Habbo Hotel is a virtual community that combines the concept of both a chat room and online game, owned and operated by Sulake Corporation. The original idea behind Habbo Hotel, Mobiles Disco, was created as a small project by two young Finnish men, Sampo Karjalainen and Aapo Kyrölä. It was intended to promote a rock band called Mobiles. The pair later sold the project to the Finnish telecoms giant Elisa Oyj.
The game is centered around Habbos, virtual representations of users of the service. These Habbos can be dressed by each user individually using pre-supplied virtual clothing. Each character has a different name, and they are identified within the service solely by this name. The service's other focus point is virtual furni, which can be bought by Habbos using credits bought via a variety of methods, including SMS, home phone, and money order. This furniture can also be traded between users.
The service began in 2000 and as of March 2006 has expanded to 18 countries.[http://www.sulake.com/pressroom_faq.html]
History
The major launch of the service in Finland was in August 2000. At the time, it was dubbed
Hotelli Kultakala, Finnish for
Hotel Goldfish. The company soon decided that a more neutral name for the service would be required to attract larger recognition. The word
Habbo was chosen following the submission of a team member.
The second member of the Habbo brand was launched in the United Kingdom in January of 2001. Since then, the Hotel chain along with its user base has continued to grow, and Habbo Hotel is currently one of the largest non-violent online game communities on the Internet, operating in 18 countries.
Features
To play Habbo Hotel, one must first create an
avatar. The sign up process includes the selection of a desired
Habbo Name and
Mission (A brief description of the user, displayed underneath the Habbo's avatar). The newly registered
Habbo now has the option to choose from a variety of clothing, shoes, hair and skin colour. Once the person is finished registering, he/she is transported to a screen known as
hotel view. These options, and the
mission option can all be modified at any time.
In the Hotel
The chatrooms that make up each Hotel are large computer-generated graphics using
isometric projection. There are two main types of rooms: Public Rooms and Guest Rooms. Public Rooms are those that supposedly could be found in a normal
hotel, including lobbies, a kitchen, pools, lounges and a theatre. The selection of public rooms will differ from hotel to hotel. Guest Rooms are fully customisable rooms made by Habbos. The creative possibilities are endless, though many examples include nightclubs, gaming rooms, trading rooms and even whole houses. There are templates for the size and shape of the room, which can be painted and filled with virtual furniture.
Habbos can keep in contact with others via use of the Console, which allows Habbos to send messages between each other. It also allows them to keep track of who is and who isn't online. There is also a Navigator which allows Habbos to select a public or guest room to enter. The navigator holds lists for a Habbo's own rooms and their list of favourite rooms, as well as a search feature enabling searches by room or room owner's name.
Furniture for guest rooms can be purchased from the Catalogue. Catalogue items can either be purchased with credits or traded from Habbo to Habbo. Credits must be purchased with real currency. Habbo Hotel offers various payment methods that differ between countries. Habbos can purchase a wide selection of items for their guest rooms from the catalogue. Every so often, rare items are offered for sale in the catalogue for a short period of time. Rares are considerably more expensive than normal items. There are also seasonal items available for purchase at respective times throughout the year, for example, Valentine's Day, Easter, Halloween and Christmas.
Habbo Club
Habbo Club is a popular subscription in Habbo Hotel that offers additional incentives that are unavailable to non-members. Some examples include a wider array of hairstyles and clothing; a special rare piece of furniture for each month of subscription; additional guest room layouts; member-only Public Rooms; 3 extra dances, and more.
Two very useful additional features of Habbo Club include the Chooser (accessed by typing ":chooser"), which lists all occupants of a room, and Furni command (":furni"), which lists all furniture within a guest room. Members of Habbo Club are also able to turn their badges on and off at their own discretion. There are two badges available - one is for those who have been a member for under 12 months and one for those who have been a member for 12 months or more.
There have been many cases of discrimination against non-HCs, mainly because HCs are stereotyped as being rich and powerful. There are some giveaways that are only for HCs, and some rooms are only for HCs, such as HC Party Rooms. There are also 2 public rooms that are exclusively for HC members.
