Club Penguin: Gone But Not Forgotten

Their video definitely resonated with my experiences on Club Penguin.

No other site captured nearly as much of my childhood online like Club Penguin (Disney Channel Asia was a distant second). I definitely felt the separation between the naked/mismatched fashion worn by non-members and the members’ drip. I was so desperate, I sought out paid-to-click sites with my friend to try and make money to afford a membership. I actually made a few dollars, albeit over the course of a year and ultimately lost due to a scam. It took me a year to recover the money, and in that time, I managed to persuade my parents to finally relent and provide their credit card details for a monthly membership. Boy did I celebrate that Christmas.

I was actively perusing the “guide”/”cheat” sites, tracking the new pins, event tips, even tracking the elusive Rockhopper/Sensei/Gary/AA to get their special autographed backgrounds. The mutual interests of other kids (and grown-up millennials) on these communities also drove me to hang out on Flash-based “Xat” chatrooms. I was most active on the Jmann93 one, and felt really proud when attaining moderator status there, only to lose it because I immediately stopped actively logging on after.

One thing that the Burbacks neglected to mention, however, was also the rise of merchandise and real money-can-buy items outside of the memberships. After Disney bought them, you start to see a real mobilization of Club Penguin toys, books, and other merch. More importantly, these things generally come with an online benefit, whether it be coins, Card-Jitsu cards, special items, and more excitingly… permanent access to typically members-only clothing/pets/items. This actually provided a way for those without membership to sample the high life, and not be dependent on a monthly subscription – that is as long as you keep your parents buying the new merch. Even before I started being a Club Penguin member, and for a while after, I really bought into the merch whenever I can. They don’t sell them where I live, so I hunt for them every time I go overseas. I remember scouring every Toys ‘R Us I laid eyes on to hopefully see Club Penguin stuff, with varying success.

The books were easier and the first I got as the range of bookstores that stock them were more diverse. I later learnt that you don’t even need to buy the books to redeem the online benefit, many of those guide/cheat sites have a dictionary of words the website asks for to prove you bought the book – refresh til you find a question on the list and enter the word/s. The toys took a bit more effort to find, but I do find them in stock here and there whenever I went overseas. While I first redeemed them for proper clothing as a non-member, my tastes graduated to off-catalog items – items that were cycled out of the typical clothing catalog on the Club Penguin game, but otherwise available by redeeming a code from the toys. Later when Card-Jitsu decks came out, I got a whole booster box, which, while they don’t offer members-only stuff the way toys do, they gave you access to exclusive cards in the Card-Jitsu game, with special effects for the rare cards that you add from the physical booster packs to your online profile! I also bought the “Game Day” Wii game, but due to complications with my Wii unit I sadly only played it a couple of times and never collected my rewards online.

Given the rise of smartphones and decline of attention spans of kids today, I doubt there’d be another magical experience quite like Club Penguin again. It’ll always hold a special status as my first real internet game, and an obsession of my pre-teen days.