Mind Candy CEO Michael Acton Smith came to my office today to tell me about
Moshi Monsters, his company's virtual world for kids that is signing up a new member every second. Moshi Monsters was his "last roll of the dice" to save his virtual worlds startup in 2008, and it worked. Moshi Monsters is up to 35 million registered users, with about 7 million of those active every month, says Smith. And it is projected to generate
$100 million this year from a combination of subscriptions and gross retail merchandise sales. The site is geared towards kids between 5 to 12 years old. Each kid gets a monster pet and a room that can be decked out with virtual goods. But instead of trying to create "just another bloody virtual world," Smith wanted it to be more like a safe social network. "Instead of copying Club Penguin," he says, "we focused more on Facebook and tried to re-imagine that for kids." There is pin board where friends can leave messages and a news feed, but there are also games, quizes and virtual world activities. The penny-drop moment for us was that kids like to share and show off online just as much as adults do," he says. "If we could create the safe place online, we could create Facebook for kids." In the video above, Smith explains his strategy and gives me a brief tour of the site.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/YGKYu8W0_Xo/
HIGH TECH COMPUTER HON HAI PRECISION IND HYNIX SEMICONDUCTOR INFOSYS TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES
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