Activities
Trading/Casinos
Many Habbos engage in the collection of rare furniture. This furniture is originally sold in the
Catalogue for a limited time (usually 1 week). However, this furniture can also be obtained by winning competitions, both official and those run by
fansites. Habbos also attempt to collect as much furniture as they can, by way of trading with others. As demand increases or decreases, certain pieces of furniture increase or decrease in value, and this enables Habbos to profit from the sale of particular furniture at particular times.
Habbos also build virtual casinos and bet their furniture there in efforts to win more furniture. Although these casinos are discouraged by hotel staff due to the potential for Habbos to be scammed, most hotels have not explicitly banned them and hence many Habbos engage in the practice anyway. Methods that a casino can scam a customer include providing vague rules and instructions (for instance, in Blackjack, not specifying whether the house wins ties, or if there is a limit to how many "cards" one can draw), or by kicking customers out after they pay furniture to the house (but before they receive payout). The casinos operate by way of virtual dice furniture, with a modified version of blackjack being the most common type of game played.
Some Habbo fansites also produce lists of rares known as rare values, which are used by some Habbos to gauge the supply and demand and hence value of each individual rare.
Roleplay
Roleplay is also popular in the hotel; and takes many forms, usually vastly different between hotels. Some players form virtual
mafias, where other players can join and participate in raids against other mafias. These players are usually required to change their avatar's appearance to a
uniform, and change their mission to one indicating their membership in their mafia, as well as their
rank. Habbos generally join mafias in order to earn furniture, but these groups are well known for trying to avoid payment.
Other players form roleplay groups based on movies such as Star Wars. In these groups, Habbos take on the role of either a Jedi or a Sith. These groups then engage in virtual raids (or combat) against each other. The habbos taking on these roles try to roleplay in their character as much as possible (e.g. act how a jedi would) Such raids usually involve players using phrases such as "force lightning" or "*punches*", to indicate that they are attacking another player (since it is not possible to use weapons in Habbo Hotel, unlike other MMORPGs). Such raids often drive Habbos to break the hotel's rules, and hence leads to numerous bans, for offences such as swearing and harassment.
Games
Games in Habbo Hotel are typically games of skill and chance. Since most games in the hotel offer prizes such as virtual furniture, they tend to attract lots of people who do not want to, or are unable to, pay for furniture in real cash. Much of these games are legitimate and fairly operated businesses, while others are run by scammers with ulterior motives.
=Falling Furni
=
Falling Furni is one of the most common games; played on all hotels, usually with slightly different rules between regions. The aim of the game is simple: the owner of the room drops virtual furniture, usually
chairs, and the Habbos playing must try to sit on these chairs. The key point of the game is the fact that the owner deliberately does not drop enough chairs for every participant. At the end of each round, those Habbos without a chair will be offered the chance to either
pay to stay (often abbreviated as
p2s, this is where the player pays the owner an amount of furni to stay in the game),
revenge (often abbreviated to
rev, this is where the players pays the owner (often more than the cost of pay to stay) not only to remain in the game but to remove another player), or to be kicked from the room (in games where lines are short, there is also the option to
line, or get back in line via a doorway rather than be kicked out of the room completely.) This process continues until there is only one chair with only one Habbo on, who will usually win a prize from the room owner. The game is very similar to
musical chairs.
=Revenge
=
Revenge is a
quiz type game which is also extremely common in the hotel. As with most games, it is played with multiple players at once. The host of the game will ask a question from a specific category (often chosen on suggestions from players or from rolling a dice) such as
mathematics or
general knowledge. The first person to answer the question is allowed to choose one player to remove from the game. That player must then choose from the same options as offered in
falling furni.
=Costume Change
=
Costume is different from the other games in that it involves changing one's avatar's appearance. The host of the game will choose a topic, and the players participating in the game will all leave the room and change their avatar's appearance to suit this theme. They will also change their
mission to explain what they have dressed as. When they return to the room, the player deemed to have worst matched the criteria will be kicked from the game. This is determined through a number of means - the opinion of the host, voting of the other players, or voting of the people waiting in the line for the next game.
