Roblox
Roblox | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | ROBLOX Corporation |
Distributor(s) | ROBLOX Corporation |
Engine |
ROBLOX Rendering Engine ImPlicitNgine |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, iPad 2+, iPhone 4+, iPod touch 5th generation, Android, Fire OS,[1] Xbox One,[2] Oculus Rift[3] |
Release date(s) |
2004 (as Dynablocks & Goblox,[4] private alpha) 2005 (Public alpha) 2006 (official beta) |
Genre(s) | MMORPG, physics-based sandbox game |
Mode(s) | Multiplayer |
Private company | |
Founders |
David Baszucki Erik Cassel |
Headquarters | San Mateo, California, United States |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
David Baszucki (Founder & CEO) Keith Lucas (Chief Product Officer) Andrew Chmyz (Chief Financial Officer) Adam Miller (VP of Engineering, Technology) Ian Silverstein (VP of Global Sales) Scott Rubin (SVP of Business of Development) |
Website |
corp |
Roblox (stylized as RŌBLOX) is a MMOG created and marketed toward children and teenagers aged 8–18. In the game, players are able to create their own virtual world and design their own games.[5] Games on Roblox can be scripted using a sandboxed edition of Lua 5.1 to affect events that occur in-game and create different scenarios. The company's main source of revenue comes from players buying Robux, the main virtual currency in the game, and from players buying "Builders Club" access, a status which gives virtual benefits to users. Players who have created an account may purchase either Builders Club, Turbo Builders Club, or Outrageous Builders Club, otherwise known by users as BC, TBC, and OBC, respectively.[6]
History and development
Roblox was created by founder and co-founder David Baszucki and Erik Cassel in 2004 and officially launched into its beta version, titled "Dynablocks" in 2004. Soon, "Dynablocks" was renamed to ROBLOX in 2005 and the website was officially launched in 2006.[7] It was named after a portmanteau of the words robots and blocks.[8] Roblox is still in the beta stages today.
Development and beta (2004–2006)
David Baszucki and Erik Cassel founded Roblox, then known as Dynablocks, in 2004. After a year of development, Dynablocks was renamed ROBLOX and was launched into beta in 2005. In 2005, people could gain the currency at that time, Roblox Points, by completing single-player mini games developed by Roblox admins. As the game was released publicly in 2006, people came to the game slowly, but eventually the game started growing exponentially to its noticeably large 6 million account base.
Early history (2006–2009)
In early 2006, Roblox had one currency, known as Roblox Points, first used like the Player Points, then as an upgrade to one's avatar, which was subsequently discontinued and replaced with "Robux". In mid-2007, Roblox added more customization to user characters to allow items such as caps to be worn.[9] Roblox badges were first introduced on 22 December 2006.[10] Meshes were added, and so were the abilities of sending friend requests to other players, and sending messages. Other things accomplished in 2006 were searching through players, places, and items, multiplayer places, stats, and inventories.[11]
In 2007, character customization became possible.[12] In late January, the abuse report queue was introduced, with the ability for any user to report content as inappropriate through the "Report Abuse" buttons disseminated throughout the site.[13] In March 2007, Roblox became compliant with COPPA, with the addition of safe chat, a change which made users who indicated to be under the age of 13 at registration only able to communicate by selecting predefined messages from a menu.[14] In August 2007, Roblox added Builders Club, a premium membership, and applied server improvements.[15]
Exclusive features and game features (2010–2012)
In 2010, Roblox began creating body shapes which Builders Club members could purchase using virtual currency.[16] These body shapes were available in the catalog as packages, which included many items that were all obtained when the package was bought. These packages varied in size and price and occasionally went on sale.
