world inside their web browser. Once they \u201cimmigrated\u201d to the city, Cytonians could select the location of a virtual house that they could fill with virtual possessions. They could then spend their time zipping around caf\u00e9s, shops, a town plaza, and earning digital money called CityCash by selling self-coded digital objects or holding jobs like a \u201cBlock Deputy\u201d community moderator. Higher-level mods were assigned duties like housing cleanup, deactivating the abandoned homes of former residents. There was even a jail for rulebreakers. <\/p>\n
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