Archive for the ‘Club Penguin Info’ Category
Why play Club Penguin and become a member you ask?
Well from here are a few tidbits ClubPenguin.com says about that:
Dress up your penguin!
* Buy clothing and accessories
* Give your penguin a new style each month
* Come up with thousands of unique clothing combinations
* Unlock more actions with different clothing combinations
Adopt more puffles!
* Adopt more than one puffle
* Get all the colors of puffles
* Buy furniture for your puffles
Get more out of Club Penguin!
* Members see more room available on each server than a non-member sees, which means less waiting time
* Open your igloo on the map and meet more friends
* Be the first to discover new areas
* Get creative
We also wanna point out these great facts:
Club Penguin has been accredited as meeting BBBOnLine standards. Children’s safety is of utmost importance to us. Memberships allow us to maintain high levels of safety. A safe chatting environment is more fun!
Club Penguin also gives a portion of all membership proceeds to charities worldwide.
Ninjas are a secret aspect of Club Penguin. They were originally from Penguin Chat 3. They wear black suits, most likely black belts, and a black facemask. They haven’t been implemented yet, although they are on the system, as they can be accessed by using Winsocket Packet Editor Professional. These special penguins have long been a mystery.
Bunny Hill is one of the hills at the multiplayer mini game Sled Racing in Club Penguins Ski Mountain. Go to Bunny Hill, and get in the second slot (the one all the way to the right). There are two versions of this cheat: Press the UP arrow key once – OR – Press the LEFT arrow key twice. Both are suppose to allow you down the slope without crashing into anything.
Club Penguin part of Walt Disney is brought to us to give our children a safe virtual world. Club Penguin started in Oct. of 2005 by New Horizon. In March New Horizon had set out to create a world of safely for children. Somewhere the up and coming internet kids could go where the environment was safe a place where parents could allow their kids access too with out feeling they would be subject to the more adult issues online.
Club Penguin has the pleasure of experience staggering success with over 700,000 current paying members. The website is updated every week and keeps growing in efforts to ensure that the site is as safe as it can be.
Memberships to the site are reasonably priced offering a monthly subscription for 5.95, a 6 month subscription for 29.95 or a year subscription for 57.95. Although some parents may feel this is a high fee to pay for a site for your child to use. You truly can not put a price on safety when it comes to the internet. Club Penguin is fully supported by the paid subscriptions to their site, there is no advertising or marketing of any type. Keeping a site free of advertising and marketing also keeps your children from seeing ads that are not targeted for their eyes.
While Club Penguin is open to children of any ages the site is more geared for children between the ages of 6 and 14. They offer games, education and interaction with other children. As the year progress Club Penguin will be offering even more new games, new features, new adventures, new missions and a lot more.
ave you heard of Club Penguin? If you have kids, you should have. The site, located at www.clubpenguin.com, was created by New Horizon Interactive in 2005.
Clubpenguin.com is a virtual world, for internet chatting, designed specifically for kids. Of course, New Horizon Interactive kept kids’ safety in mind throughout the process of creating the site, and stayed away from blunt marketing appearing to kids.
Creators say on the site they consulted parents, law enforcement representatives and educators, as well as completed research on online safety before releasing clubpenguin.com to the public in October 2005.
Since clubpenguin.com’s introduction, it has become the number one game on Miniclip. Club Penguin is partnered with BBB Online, as well as NetSmartz, which is a partnership of both the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the Boys & Girls Clubs of America.
Club Penguin has also received the 2006 Editor’s Choice award from Children’s Technology Review Magazine.
The world of Club Penguin is updated weekly, and 80% of staff consists of moderators and safety personnel (many are parents, too). Clubpenguin.com is not funded by advertising revenue – it is funded entirely by subscriptions. Subscriptions are $5.95 a month.
Buying a membership allows a kid to dress up their penguin in different outfits, decorate their igloo, host parties in their igloo, and adopt pets called “puffles”.
As part of the site’s commitment to kids’ safety, posting personal information is discouraged. Club Penguin conforms to the Canadian Code of Practice and the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Safe Harbor Principles.