Even Better Than The Real Thing

Sweatshop gamers, virtual terrorists, avatar porn, and other tales from the digital frontier

Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters.


From the May/June issue.

The current population of virtual worlds, also known as “massively multiplayer online role-playing games” (mmorpgs) such as World of Warcraft, EverQuest, and Second Life, is estimated at more than 20 million. The population of Mexico City is 19 million.

20% of mmorpg gamers say that the virtual world is their primary place of residence. The real world, a.k.a. meatspace, is just a place to get food and sleep.

Virtual-world gamers play an average of 22 hours a week. The average American spends around 8 1/2 hours a week eating.

In 2005, the fantasy role-playing game EverQuest added a feature that allowed players to place a Pizza Hut order without leaving the keyboard.

1/3 of EverQuest players spend more time inside the game than at their real jobs. 2 in 5 say that if they could make enough money inside the game they would quit their jobs.

mmorpg players say they spend an average of 135 real dollars buying virtual money.

EverQuest players spend an average of 23% more buying other players’ male characters than female characters, even though both sexes have the same abilities in the game.

The virtual-currency trading company ige Ltd. estimates that in 2007 players will spend $1.5 billion on virtual goods and services, from swords to sex.

Entropia Universe offers its players a debit card that can be used at real-world atms to withdraw up to $3,000 a month from their supply of virtual cash.

Second Life‘s economy was worth $86 million in 2006. At its current monthly growth rate of 15%, it could top $650 million this year. The gdp of Grenada is $578 million.

In January, Sweden announced it would be the first country to open an embassy inside Second Life. It is also considering taxing its citizens’ virtual earnings.

An estimated 500,000 Chinese gamers are “gold farmers” who perform menial tasks inside online worlds to create virtual goods to sell to players in the West.

A typical gold farmer earns $65 to $100 a month.

In 2005, a man in China received a life sentence for murdering another gamer who had sold off his virtual sword inside the game Legend of Mir 3.

When a World of Warcraft player died last February, fellow gamers held an online memorial by a virtual lake “because she loved to fish in the game.” The mourners, who came unarmed, were killed when the event was raided by rival players, who posted footage of the attack on YouTube.

84% of World of Warcraft players are male, and half of the game’s female characters are created by men. Only 1% of male characters belong to women.

About 29% of female online gamers and 8% of male gamers say they’ve dated someone they first met in a game.

1/3 of female gamers make their characters get married; 10% of male players do. A Second Life minister who performs avatar weddings says most virtual marriages last about a month.

A survey of college-aged Sims players found that 50% with divorced parents made their game characters get divorced. No players whose parents were still married did.

When a Chinese couple filed for divorce in 2005, the husband reportedly tried to keep $5,000 worth of virtual property in exchange for their real-world apartment. The wife wanted to split both. They had met the year before inside an online game.

The editor of Slustler, a magazine with explicit images of Second Life avatars, says, “The ‘girl next door’ effect is way higher than in real porn…. You could actually meet the people you see in the magazine.”

An hour with a virtual escort in Second Life costs between 4 and 12 real dollars.

O Mee Pooba means “I’m pregnant” in “Simlish,” the language spoken in The Sims.

The Bare Naked Ladies, the Black Eyed Peas, and Depeche Mode have recorded songs in Simlish.

Celebrities who have appeared as avatars in Second Life include Jay-Z, Arianna Huffington, former Virginia governor Mark Warner, Suzanne Vega, and Kurt Vonnegut.

Formed to fight for political rights for avatars, the Second Life Liberation Army has bombed a virtual Reebok store and shot avatars shopping at American Apparel.

For $1,500, live-shot.com offered armchair hunters the chance to shoot a real animal via the Internet. After lining up crosshairs on their computer screen, visitors could fire live rounds with a click of the mouse.

In 2003, Hezbollah released a video game in which players were awarded medals for throwing grenades at images of Ariel Sharon.

America’s Army, the Army’s recruitment video game, has been downloaded 17 million times. “It shows we are not robots,” explained an Iraq vet who appears as a character in the game. “We’re just people.”

The Navy has spent $4 million to study the use of virtual reality to treat ptsd. Says an official, “We also hope that this type of therapy, with its video-game-like qualities, will resonate well with the current generation of warfighters.”

Nearly half of online gamers say they are addicted to their games.

Gamesterdam,” a rehab program for video-game addicts, opened in Holland last July to “give these people a taste of life. Real life!”


Virtual Worlds at a Glance

Game Inhabitants Total Users (Millions) Meaning of Life What $5 Buys In a Nutshell
World of Warcraft Think Lord of the Rings 8 Explore new realms, kill things, earn gold 1 Sword of the Falcon D&D without the F-to-F
Second Life Hip, sexy avatars 4 Hang out, look good, buy stuff 1 J-Lo avatar, 1 yacht Burning Man meets shopping mall
Entropia Universe Intergalactic entrepreneurs, monsters 0.6 Mining, selling sweat and dung, free-market capitalism 2 alien skulls Does Ayn Rand dream of electric sheep?
The Sims Online Gibberish-spewing humans 2 Eat, sleep, work, die 5,000 office chairs Depressingly real

Fact:

Mother Jones was founded as a nonprofit in 1976 because we knew corporations and billionaires wouldn't fund the type of hard-hitting journalism we set out to do.

Today, reader support makes up about two-thirds of our budget, allows us to dig deep on stories that matter, and lets us keep our reporting free for everyone. If you value what you get from Mother Jones, please join us with a tax-deductible donation today so we can keep on doing the type of journalism 2022 demands.

payment methods

Fact:

Today, reader support makes up about two-thirds of our budget, allows us to dig deep on stories that matter, and lets us keep our reporting free for everyone. If you value what you get from Mother Jones, please join us with a tax-deductible donation today so we can keep on doing the type of journalism 2022 demands.

payment methods

We Recommend

Latest

Sign up for our free newsletter

Subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

Get our award-winning magazine

Save big on a full year of investigations, ideas, and insights.

Subscribe

Support our journalism

Help Mother Jones' reporters dig deep with a tax-deductible donation.

Donate