Virtual Pets Blog

November 22, 2007

Webmasters bring change to virtual pets

Filed under: Virtual pets — admin @ 10:09 pm

Are you a webmaster? Have you thought about creating a new niche website? Well, the virtual pets niche is always looking for new webmasters that can help promote virtual pets. So, have you read about virtual pets so that you can know what they’re about? Well, we believe that the virtual pets niche is very profitable and if you have time to promote your own site dedicated to virtual pets - you’ll be able to generate at least $40/day in revenue.

So, what is all this talk about? Well, virtual pet fans gather around all the time by creating fansites for their favorite virtual pet site - where other webmasters decide to create their own virtual pet forum, even though virtual pet forums are hard as hell to get going. Why is it so many people think they can actually build a virtual pet forum and hit it big? They can’t, unless they know all about promotion + seo, however; if you create a fansite dedicated to a certain virtual pet site, you’ll be able to strike gold on the search engines if you know how to build backlinks. Just take a look at our neopets webmasters make money to see what we’re talking about.

A fansite is easier to create than a fansite about virtual pets though, but if you can bring in a ton of new members to your virtual pet community - like your friends that are fans of virtual pets like yourself, then you’ll be alright. We think if you’re a good promoter, active person and know a lot about virtual pets, then you’ll strike it gold. The virtual pets niche is large and consists of monsters like Neopets, Webkinz, Marapets, Subeta and many big-named virtual pet sites. If you create a fansite for a certain large virtual pet site, then you’re working in the virtual pets industry - as your fansite is dedicated to a virtual pet site.

Promotion of a virtual pet fansite:
So are you lost on this subject? Well, target all the fansites - ask them to link back to your virtual pet fansite and ask them if they can tell their members about your new niche site. Give them a reason to come to your site - offer them an incentive or two; perhaps, you can give them some types of points - or offer a massive contest, such as; a $150 referral contest, which would encourage your users to refer their friends. If you don’t have the funds, then you can rely on pure content tacts, which is content is king and without the content your virtual pet fansite will not attract anybody. Virtual pet fans enjoy browsing through content to learn more about their favorite virtual pet site - or talk about it with their friends, so give them a reason to talk!

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Buy neopoints and become the richest neopian

Filed under: Neopets — admin @ 3:27 am

Have you ever thought about buying neopoints from other neopets players? Well, a lot of users are known to make neopoints and then re-sell it for profit. So, why haven’t you tried to sell your neopoints yet? Users are doing it all the time, and there’s a huge market for players that are looking to buy neopoints. Right now, the standard rate is 1 million neopoints for $20 bucks. Isn’t that sorta cheap? Well, yes, but Neopoints are easy to earn - and if you know how to play the game of Neopets - by using neopets cheats and cheating your way to the top, then you can easily earn neopoints and sell it to other neopians.

TNT has yet to crack down on neopoints sellers nor buyers, but usually if you buy neopoints all the time and the Neopets team hears about it, they’ll freeze your account without warning. So, buy neopoints at your own risk - and watch out for the scammers.

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November 21, 2007

Neopets: The fall from grace

Filed under: Neopets — admin @ 2:22 pm

In the beginning, there was Neopets, and it was good.

Borne in November of 1999 from the minds of Adam Powell and Donna Williams, Neopets was an overnight success. By the end of the year, Wikipedia reports that the site was receiving 600,000 page views and had outgrown the bank accounts of its creators. Enter the Dohring Company. Dough Dohring and a team of investors bought a majority share in the property and Neopets Inc. was born. Since then, various merchandise and advertising licenses have been sold, and finally, the property was purchased in full by Viacom in 2005.

This is where things got messy. What began as a fun and radically new community based game has spiraled into the depths of corporate cold-heartedness. Something happened during Neopets’ journey into fame and corporate sponsorship; it became a victim of its own success. Let us examine the two problems that are slowly eating away at what was once one of the Web’s most friendly user communities: Pride and Site Security.

