![](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125619937/800188664.jpg)
Aug 27, 2011 Oloko is a free-to-play virtual world game for children. The virtual world of Oloko combines knowledge, play, discovery, fun and safety, while providing a place for the development, creativity, social interaction and adventure for your child. Playing provides children with the opportunity to access and explore their own imaginary world, Read More ». Play Oloko Oloko Games. Lang: English Oloko Screenshot: Oloko Videos.
Developer | goodbeans GmbH |
---|---|
Type | Massively multiplayer online game |
Launch date | Germany December 2007 England February 2008 France February 2008 Spain February 2008 Netherlands February 2008 Poland April 2008 Sweden July 2008 Norway July 2008 Finland July 2008 Denmark July 2008 Russia December 2008 |
Discontinued | November 1, 2016 |
Platform(s) | Online (Adobe Flash) |
Status | Closed (November 1, 2016) |
Website | Panfu Website at the Wayback Machine (archived October 29, 2016) |
Panfu was a massively multiplayer online game for children aged between 6 and 14, involving a virtual world where players could create their own panda and explore the island of Panfu. Players were able to complete quests, play mini-games and chat with other pandas. According to creators about 15,000 players registered daily on the German Panfu.[1] Panfu was made available to the general public on December 1, 2007 – after a beta-testing-phase.[2]
The servers were taken offline in November 2016 after Goodbeans GmbH filed for bankruptcy in 2015.
History[edit]
The two founders of Young Internet, Kay Kühne and Moritz Hohl, first published Panfu in December 2007, after 3 months of development and a month of public beta-testing. Panfu is a name composed of the words 'panda' and the Chinese word for happiness, 'fu'.[3] Only 6 weeks after launch, Panfu had more than 300,000 registered members.[4]Panfu hit one million users in April 2008.[5]In June 2009, the website had 10 million users worldwide and became the biggest children's virtual world in Europe.[6]
In the meantime, the number of users grew to over 15 million and the game was translated into 12 languages.[7] In 2012, Young Internet was renamed to Goodbeans and shifted their focus to mobile gaming.[8] With the new focus on mobile-only, their focus slowly drifted away from Panfu. The last team-members were laid off in December 2014, and in February 2015 there was only two employees left.[9] In January 2015 Goodbeans filed for bankruptcy, after Panfu had not been updated since December 2014. Instead of shutting Panfu down, they decided to let it stay up until it ran out, and thus never properly announced that they were closing.[10]Panfu finally closed in November 2016.[11][12][13]
Security in Panfu[edit]
![Oloko Game Oloko Game](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125619937/197958524.jpg)
According to the creators, security was the biggest priority in Panfu. The chat was closed from 3 AM to 8 AM on weekdays and from 8 PM to 11 AM on weekends. A word filter prevented verbal attacks and warned the players when they didn't follow the rules. At the same time, the chat was strictly moderated by moderators from all over the world who watched over the chat. Parents could also opt-in to allow their child to only see the high security-chat. It allowed the child to select chats from a menu of premade greetings, questions, phrases, feelings, and options for action.[14]
In July 2009, the first Panda sheriffs were introduced to help the moderators keep Panfu safe. They could mute other players for 30 minutes or freeze them, so they could not do anything for a minute. This worked only a few times, after which the sheriffs had to bring another sheriff or a moderator to help. Players could tell what pandas were sheriffs by the star-badge they had on their profiles.
That was in the original Panfu before it closed. And in the private server, panfu.me, they don't close the chat at different times during the whole day and night. They have only the moderators, so-called 'Sheriffs' and the reporting system left.
![Oloko Oloko](http://www.browsergameslist.com/imgs/oloko.jpg)
Membership[edit]
For some features in Panfu the players had to purchase a membership known as 'Gold Panda', with which they then had the opportunity to decorate their treehouse, purchase clothes, adopt a pet and visit the 'Underwater School'. In 2013, a lifetime Gold Panda-offer was made, which was supposed to be limited to only that spring, but ended up remaining until the game was closed.[15]
References[edit]
- ^Interview with Panfu creators 'Moritz Hohl' and 'Kay Kühne'
- ^Panfu.de schickt die Pandas los - Deutsche Startups
- ^Documentary about Panfu on German television
- ^Erfolgreicher Start für Kinder-Online-Welt Panfu / Nach nur sechs Wochen zählt Panfu.de über 300.000 Mitglieder / Täglich 15.000 Neuanmeldungen
- ^Panfu 1 Mio User April 2008 DE
- ^Panfu mit 10 millionen nutzern größte virtuelle welt für Kinder in Europa
- ^Panfu: “Quengelfaktor” als Erfolgsgeheimnis
- ^Goodbeans Blog: 'From today on Young Internet will be goodbeans'Archived 2014-04-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^HABA Fox and Sheep-exit
- ^OMR #174 - Verena Pausder
- ^VerenaDE on Twitter: 'It was stopped this September, but I don't know any details.'Archived 2019-06-19 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Panfu Presskit - IGDB
- ^Die vergessenen Rocket-Startups - Grunderszene
- ^'Die Welt' about security on the internet
- ^Panfu's Facebook-post about lifetime-membership
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Panfu&oldid=952491832'
![](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125619937/800188664.jpg)