2024 is over, and not only are we starting a new year, but a new quarter century. But before we say goodbye to the old year, let's take a look at its triumphs and tragedies,its wins and blunders, and other interesting moments.
Sadly one of the more consequential events was someone writing a
slanderous article accusing a number of Lindens and Moles of ageplay. It
had no real evidence of the accusations, but enough residents were
talking about it to the point Linden and Mole chatter on Bellisseria
group chat quieted down for a while, and Patch and a number of other
Lindens and Moles were scarce for a while. The Lab announced they would
investigate the accusations. But they would also make some changes in
child avatar policies, notably they could no longer be nude and could no
longer be in adult sims, even if there was nothing sexual out in the
open. The later got some complaints as some residential areas were rated
Adult only out of worry the Lab had a problem with couples being
intimate behind closed doors, and there were events, notably Burn 2,
where nudity was okay but allowed child avatars to be among the visitors
and volunteer staff.
Probably the development Linden Lab was talking about the most was it's Mobile Viewer, available for newer smartphones powered by Android and IOS. At the start of the year, it was available only as a "private alpha" for Premium-Plus residents, and they had to be on a waiting list. In June, Premium and Premium Plus accounts could get it on "early Beta." In November, it would be released officially, and available for all residents to use. But there was one detail that complicated going about on it. Since it was available through Google Play and the App Store, their terms and conditions meant that it couldn't be used to access adult regions. Firestorm announced it had no plans to make it's own mobile viewer.
Another development for Second Life was PBR, or Physical Based Rendering, technology. This made possible reflective surfaces off metal and water, and allowed for actual working mirrors. Introduced in June, it would take off in popularity when introduced into Firestorm viewers later in the month, which got people using it and content creators making items such as furniture mirrors. But, some residents experienced technical glitches and crashes, leading to the opinion of some that the technology was rushed to be in time for the Second Life Birthday. One former Newser reported was saying the update make SL so bad, he was leaving and not returning. With the most popular viewer, Firestorm, having a "three viewer policy" in which older viewers were gradually phased out, those who were finding PBR features made SL almost unusable feared what would happen if the last viewer before the update, 6.6.17, was phased out. Finally in mid-August, the Firestorm team announced they were modifying their policy and 6.6.17 would be around "forever." The Lab would also acknowledge some residents were having issues and resolved to fix the bugs, as well as working closely with Team Firestorm. The bug fixing would go on into September and presumably later.
Other Lab developments, on WelcomeIsland, on January 30 there would be a new Community Exhibition where SL communities could place a display to advertise themselves to newcomers. JIRA support ended in February, it's operations transferred to a community portal. In April, the Lab would lower the land impact, or weight, or mesh items. In September, the Lab would announce they were working on a combat system for those interested in taking part in battle games. Voice would change in Second Life, the servers moved to WebRTC.
In July, the Second Life Blogger Network was put on hiatus. A new one
would appear in November. Also in July, Linden Lab would take a poll for
it's next Linden Home theme. The results would be delayed, then in
August it was announced the winner was the Tiki/Water Theme, with Alpine
Style Theme (Snow) as the runner up. But for some reason, neither or
any other new Linden Home would be made available this year.
In October, Linden Lab would do a partial reversal of it's controversial Gacha Ban in 2021. Gacha machines can be made and sell items like they did before, but these items can no longer be transferable and able to be resold. While this made some happy, some longtime gacha fans complained part of the fun was being able to give away or trade them while some critics complained they were still bad.
There was some expansion of Bellisseria, notably early in the year. There would also be a new water connection between it and the Mainland in June. In April, Bellisseria would celebrate it's fifth anniversary. It would also have numerous events around the year on it's Fairgrounds, such as Bellisseria for Life in spring and it's own Mole Day in September.
In June, the SL21B, the Second Life Twenty-First Birthday celebrations would take place with the theme "Elements." As always, there were numerous resident and community-created exhibits. Among those taking part was the Newser, with it's exhibit build by the talented Silvia Ametza and her team. There would be a few town hall events. At one, Patch Linden would announce 21 residents could upgrade their accounts to lifetime Premium Plus. One difference between this and earlier Birthday celebrations, all the official music events were in the first ten days, then no more.
Brad Oberwager, the head of Linden Lab, would confirm in October that
there were some layoffs saying there were "changes across the whole
organization, and some people got promoted,
some people got moved into different parts of the organization, and some
people, we had to say goodbye ..." Philip Linden aka Philip Rosedale, the founder of Linden Lab, would become it's Chief Technical Officer in October. One Linden, Strawberry, would close the blog of her private account, Strawberry Singh.
In December, Linden Lab offered a gift to the residents, six months free
of the gaming company Madpea's Unlimited service. But it would also
offer them to take part in an experimental AI character designer. After a
few days of heated debate on the forums, it would pause the program.
One change in Linden Lab was the sale of it's virtual currency exchange service Tilia in May. It had been created several years ago in response to growing US Government scrutiny about virtual money.
In
May, the Grid would experience a welcome milestone. The number of sims
had gone up past the 28,000 mark for the first time in years. Sadly the
number has declined by a few hundred since, due to the closing of some
private regions.
