Virtual Consumerism: Case Habbo Hotel

Information, Communication & Society, Vol. 12, No. 7, pp. 1059-1079, 2009

21 Pages Posted: 27 Jun 2010

See all articles by Vili Lehdonvirta

Vili Lehdonvirta

University of Oxford - Oxford Internet Institute

Terhi-Anna Wilska

University of Turku - Turku School of Economics

Mikael Johnson

Helsinki Institute for Information Technology

Date Written: January 1, 2009

Abstract

Selling virtual items for real money is increasingly being used as a revenue model in games and other online services. To some parents and authorities, this has been a shock: previously innocuous ‘consumption games’ suddenly seem to be enticing players into giving away their money for nothing. In this article, we examine the phenomenon from a sociological perspective, aiming to understand how some media representations come to be perceived as ‘virtual commodities’, what motivations individuals have for spending money on these commodities, and how the resulting ‘virtual consumerism’ relates to consumer culture at large. The discussion is based on a study of everyday practices and culture in Habbo Hotel, a popular massively-multiuser online environment permeated with virtual items. Our results suggest that virtual commodities can act in essentially the same social roles as material goods, leading us to ask whether ecologically sustainable virtual consumption could be a substitute to material consumerism in the future.

Keywords: virtual property, consumer behaviour, commodification, global culture industry, massively-multiplayer online game (MMO), real-money trading (RMT)

Suggested Citation

Lehdonvirta, Vili and Wilska, Terhi-Anna and Johnson, Mikael, Virtual Consumerism: Case Habbo Hotel (January 1, 2009). Information, Communication & Society, Vol. 12, No. 7, pp. 1059-1079, 2009, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1630373

Vili Lehdonvirta (Contact Author)

University of Oxford - Oxford Internet Institute ( email )

1 St. Giles
University of Oxford
Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 3JS
United Kingdom

HOME PAGE: http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk

Terhi-Anna Wilska

University of Turku - Turku School of Economics ( email )

Rehtorinpellonkatu 3
TURKU, FI-20500
Finland

Mikael Johnson

Helsinki Institute for Information Technology ( email )

Helsinki 00180
Finland

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