In the year 2011, more than 5.4 million games were created by users.[17]
At the Roblox Game Conference, Roblox released a system that allowed members with a premium membership to trade collectible items with other users who have Builders Club. Over time, other features have been added to the system such as increasing the value of a trade, adding Robux to a trade, and owning and trading multiple copies of the same collectible item.[18]
On 13 January 2012, Roblox announced on the blog that their first Hack Week had been held. The post announcing it described it as a week where developers worked on projects they chose that they then had to present to the company and that, if considered interesting, could be put further work on.[19] Projects worked on by developers were later described by blog posts during the rest of the year. They included the implementation of the possibility for user interface elements to rotate,[20] which was later added to the game engine, the exploration of a system for crafting items,[21] the suggestion of a system that would allow game developers to connect many games together,[22] which was also later added to the engine[23] and the creation of a mobile website to replace the normal website for tablets and cell phones.[24]
On 5 June 2012, Roblox announced that a new water material was released to add to the existing collection of "high scalability" terrain cell materials.[25]
On 11 December 2012, Roblox released the ability to play games on iOS.[26][27][28][29][30] The current iOS devices compatible with running Roblox games are the iPad 2 and newer devices including mini, iPhone 4 or newer, and the iPod touch 5th generation. The mobile Roblox application gives users the ability to customize their character, shop in the virtual catalog, play games, view their profile, and respond to messages. Previous to the release of the mobile Roblox application, the company created 20 virtual Roblox tablets. Players who purchased one received a brand new iPad 3.[31]
On 21 December 2012, featherweight parts were introduced. This feature enhanced game performance greatly by decreasing the usage of file space for each part in a place.[32]
April 1st 2012 hacks
On April 1, 2012, Roblox suffered site issues that caused players to get incorrect amounts of Robux. Some assets were uploaded without being reviewed by the moderators. There was a mysterious face uploaded to the catalog named c:. The only person who has it is user stickmasterluke. The hackers were able to access a few moderators accounts and make them say very graphic and inappropriate things. Soon after, users Pheedy and are17, both accounts under the control of DracoSwordMaster, became moderators, and used their elevated powers to unban Minish, who is a well known hacker on ROBLOX. The prices of hats in the catalog went down tremendously, and players on the site were stuck in two possible situations; one being undeservedly earning ROBUX spontaneously, and the latter having their ROBUX lost. The warning banner for the top of the site would flutter in chaos, changing colors and bestowing objectionable content, examples being "thank you minish for messing up the economy. nub." and "always share your passwords with strangers, kids!" Items in the catalog had prices changed and renamed. The entire website was soon shut down. After the hack attack was over, people were pointing the finger at users Minish and DracoSwordMaster, who are also well known hackers on the website for the hacks. After all this activity had occurred, ROBLOX staff brought the site offline, reporting they were still attempting to patch up the currency system. Administrators John Shedletsky and Matt Dusek had discovered a way to regress the everything that happened, and once the entire system was restored to its previous form, all the accounts that were tampered with were permanently banned, including DracoSwordMaster, and the "c:" face was pulled from the catalog.[33]
Contemporary history (2012–present)
The co-founder of Roblox, Erik Cassel, died on the morning of 11 February 2013 after a three-year battle with cancer at his home located in Silicon Valley, California.[34]
The safe chat feature was removed and was replaced by a system based on a whitelist for users under 13 years old and on a blacklist for other users. This new system allows users under the age of 13 to create content on the website, which they were not able to do previously. Any words that are not pre-approved will be replaced with a series of pound signs (#). This has been subject to criticism, because words not deemed inappropriate can be censored.
The lighting system was improved with the addition of dynamic lights implemented in a voxel-based fashion.[35][36] Dynamic lights were later added to the mobile version of Roblox.[37][38] On 2 October 2013, animations made a debut in Roblox, with an overhaul of the default Roblox character animations along with user made animations allowed.
