A eulogy for a site that raised me.
Old friend, though you still shamble on it
is clear that your core has been hollowed and your
soul bled dry. Nevertheless, I am fortunate to have my
memories of what this place once was.
On December 31, 2020, Adobe Flash was
officially unsupported, breaking hundreds of site
elements and leaving the place borderline defunct. But
the death knell for this site had sounded many years
before, in fact the place had been hearing continuous
knells of some form or fashion for the past 10 years
or more. This is to say that even in my time, the site
was regarded as past its prime, adulterated by the
insidious capital interests of viacom. (oh, it's
jumpstart now?) I wasn't one of the first, and I
definitely wasn't one of the last. I remember Neopets
as a bleeding giant, I remember seeing hundreds of
complaints by older, wiser users from my earliest days
there. I remember watching the old art slowly get
chipped away and replaced with new pieces, the soul of
the original site waning as mundanely as the erosion
of a beachside cliff.
The collapse, the point of no return, the precipitous
fall into unuseability loomed, but back then it loomed
distantly. Within the belly of the ship of theseus
thousands of us logged in each day to do dailies,
barter on the forums, restock shops, submit scores,
gamble, code, roleplay, trade stock, trade pets, and
just putter around. I will always remember Neopets as
a bit patchworked, navigating the site meant
traversing through layers of old and new assets,
seeing the art style shift and change under a hundred
different hands. This patchworkiness extended past the
art, into the soul of the site itself. The place was
bursting with Stuff to Do, and just beneath the shiny
new layers of recent content lied a deep well of
strange, ancient things. A fully functional html rpg?
Yeah we have one of those and a sequel too, hope you
don't mind refreshing your page for every move. Your
pet may have shiny new art but their petpages will
always remain a flashback to 1999. I enjoyed the rough
around the edges quality, and the fact that it
remained in spite of the best efforts of the sites
management.
Many words have been spilled about what a heavy loss
it is, that current generations lack kid-friendly
sites that will also teach you how to code, how to buy
low and sell high, how to draw, how to write. It
wasn't a perfect community, but it was a warm enough
nest to me and thousands of other fledgelings at the
time, and for that I'll always be grateful. Let me
tell you Webkinz and Club Penguin didn't give me even
half of what Neopets did.
Out of all of them, I never expected Webkinz to be the
last one standing. It's funny how life works like that
sometimes.
There was and is a lot of content on Neopets. Enough
to occupy at least some of every afternoon and weekend
for countless childhood years. Big enough to be a
distraction or an escape or a lifeline anytime, as
long as you can get to the computer.
Though the site may continue on for a while yet, I
still feel myself mourning. Goodbye to late nights
scrolling through shops smattered with ancient flash
art and new assets mishmashed, goodbye to refreshing
auctions and trade lots, goodbye to roleplaying, to
guild membership, to bungling through html tutorials.
Goodbye to dailies, to staring covetously at the
rainbow pool, to monthly neolodge check-ins, to turmac
roll, to waking up to a box of neomail. Goodbye to the
place that smuggled the concept of being trans into my
hermetically sealed garden of eden, in its own
whimsical and abstract way. Goodbye to my old pets and
the person I was when I raised them.
Neopets was a good website. I'm biased but I'd say it
was one of the best.
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