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Posts Tagged ‘Social Networking’

Who’s Your Daddy Farmville? Happy Farm

December 25th, 2009 252 comments

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We all know that Facebook’s application Farmville has nearly 70 million monthly active users despite its simplicity.  However most people do not know that Farmville was actually the child of a Chinese game that is also on Facebook, but has a much lower user base (currently 3,372,366 monthly users), called Happy Farm.  It lacks in organization and some features that Farmville has, but has other redeeming traits including nicer graphics, different items, and different abilities, such as stealing.  Being Farmville’s predecessor, Happy Farm was rated in the Top 15 Most Influential Games of the Decade.

Farmville and Happy Farm Similarities


Neighbors


Just like in Farmville, Happy Farm revolves around you having neighbors.  You need neighbors to build a bigger farm so you can grow more crops just like in Farmville.

Happy Farm allows to interact with you neighbors in a few interesting ways:

There are four ways to interact with your neighbors: helping care for their farms, stealing some harvest, sending gifts and sending messages.

Gifts

Just like in Farmville you can send and receive gifts.  There are 5 different kinds of gifts: “free gifts, flower bouquet, toy and decoration, some other special items.”

Crops

What would a farm game be without crops? Even though both have crops, Happy Farm tends to revolve more around flowers where Farmville includes many types of crops.  Also, Happy Farm crops tend to have pests on them so another action in the game requires you to remove the pests.

Farmville and Happy Farm Differences


Exchange Center

Happy Farm includes a place where users can exchange items such as Dog Food and Toy Seed.  Sometimes special items can be found here as well.

Pet Store

The pet store is where you can buy different pets to help guard your property from thieves.  Thieves drop coins if caught by a pet.

Stealing

Unlike in Farmville, you can steal neighbors crops in Happy Farm but simply clicking on their crop when visiting their farm and choosing “Loot Harvest.”

Conclusion



Obviously both games are fun and have their redeeming qualities. I think Happy Farm looks nice and has some interesting features, but its user interface is fairly complicated.  I started using the application and I couldn’t figure out where things were.  While Farmville uses words such as Market and Gift on its icons, Happy Farm just uses pictures, making finding stuff complicated.  Also, happy Farm doesn’t have much room for expansion, but for the precursor to Farmville I think it is pretty fun.   Obviously the rest of the Facebook population agrees with Farmville being the better of the two.

Goodbye Facebook, Hello Yatedo: A New Way to Stalk People

December 14th, 2009 222 comments

Everyone knows the creepiness that Facebook brought to the online word in terms of cyber stalking.  All you need is a name and assuming your account has limited privacy, anyone can view most if not all of your information.  However, this form of stalking may soon end as a new form begins.  Enter Yatedo, a search engine to find anyone on the web.  On their main page they say the following about themselves:

Yatedo is the new generation free People Search Engine which lets you find and contact anyone on the entire web with any kind of information you have about the person you are looking for.

Now you will not have to have Facebook open when you are doing a school research project on Albert Einstein.  Instead just open Yatedo and search for both Einstein and your best friends.  I have requested an invite to this service, so I will see more of what it is like once I get one, but for now here is a screenshot of an info page.

yatedo