In December 2013, an animation plugin was made available to be used. Users also became able to insert basic humanoids through the interface of the studio.[39]
Around August 2013, the minimum price for catalog items increased from 1 ticket or 1 Robux to 300 tickets and 25 Robux for shirts or pants and 120 tickets and 10 robux for T-shirts.[40] This was met by criticism from the community and it was reduced to 100 tickets and 10 Robux for shirts and pants and 20 tickets and 2 robux for T-shirts.[41]
On 1 October 2013, Roblox released a feature called Developer's Exchange. The feature allows users to exchange their Robux into USD. The requirements to use the program are a minimum threshold of 100,000 Robux, Outrageous Builders Club, and a valid Paypal account. The current trade ratio is 500 to 1.[42]
On 11 October 2013, body packages became available to all members of Roblox, including those who did not have a premium membership.[43]
On 22 October 2013, players became able to change their usernames to an unused one for 1000 Robux. The feature also allows the player's original name to be saved in case a user wishes to change back.[44] On 14 October 2014, one badge was retired and all other badges were redesigned.
On 31 May 2015, a feature named Smooth Terrain was added, increasing the graphical fidelity and changing the physics engine from a blocky style to a smoother, more photorealistic, style[45]
In Summer 2015, all combat-related badges were discontinued.[46]
On August 4, 2015, Roblox discontinued purchases for lifetime and 6 months Builders Club, Turbo Builders Club, and Outrageous Builders Club.[47]
On October 15, 2015, there was a new chat system that replaced the old one. Also fixed many issues with the old chat and party systems.[48]
On November 10, 2015 Roblox announced a new Physics Material Properties that allows blocks to be pushed around easier, another object being pushed more easier, and blocks being pushed depending on the terrain type.[49] As of February 10, 2016, this was effective and is default for all games, but it can be switched to the older physics standard.
On November 24, 2015, Roblox introduced a new shadows for Humanoids that made players' shadow look realistic.[50]
In February 2016, Roblox allows users to create usernames with underscores again.[51]
On 12 March 2016, Roblox announced on their blog a new R15 avatar was in the works. This would be a new body part package that would have 15 body parts instead of the regular package's 6. After R15 is released, players can still choose to use R6 if they do not like the new package.[52]
On March 15, 2016, Roblox announced that the currency called "Tickets" is planned to be removed after 30 days of the announcement because ROBLOX deemed the said currency useless. During the 30 days, Roblox released hats that can only be bought with Tickets as exclusive, commemorative items. Additionally, the Trade Currency system will be removed.[53]
Also, on March 15, 2016, Roblox announced they will lower the ROBUX price floors to 5 ROBUX minimum as in means of currency. They will also allow users to upload their hats, gear, and more, similar to how players can do Models.[54]
On April 14, 2016, the Tickets currency was removed from Roblox's internal payment system, and was removed from all subdomains of the website.
Gameplay
Players can customize their virtual characters with hundreds of different hats, head shapes, body shapes, clothing, and gear. Players may create their own articles of clothing, which allows for a more personalized in-game experience. However, selling player-created articles of clothing and collectible items require Builders Club, but non-premium players may still create T-shirts, which are decals attached to the front of a player's torso.
Social interaction
Players can add other people they meet in the game to their friends list. Since 2011, this can be done inside a game.[55][56] On 4 February 2015, a new update to replace the Friends and Best Friends system, named Friends and Followers,[57] was introduced. This allows more personal game play if wanted. This update also allows 200 Friends and infinite Followers. Players also have the option join community groups.[58] After joining, players can then advertise their group,[59] participate in group relations,[60] and set their primary group.[61] On the website and in game, users who are under 13 years old can only use specific words that are part of a whitelist maintained by the Roblox moderators. In contrast, users who are over 13 years old can use any word except words that are part of a blacklist.