=Racing
=
Another popular game is
racing. In these games, groups of players (usually 4-6) are seated in a line next to each other. The objective of the game is for the players to move their avatar to the opposite end of the room and back again in the shortest possible time. At the end of each race, the slowest player is offered the same options as in falling furni and revenge above. This continues until there is only one player remaining, who usually receives a prize. A unique part of the game is the ability to "buy spaces". This consists of giving the room owner a piece of an amount of furni, in exchange for making the distance he or she must cover shorter.
=Quests
=
Quests are usually held by
Habbo staff, but are sometimes also run by
fansites or other players. The objective of a quest is to get to the end of a series of rooms. This will usually be done by a combination of
sticky notes and room passwords. The players participating in the quest will enter the first room (usually without a password). This room will contain a sticky note with a question or instruction written on it. Once the player has answered the question or performed the instruction (which will usually also produce an answer), they use the answer they retrieved as the password to the next room of the quest. This process continues until they reach the last room, where there will often be a sticky note with instructions on how to enter the competition.
=Mazes
=
Unlike
mazes in real life, Habbo mazes are usually very different. To complete them, Habbos must go through a number of rooms filled with furniture to reach the end room. If furniture appears to be hiding the next chair, you must find what spot to click to reach the chairs. Most maze owners do not reward winners for completing the maze, but some do, or host a
maze race from time to time. These mazes are often hard to construct well, meaning that many mazes on the hotels are either too easy or impossible to complete. This is made more diffficult by the various
bugs in the Habbo Hotel client.
Charity and Community Service
Habbo Hotel has often recognized and promoted localized charities and organizations that benefit young people. Most notable being the use of the
Info Bus, an information centre in the form of a virtual
bus, where advisors from different organizations come online to meet Habbo users and discuss certain topics. Some of the organizations that have taken advantage of this innovative mean of communication with young people have include UK based FRANK, Finland based Hubu, and
UNICEF. Info Bus sessions often involve discussions about a given topic, a chance for Habbos to ask advsiors questions, and sometimes the advisor may be able to set-up a quiz/polling booth for the Habbos inside the bus to participate in.
Some Habbo Hotels take the opportunity to further educate their users about Internet and Online Safety using the Info Bus, in sessions mostly run by the Habbo Staff or Moderators.
In 2006, the UK based Habbo Hotel promoted charities and organisations such as YCNet (a network for Young Carers in the UK), and the 2006 NSPCC Campaign "Don't Hide It".
Moderation/Guidance
Office staff
Each branch of Habbo Hotel has an office associated with it. Operated by Sulake employees, this office is the workplace of the respective hotel's senior staff. These staff generally include a 'Hotel Manager', or Content Manager, who oversees the hotel as a whole by communicating with the players through newsletters, creating competitions, and managing the content of the website; a Community Manager, who is responsible for moderation and guidance throughout the virtual community by managing
in-game Moderators and
Habbo eXperts; and a Country Manager, who manages the business side of the community such as sales, finance and administration.
Office staff may also consist of player support staff, who respond to queries sent via contact forms by players; and pixel artists who create the vast amounts of imagery used both in-game and on the community's website.
Moderator staff
Habbo Hotel's moderation is covered by paid
moderator staff. Moderators are police vetted Sulake employees who work from home.
Office staff moderate the hotel during local office hours, and are relieved by moderator staff outside these times. Moderators will always have the prefix "MOD-" in their account name and have a Habbo Staff badge.
Moderators utilise in-game commands as well as a separate web based tool known as Housekeeping. These tools allow moderator staff to send messages to Habbos in the hotel, which appear as in-game popups. These prove to be effective in preventing minor infringments of the Habbo Way, the guidelines that govern the community. As well as this ability, moderator staff can also kick Habbos from any room, mute them (prevent them from talking), and ban them from the hotel entirely. Bans are placed on individual Habbo accounts, however, many more serious offences are punished by a Macromedia Shockwave ID or IP address ban.
