Metaplace! That's what!

Build a virtual apartment and put it on your website. Work with friends to make a huge MMORPG. Share your puzzle game with friends. We have a vision: to let you build anything, and play everything, from anywhere. Eventually, anyway. We have to finish first.

Latest Forum Posts

robh on ESRB Rating?

August 28th, 2008 at 3:38 PM PDT
5 Replies, 89 Views

Delvie on August Update

August 28th, 2008 at 1:51 PM PDT
1 Replies, 26 Views

Monkey Rogue on my game ideas- vertical shooter

August 28th, 2008 at 12:27 PM PDT
1 Replies, 9 Views
MetaForums
Media Info

Feel like writing about Metaplace.com on your own site? Maybe you're a journalist? Here you'll find all sorts of materials that might make that easier: fact sheets, screenshots, logos and other artwork, and all the other handy stuff that goes in a Media Kit. Go nuts -- you've got blanket permission to use any of this stuff!

Contact Info
Areae, Inc.
11770 Bernardo Plaza Court
Suite 101
San Diego, CA 92128
USA
Phone: 858-451-2700 Fax: 858-451-2722
For press enquiries, please email:
FAQ

Our motto is: build anything, play everything, from anywhere. Until now, virtual worlds have all worked like the closed online services from before the internet took off. They had custom clients talking to custom servers, and users couldn't do much of anything to change their experience. We're out to change all of that.

Metaplace is a next-generation virtual worlds platform designed to work the way the Web does. Instead of giant custom clients and huge downloads, Metaplace lets you play the same game on any platform that reads our open client standard. We supply a suite of tools so you can make worlds, and we host servers for you so that anyone can connect and play. And the client could be anywhere on the Web.

We hope there will be millions of worlds made with Metaplace. It could get hard to find stuff if we're right, so the portal lets you easily search, rate, review, and tag worlds and games of all sorts. You also get a user profile so you can find each other.

That's sort of the whole point. You should be able to stage up a massively multiplayer world with basic chat and a map you can build on in less than five minutes. It's that easy. Inherit a stylesheet -- puzzle game, or shooter, or chat world -- and off you go! Building maps and places is as easy as pasting in links from the Web, and dragging and dropping the pictures into your world.

What's more, you can link your world to someone else's world. Put a doorway in your virtual apartment that leads to Pirate Vs Ninja-land! Stick your world in a widget on your Facebook or MySpace profile. Mail it to a friend and they can log in with one click.

You can make pretty much any sort of game or world you want. You can decide whether it's massively multiplayer or not (it's MMO out of the box, but you can set it to a lower size if you want). You can decide whether to have physics or not, you can change the keymappings and the interface, the sort of stuff there is in the world, the maps... basically, it's all up to you. Game logic is written in MetaScript, which is based on Lua. So it's easy to make whatever kind of game or world that you want.

Metaplace will support everything from 2d overhead grids through first-person 3d. However, right now we only have clients that do 2d of various sorts, including grid view, 2d isometric, 2.5d heightfields, and so on. We expect to keep working on the 3d client support.

We speak Web fluently. Every world is a web server, and every object has a URL. You can script an object so that it feeds RSS, XML, or HTML to a browser. This lets you do things like high score tables, objects that email you, player profile pages right on the player -- whatever you want. Every object can also browse the Web: a chat bot can chatter headlines from an RSS feed, a newspaper with real headlines can sit on your virtual desk, game data could come from real world data... you get the idea. No more walled garden.

Metaplace is made by Areae, Inc. We're a team of veterans of the game and Web industries who thought that the current way of doing things was kinda slow and didn't give users like you enough control. Check out the company website to learn more about us!

Developer Blog

Metaplace Badge Survey

 
Metaplace Badges – Your Input Wanted!
 
In a previous community-oriented post of mine, I briefly talked about our plans to have a robust badge system in Metaplace. If you have spent any time gaming on websites like Kongregate or Pogo, or if you own an Xbox 360 with a Live account – you’ve already been acquainted with the joys of badges. Badges are basically small benchmarks of success in a game. There are preset goals that a player must strive to achieve in order to receive badges. These rewards can be then displayed to show others what you’ve accomplished, to ‘brag’ if you will. Some badges are easy to achieve, some are more difficult. Some badges you can work for, others are hidden and unlockable through attaining other badges.

Using a badge system with Metaplace is slightly more complicated than the standard gaming website. We plan to have badges not only for players of games, but also for world creators and builders. We also plan to allow world builders to place badges right within their game for all players to earn! We want to encourage people to play, build, and browse the website – therefore our badges are going to be all-encompassing and cover the many areas of the Metaplace service. We want our builders and players to be excited to earn badges and proud to display them. We’d like them to have meaning, keep people interested in collecting them, and make people want to build games so that they can put badges in them for others.

We have some tentative plans in place to prevent world builders from creating meaningless badges that everyone can earn. We also have plans to have a point value associated with the badges. We’re currently in the process of designing our badge system and I’m interested in hearing some of your ideas for a badge system for Metaplace. Please fill out this optional survey (only answer the questions you want to) if you’d like to have your feedback heard by our development team. Thank you for your participation!

Click here to fill out the survey!
 
Thank you!
 
Tami "Cuppycake" Baribeau
Community Manager
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Posted on Thursday, May 22nd, 2008 at 4:45 PM PDT