ROBLOX Studio
ROBLOX Studio is the program users use to customize their places. It is a free program that comes with ROBLOX.[62]
Building
Players use ROBLOX Studio's built-in building system to construct places with bricks from varying colors and shapes. Players also are able to use user made plugins and tools to build. Players also have the ability to scroll through the ROBLOX Library and find free models and scripts. ROBLOX also created a "Official Model Maker" system where talented model makers are able to create and make their creations visible on the front page of the ROBLOX Library model section.[63]
Programming
Players can use the programming language Lua to dynamically change the environment of the game.[64] Also, plugins can be developed with Lua to be used in Roblox Studio.[65] The exact version of Lua that is used in ROBLOX Studio is Lua 5.1. It is sometimes however, referred to as ROBLOX Lua.
Website
The Login page for Roblox.com as of November 2016. | |
Type of site | Online videogame platform |
---|---|
Available in | English |
Owner | ROBLOX Corporation |
Slogan(s) | Think. Build. Create. It's Free; Powering Imagination |
Website | http://www.roblox.com/ |
Alexa rank | 321 (November 2016)[66] |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Optional but required for most features |
Launched | January 30, 2004 |
The ROBLOX.com website is the home of Roblox. It contains most of the features that Roblox has, including: the catalog, groups, forums, trades, the blog, and more. The only feature the website does not have is the game client. However, to access the games for the client, one must use the website.
ROBLOX Library
A page similar to the catalog that displays models, decals, plugins, and audios free to the community. This page was originally in the catalog, but was later moved to the Develop page.[63]
Economy and currency
Roblox currently has just one virtual currency: Robux. Robux was originally released alongside with another currency called Tickets until on March 15, 2016, when ROBLOX announced that the currency called "Tickets" was planned to be removed after 30 days of the announcement and the Trade Currency system would also be removed.[53] They can be converted from one to the other with the currency exchange.[67][68] Tickets were earned for a variety of activities, such as when places are visited, as a daily login bonus, or for item sales including clothing. The announcement of their removal sparked a major campaign against it, both on Roblox forums and social media. In-game items can be sold for either a set price in currently just Robux, it formerly used Tickets as another currency option before its removal. Robux is earned daily by premium members in varying amounts depending on the user's type of membership. Robux can also be earned through sale of virtual goods, such as clothing or developer products, or can be purchased directly with money.
DevEx
The developer exchange, widely known in the game as DevEx, is a feature that exchanges the game currency, Robux, to real cash. This option is only available to users that hold Outrageous Builders Club and at least 100,000 Robux. Users of the developer exchange can make from (100,000 Robux) to (20,000,000 Robux) in a month. The Current Robux to US Dollars ratio is 100,000:200.
Mobile gameplay
Roblox can be played on many Android devices, as well as the iPad 2, the iPhone 4, the iPod touch 5th generation or any successor to one of those Apple devices.[69][70][71] This is done with the Roblox application which can be obtained from the application store. The application allows purchasing items from the catalog that are not available for users not using the mobile application using the currency system of iTunes. The application can be used to view the user's inventory, friends, groups, and messages. It can also be used to purchase upgrades (premium memberships or Robux) with the currency system provided by iTunes and Google Play.
During the alpha period, only selected places such as Crossroads, Paintball!, ROBLOX Snowmobiling, Dodgeball!, etc. could be played from the application.[69] The application is now stable and allows any place to be played. However, many places are not adapted to be played on the mobiles, which can result in games being too slow or some games being impossible to play because of the controls that are not available on mobile. Additionally, some games are simply unable to load due to size and complexity, for example the popular and leading tactical shooter
Holiday traditions
During holidays like Easter, Halloween, or Christmas, Roblox will adapt the website to resemble the season. For example, during Halloween, the website theme will be black, orange, and purple, with a pumpkin representing the "o" in Roblox. During Easter, Roblox sets up a game where players can search the map for "eggs" to collect and earn as hats for their character. On Halloween and Christmas, Roblox creates "gifts" that the players can earn or buy. After the gifts are no longer obtainable, they will open after a set period and give players a specific unique item. Unlike other holiday traditions, the 2015 egg hunt had featured games made by developers, other than a Roblox map done the years before though it returned to a privately hired developer creating a game just intended for the 2016 egg hunt. Many of the recent traditions have been sponsored by movies and TV shows, which has been subject to severe criticism from the game's community.
