Timeline
The plan for this page is to have a bullet point list of all major events that occurred in the timeline from Habitat until the present day. These will be presented in chronological order and wherever possible, links and citations will be given.
If you can provide a date for a major event or can confirm one, please get in touch with us. If you have proof of these dates but cannot publicly share them, we can discuss this to confirm the authenticity of the information.
1985
- Habitat begins.
1986
Unknown Date
- Habitat is demoed at The Palladium nightclub in New York City.
1987
- Habitat alpha test occurs.
1988
- Habitat alpha ends.
1989
- Fujitsu Habitat is demoed at Asia Telecom ‘89 in Singapore by a team from Fujitsu alongside Chip Morningstar and Randy Farmer.
- Club Caribe is released.
- Fujitsu Habitat monitor test begins.
1990
- Fujitsu Habitat is officially released on the FM-TOWNS computer.
1991
1992
1993
- Development of WorldsAway begins.
1994
- Club Caribe closes.
1995
- WorldsAway’s Dreamscape launches on CompuServe.
1996
March
- Habitat II is released in Japan on Windows, Mac and the Sega Saturn.
Unknown Date
- WorldsAway’s Pride world opens.
1997
July
- WorldsAway releases the 2.0 upgrade.
Unknown Date
- Hallway is opened to the public as part of the beta test for WorldsAway 2.0.
- Tim Lavalli is hired at Fujitsu Software Corporation and becomes known in the Dreamscape as Brother Echo.
- Jeffrey Douglas who was formerly known as Oracle Vaserius in the Dreamscape, leaves Fujitsu.
- Glass City is released in Korea.
- Hallway is renamed to Hotel Silicon.
- Electric Communities invite people to participate in the EC Habitats beta program.
- The WorldsAway Products and Services group is moved from being a part of Fujitsu Software Corporation, to being under the control of Fujitsu Business Systems of America.
1998
- Habitat II opens their Graceville world, a clone of the Dreamscape world, using the WorldsAway 2.0 client and server architecture.
- Scott Moore who was formerly known as Oracle Teresias in the Dreamscape, leaves Fujitsu.
1999
May
- The WorldsAway Products and Services group in the USA is sold by Fujitsu Systems Business of America on the behalf of Fujitsu Limited in Japan to Inworlds.com, which was led by former Fujitsu executive David Andrews. The WorldsAway Products and Services group led development of the software, created new artwork, operated several virtual worlds, marketed them and licensed the software out to other people. The Products and Services group was sponsored by Fujitsu Limited in Japan, who ultimately owned the WorldsAway property.
- Inworlds.com, Inc is renamed very quickly to Avaterra.com, Inc.
Unknown Date
- Version 2.4 of the WorldsAway client is released. It would be the final release by Fujitsu to bear the name WorldsAway.
- Fujitsu Habitat closes.
- Habitat II closes both Elysium and Graceville worlds.
- Habitat II rebrands itself as J-Chat and opens a new world.
- Avaterra rebrand themselves as VZones. They continue to trade as Avaterra, but the service itself becomes known as VZones.
2000
Unknown Date
- Avaterra release version 3.0 of the VZones client. This is the final client release created by members of the original development team who used to work for Fujitsu but moved over to Avaterra.
- Avaterra.com, Inc goes bankrupt.
- The VZones service is down for a month due to non payment of hosting bills. Robert Dunbar, a former remote assistant, steps in to try and raise the funds to pay the bill and get services operational.
- A contract is signed between Avaterra and Robert Dunbars company before the board of directors, transferring Avaterras software license to Virtual Universe, Inc.
2001
Unknown Date
- David Andrews, former Fujitsu executive and Avaterra CEO, returns to the fold and takes over operation of the VZones service from Robert Dunbar. David Andrews company that took over operation of VZones was called Stratagem Corporation.
- Fujitsu Parex merges with G-Search, Ltd who operate and maintain the J-Chat service. G-Search, Ltd is a wholly owned subsidiary of Fujitsu Limited in Japan.
2002
2003
Unknown Date
- Sanrio license the WorldsAway software from G—Search, Ltd and launch Sanrioworld. A Hello Kitty themed virtual world.
2004
2005
2006
Unknown Date
- David Andrews sells Stratagem Corporation to Justine Reichman, who takes over operation of the VZones service.
2007
Unknown Date
- An unauthorised Glass City opens privately, by one of the former Glass City server engineers.
2008
2009
2010
January
26th
- G-Search, Ltd shuts down the J-Chat service.
2011
2012
2013
2014
July
- Due to non payment of server hosting bills, the VZones service closes its doors without any announcements and the owner, Justine Reichman, goes completely silent.
August
- MetroWorlds, an officially licensed WorldsAway world, launch the Eden beta world.
Unknown Date
- Lucasfilm’s Habitat, which was later purchased by Fujitsu, was made open source thanks to the efforts of The Museum of Art and Digital Entertainment in Oakland, California.
- A hackathon was held at The MADE to attempt to get Habitat operational again. This event was attended by Chip Morningstar and Randy Farmer. A basic region was created using packet crafting and the first Habitat region in 20 years was able to be successfully displayed.
2015
October
- MetroWorlds launch their main virtual world called Metropolis. The beta world known as Eden closes several weeks later.
2016
2017
November
- MetroWorlds shut down their Metropolis service.
Unknown Date
- Randy Farmer starts the NeoHabitat project. A recreation of the original Habitat server, using a modern programming language. This happens after three years of attempting to get clearance for some missing files needed to compile the original Habitat server code on the original hardware.