For Team Firestorm, founder Jessica Lyon stepped down as it's Project Manager in January after almost fourteen years of being in charge of the people behind Second Life's most popular viewer. She remains on the team as it's CEO, but is no longer leading in day to day matters.
Second Life's largest fundraising organization, the Relay for Life in Second Life, would hold a number of events for this year's season, Decades of Hope: the SL Living Expo, Belliseria for Life, Fantasy Faire, Sci-Fi con, Fandom con, Making Strides, The Renaissance Festival, I Pink I Can, the Winter Expo, and of course the main fundraising season from February to late June, with it's high point the Relay Weekend in early June. Once again, hundreds of thousands of US dollars were raised, over $454,000 as of the end of the main Relay season. Mattie Carlton
(Mattie Foxpaws) would do a song for the Relay in honor of a departed friend, "We Are Here." The team of the community hosting the Newser office, the Sunbeamers, would hold a number of events such as it's annual air show (with the Anemone Wing Walkers and Team Phoenix), took part in multiteam events such as the Relaystock and would reach Ruby level for the second year in a row.
There were numerous other events in Second Life. In March there was the Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education conference. This year, it was noticed that when the Lindens had a meeting there, Patch Linden was absent. There was the Burn2 art and music festival in October, the Second Life version of the Burning Man festival in real life, which had spinoff events in Winter, Spring, and Summer. There were the monthly Homes for Our Troops benefit concerts at Veterans Island. Mieville would hold events such as Silk Road. There was Virtual Ability's events, such as the Annual International
Disability Rights Affirmation Conference. Team Diabetes would hold fundraising events, such as Scare Me Silly and the Art Bazzar Bay City would have Mole Day in February, a Truck Food Festival, Oktoberfest, and many other events such as it's anniversary parade and party in May. Team Firestorm, the people behind Second Life's most popular viewer, would hold their anniversary party in September, their fourteenth. Halloween was celebrated in many places around Second Life, notably on the Luna's Empire sim which brought back it's Ghostbuster-inspired free to play game.
While 2024 was a Presidential Election year, the Newser would have less coverage than in previous years due to the increasing amount of political drama and the increasing desire of some residents to get away from it. But there were some events such as the Red White and Blue Civic Awareness Party at the PBC. Much like eight years ago, Trump's victory was followed by numerous cheers and screams on social media.
Some Lindens would depart the team. In February, Mojo and Styfy Linden left. Alexa Linden, and an unknown number of others, would leave in October.
And sadly some residents would pass away. Among them, Lorivonne Lustre aka Lorraine Mockford of the VWBPE, Sylys Sable/Sylys Weezles, a regular at several clubs, including the Happy Vixen, Smoke Texan, the part owner of the Stagg Island 9/11 memorial, Kim (kimberleyalice1961 Resident) of Kim's Kreations, Lady Lovie Benoir of the Premier Business Center, Kara Foxdale, a tarrot card reader the Newser interviewed in the past. There was also Arabella Cinquetti of Lightning Video, her store closing just after her passing in March, and the servers for her videos going offline in April. Among the locations affected was the Happy Vixen, which had a movie theater with her videos. The Sunweaver community would say goodbye to Zorro Wurramunga, also known as the "Fisher Fox."
One noted longtime resident, Xavier Thiebaud, known for his work in the arts and founding a popular group, would announce he was departing Second Life for personal reasons, having a farewell party in August following the last showing of his plays.
Of locations in Second Life, Wedcot Center would be back in March following being offline for a few months. But another tribute to a Disney park, Magicland, would close in April, though the builds would remain on the sim for a while. Also in April, the last of the University of Western Australia sims closed, noted for it and it's sister sims holding art and machinima contests with some large prizes. Oahu, the home of the Pearl Harbor Memorial, would close and then reopen after it's original owner stepped in to revive the island. In December, Club Furzona, which the Newser wrote about a few years ago, announced it was leaving Second Life, but no destination was mentioned. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial would move to Veterans Isle.
For the Sunweaver/Angel community, there would be the return of Nydia Tungsten's KVXN Radio in August.
Draxtor Despress had been working with Linden Lab for ten years. But in March it would come to a close. He would continue with his Book Club a little longer, but it would soon have it's final show in November. He would restart his Drax Files videos.
Ryan Schultz, who blogged about Second Life and other virtual worlds, would announce in November he was having to cease updates on it.
On the Internet, Facebook would go through an outage in March. In October, the Internet Archive/Wayback Machine would be hacked.
In
gaming news, in January a private server for the discontinued game
"City of Heroes" got the go-ahead by the game's owner NCSoft to operate
in an official capacity. In September, Nintendo, the owners of the Pokemon franchise, sued the owners of Palworld on the grounds the game infringed on some of it's copyrights. Later, gaming updates would make a change with one detail people thought made the game resemble Pokemon a little, but the lawsuit remains.
2024 was an eventful year, and hopefully 2025 will be a great one.
Bixyl Shuftan
SL Newser
"..hopefully 2025 will be a great one." -- With Musk-Trump in charge?
ReplyDeleteGreat Review and agree with last comment.
ReplyDeleteWell, at least we can hope for Second Life great year
ReplyDeleteThank you for the complement. As for the new President, I'm sure comedians and political cartoonists will do well.
ReplyDelete