Moderation
As Roblox moderators work to maintain a safe environment for children, many aspects of the site are moderated, such as the game's forum and chat logs.[72][73] If a player violates the conditions of use, a moderation action may be taken on the account, which may be terminated or prevented from using the website for a determined period. Less severe, or first time offences may attract a warning which requires the player to reconfirm their acceptance to Roblox rules upon their next log in. When a player's account is permanently deactivated, other users are no longer able to view the user's profile, statistics, or inventory (the profile will be replaced by the generic message "The item you requested does not exist"), though they can still play games created by the player if accessed through the search function recently played games or favourites tab. Inappropriate usernames are changed to "[ Content Deleted ]" with the user's ID number afterwards and the usual removal of the ability to view the profile; similarly, the name of content also deemed inappropriate is also changed to "[ Content Deleted ]".[73]
Users who act in these violations range from minor to major.
Type | Period |
---|---|
Reminder | N/A |
Warning | N/A |
Ban | 1 day |
Ban | 3 days |
Ban | 7 days |
Ban | 14 days |
Termination [account deleted, still able to create new accounts on computer] | Permanent |
"Poison" Ban [account deleted, will disable ability to make accounts on that computer] | Permanent |
IP ban | 1–2 weeks |
Unauthorized credentials ban (Permanent IP ban) | Permanent |
An unauthorized credentials ban permanently removes the ability to access the site.
An IP ban removes the ability to access the site. However, IP bans are temporary.
Poison bans prevent the user from creating new accounts on the IP address permanently.
Termination bans delete the account the action is performed on, but still allows accounts to be created from the computer/IP. Theoretically, this would only serve to inconvenience offenders, as they would be able to create a new account immediately.
Catalog
A place where users can buy virtual items and clothing for their character. This is also a place where users can view user-created clothing. This is a major part of Roblox and one of the main uses of in-game currency. Hats, Shirts, T-shirts, Pants and Gear are among the categories of items. Once an item is purchased, it is available in the player's inventory, and wearable items also appear on the "Avatar" page, where the user can place them on their character.
Blog
The Roblox Blog is where ROBLOX posts official information and press releases. This is usually where new updates, events and major changes are announced. Players are not able to post to these blogs, but they are able to post comments on existing blog posts by ROBLOX. Any comment posted on the blog is moderated by ROBLOX moderators.
Forums
The popular ROBLOX Forums are a big part of the site where ROBLOX users can discuss many different things, related to ROBLOX or not.[74] They have been around since 2004, in fact, and one of the eggs for a yearly Egg Hunt event of ROBLOX could be obtained by going to the forums and clicking on a banner that would randomly appear, telling the user they could obtain the egg by clicking on said banner. Many other notable events and such have taken place on the forums as well.
Despite the popularity of social media, players continue to frequent these forums and serve as a place for players to post rules and information about their games, learn about Roblox and have general conversations. Players under thirteen can view and create posts, allowing them to communicate with other users, whereas their communication is limited to whitelist words in game.