Habbo eXperts
Habbo eXperts are commonly known throughout the hotels as
Habbo Xs. This recently devised system is designed to present Habbo Hotel as a welcoming environment to new members. This is done through the selection of a number of regular Habbo players of any age, who are known to have a solid understanding of the
Habbo Way and the Hotel in general. These players receive a special badge to identify them to new players. Habbo Xs are expected to be found in the
Welcome Lounge public room for new players to approach them with any questions they may have about Habbo Hotel.
The system, although praised by many, is also disputed by some Habbos as a form of favouritism, with many Habbos well known within their respective communities being selected for the program. The system has not yet been implemented on all hotels worldwide, however is in operation throughout all English speaking hotels.
Hobbas
Hobbas were volunteer Habbo users who assisted with moderation of the hotel. Hobbas were split into three groups - silver, gold, and super - each of which had different levels of powers. Hobbas received many of the same commands as moderators use, as well as access to a limited section of Housekeeping. Hobbas applied for their voluntary position through the Hotel websites, and had to meet selection criteria (including a minimum age of 18 years) in order to file a valid application. The application process also involved telephone interviews, as well as a written contract between the individuals and
Sulake Corporation.
Due to staff concerns, the Hobba system was removed permanently, worldwide on December 31, 2005. All Hobbas and ex-Hobbas were given a special Hobba Memorial badge in memory of the their services to the hotel.
Language
There is a filter in place to block certain objectionable words and phrases. It has become to be known as the Bobba Filter on the most prominent hotels, due to its replacement of all offensive text with the simple word "bobba" (various hotels, mainly those not in English, use a different word). Replacement comes anywhere from benign words like "poop" and "ass" to highly offensive words, phrases and even websites. The filter also stops people giving out personal information, mainly phone numbers and e-mail addresses. The level of censorship varies from hotel to hotel, and is applied using discretion. In some cases, for example, other words such as "harbl," "mantrain," and "AIDS" while not outwardly malicious, are censored for more specific reasons; in the case of said examples, for their association to and usage by certain large groups of Habbo users who, in July, blockaded parts of the hotel and caused significant annoyance to Habbo users.
[Habbo.com - "Habbo site filters". Retrieved after July 7th, 2006.]
Habbo Way
The
Habbo Way is a simplified version of the hotel's Terms and Conditions. It is similar between hotels. It is a generalized ruleset that is easier to refer to then referring to a section of the Terms and Conditions (and also avoiding
legalese). The Habbo Way covers points such as swearing,
hacking, asking for personal information and trading Habbo furni for items in other games (such as
RuneScape or
Neopets). These rules also extend to cover specific scenarios, such as blocking access to parts of rooms (blocking the
pool ladder is common,
as is blocking access to
desks and dancefloors) and disclosing the full names or
instant messaging accounts of Sulake staff.
Sponsorship
As a website geared towards teenagers, Habbos Hotel often attracts sponsorship from outside entities. This sponsorship includes visits by
musicians and
bands (such as
The Veronicas[Frontier Touring - "The Veronicas Habbo Hotel Appearance". Retrieved 3rd July 2006.],
Gorillaz[Sulake.com - "Gorillaz live at Habbo Hotel". Retrieved 3rd July 2006.], and
Skye Sweetnam[SkyeSweetnam.com - "Skye Chats LIVE on Habbo Hotel". Retrieved 3rd July 2006.]), as well as corporations (such as
Lego,
Garnier and
Starburst). This sponsorship has often been an argument used by those opposed to Habbo Hotel - stating that Habbo Hotel sponsors are targeting vulnerable teenagers through excess advertising.
External Links
Current Hotels
There are currently 18 Habbo Hotels in operation:
Fan Sites
Some Habbo Hotels maintain an official fan site list. This is a list of the best sites dedicated to Habbo Hotel as voted by the members of that hotel's community or selected by members of staff.
References
Virtual reality communities | Finnish brands
Habbo Hotel | Habbo Hotel | Habbo Hotel | Habbo Hotel | Habbohotel | Habbo Hotel | Habbo Hotel | Habbo Hotel | Habbo Hotel