I was goofing around on the Motley Fool website the other day (I know, Pudding and her wild times on financial planning sites in the early morning), and I found a rather interesting reference to Neopets
on one of their community blogs.
chk999 wrote:
To go a bit farther afield, it looks to me like one skill that the American populace badly needs is financial planning. So could we build a videogame that was fun to play, and where you got rewarded for good financial planning and punished for bad planning? I suspect yes, but you would need someone much better at game design than I am to make it work. (Interestingly enough the NeoPets website does encourage commerce and financial planning and is very popular with 'tween girls.)
As a college student who was a Neopets-playing tween girl back when Neopets was targeted toward college students, I remember justifying the stupid amounts of time I'd spend playing by telling my parents that I was learning about business through the game. When I was 11 or 12, I spent a lot of time trying to assure myself that the time on the site wasn't wasted--that it was actually educational. I don't think that was entirely wrong: I'm a crack anagram solver and Scrabble/Cranium player because of Eliv Thade, after all, and I impressed my cryptology prof with some Lenny Conundrum skillz back when I was a first-year.
While the Shop Wizard helped me grasp perfectly-competitive markets instantly when we got to that bit in Econ 101, there are a lot of aspects of business and commerce that just aren't a part of Neopets, or any MMO. The stock market on Neopets is fairly cyclical and not tied to any other part of the site--not like the real stock market at all. (I'd love to see the Stock Market revamped so that it's tied to how well Neopian Shops are doing--something like the
Price Changes page on steroids.)
More than investing or financial planning, I think Neopets (and the latter-day PPT Mafia) honed my scam detector. I roll my eyes at the FreeCreditReport commercials that my friends love*, pointing out the utter waste of money that service involves (and the total lies they use to market it). It hasn't escaped my notice that several of the other eye-rollers have Aisha plushies in their dorm rooms.
I almost think that the scammy environment on Neopets in the old days did me a favor. I wound up giving one of the first Clamades in Neopia to a scammer before there was a real trading post, believing I'd get a Grand Lightning Beam out of it. It's kind of hilarious how cheap both of these are now--suffice it to say that they were big deals then. That kind of low-stakes loss helped me realize that there's no real shame in being fooled, but that it's necessary to educate yourself so that you don't wind up pinning your hopes on Nigerian royalty. It's better to lose neopoints than real money.
Has Neopets taught you anything about business and money?
*They think the singer's cute enough to make up for shady business practices. He's not.