Builders Club
Roblox is free to play, although members may purchase monthly memberships to enhance their game experience. One membership option, Builders Club, grants players multiple amenities, including a daily virtual currency stipend of 15 Robux per day. Other membership options include Turbo Builders Club and Outrageous Builders Club, with each option getting more expensive than the last. Depending on the tier of Builders Club a player buys, the player can unlock more places to build in, more money to spend, more groups to join, and the ability to create and sell clothing. Recently, ROBLOX has given non-upgraded users a severe disadvantage which has been subject to criticism. In August 2015, ROBLOX discontinues 6 month and lifetime Builders Club, Turbo Builders Club, and Outrageous Builders Club.[47]
Relief funds
In 2010, Roblox published two hats in the virtual catalog that players could purchase to fund for earthquake relief for the Haiti earthquake. They were named the "Blue Hat for Haiti", and the "Red Hat for Haiti". For every player who bought the blue hat, Roblox had donated 10 cents to the Red Cross Relief Fund to help Haiti recover.[75] For every player who bought the Red Hat, Roblox had donated 65 cents to the Red Cross[76] Roblox donated at least $5479 to the Red Cross Relief Fund because of this, after a week of the hats being on sale.[77] In 2011, Roblox also published two hats that players could purchase to raise money for Japan after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. The Rising Sun Cap and the Japanese Baseball Cap were put into the catalog for players to buy. For every Rising Sun Cap that players bought, Roblox had donated $1.00 to the Red Cross. For every Japanese Baseball Cap that players bought, Roblox had donated 10 cents to the Red Cross.[78][79][80] After only two days of the hats being on sale, $10,445.80 was raised, from 23935 hats being sold.[78][79][80]
In 2013, Roblox published a hat after the death of their co-founder, Erik Cassel. Every time the hat was bought, Roblox had donated money toward cancer research, which was the cause of Cassel's death.[81]
Again in 2013, Roblox published two hats after Typhoon Haiyan. For every hat that a player bought, Roblox had either donated 10 cents or 65 cents depending on the hat.[82] A total of $3,330.30 was raised from players buying the hats.
In Summer of 2014, Roblox released a gear of which it represented a bucket of ice cold water during the Ice Bucket Challenge trend to spread awareness of ALS.[83] For each time a player bought the gear, Roblox donated to ALS research garnering up to about $6,200 at the end.[84]
Conventions
Roblox Rally 2011
The 2011 convention was held at the Exploratorium in San Francisco, California on 1 August 2011.[85] At the time, the convention was named the Roblox Rally. Attendants received a free poster, a T-shirt, water bottle, and their own lanyard. Each player who attended also received a free lunch of their choice.
Roblox Game Conference 2012
In 2012, the convention was held at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, California, on 14 July 2012.[86] The convention was again renamed, this time as the Roblox Game Conference. Attendees each received a poster.[87]
Bloxcon 2013
For the first time in its history, the Roblox convention was held outside of its home state. There were three different conventions, each hosted on a separate date.
- The first one was held on 13 July 2013, at the Museum of Science and Industry, in Chicago, Illinois.[88]
- The second Bloxcon was held on 27 July 2013, at the Royal Air Force Museum in London, England, just a mere two weeks after the first one.[89]
- The third Bloxcon was held at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York City, New York on 10 August 2013.[90]
- The final Bloxcon was announced in June. The final convention was the Virtual Bloxcon and was held on 21 September 2013.[91]
2013 Roblox Film Festival
There was a Roblox Film Festival in 2013 which had been previously announced on the blog and which started in late April and ended at midnight on 3 June 2013. Players were allowed to choose from a variety of categories, some applying to the Bloxcon events and create a short video of varying time lengths. For example, a user might enter a video showing what London is like. The winning video picked from each category relating to a Bloxcon was shown at the actual event. The prize is an award under the moniker "BLOXY", mocking the Oscars.[92]
2014 Tour
On 8 March 2014, Roblox announced that they had partnered with the Maker Faire organization to hold their conventions in the form of a tour. Beginning in April, Roblox booths would be staffed by the players in their specified city's Maker Faire. A minimum of eight people are needed to run a booth, and if twenty five people commit to staffing the booth, a Roblox staff member will attend the event. The tour runs through the end of 2014.[93]
Virtual Bloxcon 2014
Bloxcon 2014 started on 21 June. Unlike Bloxcon 2013, the entire convention was held online. It was being livestreamed through twitch.tv and was full of challenges, question and answer sessions, hall of fame inductions, giveaways and new content in the catalog and game.[94][95] In the end, over 125,000 people tuned in to watch Bloxcon 2014. Throughout the day, three "Mysterious ROBLOX Virtual BLOXcon Gifts" were being sold. They could only be gained for a limited time and when they were opened, the users who obtained those gifts got: Classy ROBLOX Bowtie (from the first gift), ROBLOX R Bowler (from the second gift), and 2104 Space Vision Glasses (named because at the beginning of the stream, the stream had it say 2104 instead of 2014; from gift three). Users could also get the Virtual BLOXcon Top Hat 2014, earned by buying Robux or Builders Club that day.