The obvious place to begin is pride. With it’s current status as the Web’s premiere virtual pet site, Neopets has become so caught up in it’s own success that it has forgotten how to deliver that most paramount of services: Customer Service. Users are constantly finding themselves the owners of frozen accounts after having done nothing wrong. They simply receive the standard form letter when they attempt to login, and when they attempt to contact the company, they are treated in a way that is frighteningly similar to how the IRS deals with the American taxpayer. It seems, these days that Neopets believes itself to be above explaining its actions to the users that it casts aside. How many innocent users does the company believe that it can treat in this manner before the flocks that have found their way to the site begin to migrate, en masse, to a friendlier locale?

Usernames play a big part in this. Hundreds of users per week find themselves frozen by TNT (The Neopets Team), many with accounts that are well in excess of two years old, for unacceptable usernames that were allowed to slip through the system filters, if there are truly filters in place at all. These users have been the most faithful, abiding by the rules of the site, providing the clicks that maintain the flow of advertising dollars, yet for their longevity they are not even given the chance to rectify the problem by changing their username and being allowed to login once more. They are simply given a cold farewell to their account and told that they are welcome to start anew. At first look, this does not seem to be so bad, until you consider the collectible avatars and trophies that are given out in the plots and promotions, then retired and never offered again. Then there are users who had pets that were given drastic and unattractive makeovers after the layout change, and allowed to choose which artwork they liked better. Should they try to recover the same species of pet and paint it as the former pet was, they are treated to the artwork that has been so highly criticized, with no option to get the former look back for their pet.

The customer service failings do not end here, however. There is a total lack of investigative willpower among the staff on Neopets that is just sickening. Accusations are thrown about on the site all the time, and if those accusations are made by a person of a significantly young age, they are accepted without question and no attempt to investigate the problem is made. The accused is simply frozen and told to start again. When true rules violators of the site are found, they are often left untouched unless they break one of the two cardinal rules of Neopets. Those cardinal rules are: No item duping, and no hacking accounts. It is my belief that the only reason these offenses are taken seriously at all is because they reveal the true severity of the second problem that plagues Neopets even today… Site Security.

Site security is a huge issue with Neopets. Cookie grabbers abound and it is not uncommon for the unwary user to click on a link they are led to by a seemingly friendly user, only to wake up the next day and login to find their entire inventory, bank account, and gallery empty. What’s worse is that they are then told that Items and Neopoints cannot be returned. After having worked hard to earn millions of Neopoints, and rare items, they are told that they must simply start over. Whatever happened to server logs? Would it truly be that difficult for staff to look at what was moved and simply put it back? Or is the reluctance to return these items suggestive of a bigger problem that TNT does not want to be brought into the light? Could it be that this problem is so widespread on Neopets that if they were to start returning things to victims of hacked accounts that they would need to hire a team of administrators just for that purpose? You be the judge.

I cannot, however criticize Neopets for disallowing item duplication, as this obviously would destabilize the site’s economy and deflate the value of the truly valuable and rare items that are subject to this cheat. What I do fault them for; however, is their handling of the matter. Oftentimes, in the early onset of a duplication wave, unsuspecting users are snookered into accepting what they believe to be a legitimate item, only to have their account frozen for cheating, and then given the cold silence that users have become so accustomed to when they try to dispute the claim against them.

I have to give credit where it is due. Neopets is a brilliant idea, and has spurred a plethora of smaller petsites that aspire to the greatness that Neopets has achieved. As the old saying goes “Pride goeth before the fall”, so too will Neopets be toppled one day by the ideas they helped to inspire in petsite fans everywhere.

Thank you all for listening to my rant.

Yours Truly,
TheDarkBaron
Permission to use this article is granted exclusively to Virtual Pets Blog (www.virtualpetsblog.com) and it may not be posted whole or in part on any other site without the express, written permission of TheDarkBaron.

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