That 22 June, at midnight (PST), new items were released on the catalog late at night. It was called the "Midnight Sale" and items such as limited faces, hats, and a new variant of a well known collectible item within the game, the dominus.
Roblox Developers Conference
Roblox Developer Conference is a conference where ROBLOX developers and administrators for a showcase and to share ideas. In 2016, the conference was held in the Bay Area of California, close to Roblox headquarters. Attendees are also able to test new features before they are released. The event was streamed on the ROBLOX Twitch channel.[96]
Twitch.tv
ROBLOX staff and developers host a Twitch.tv broadcast every week. They usually play user-created ROBLOX games. Additionally, they sometimes reveal giveaway codes for virtual items (hats, gears, etc.) on special occasions.
Monthly Bloxcasts
On 23 November 2013, it was announced on the blog that beginning 7 December 2013, a livestream titled Bloxcast would take place every month lasting about one hour and a half. The Bloxcasts will feature live gameplay from the staff, Q&A sessions, and announcements involving the game and updates.[97]
October 2014 incident
On 24 October 2014, three Roblox employees were fired after an incident that occurred at the end of the 24-hour Twitch.tv live stream. They thought the live stream had finished, however it was still recording the audio which thousands of children were listening to. For over two minutes, the three administrators started chatting about the website in a very negative way. They were heard swearing numerous times throughout the two minutes and disrespecting the site and other players. After 20 minutes, the administrators quickly pulled down the live stream.[98]
References
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- ↑ McCaffrey, Ryan (24 September 2015). "Roblox Helps You Make Your Own Xbox One Games". IGN. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ↑ "ROBLOX Enters the VR Space with Launch on Oculus Rift".
- ↑ "goblox.com whois lookup - who.is". who.is. Retrieved 2016-10-08.
- ↑ Needleman, Rafe (14 June 2011). "Roblox: A virtual world of Lego-like blocks". CNET. Retrieved 29 February 2012.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (2 August 2007). "Builders Club is Coming…". Roblox Corporation.
- ↑ "Roblox Info on BusinessWeek". BusinessWeek. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
- ↑ Herndon, Becky Lee (14 September 2009). "Interview with Telamon". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (8 May 2007). "More Character Visuals". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 22 March 2010.
- ↑ Baszucki, David (22 December 2007). "ROBLOX Badges". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (1 January 2007). "2006 in Review". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (12 January 2007). "Blox. James Blox.". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
- ↑ Cassel, Erik (31 January 2007). ""Report Abuse!!!"". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (27 March 2007). "A New Day Dawns…". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (16 August 2007). "Builders Club is Here!". Roblox Corporation.
- ↑ Shedletsky, John (14 May 2010). "Do You Need Any Body?". Roblox Corporation.
- ↑ Baszucki, David (23 February 2012). "5.4 Million Games Created in 2011". Roblox Corporation.
- ↑ Venugopal, Sairam (16 August 2013). "Purchase and Trade Multiple Copies of Limited Items Today". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ "Hack Week: The Series!". Roblox Corporation. 13 January 2012. Archived from the original on 8 March 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ↑ Chandrasekaran, Deepak (1 August 2012). "Hack Week: Implementing Rotatable GUIs". Roblox Corporation. Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ↑ Lal, Navin (30 July 2012). "Hack Week: Exploring a Crafting System in ROBLOX". Roblox Corporation. Archived from the original on 8 March 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ↑ Lal, Navin (13 January 2012). "The Big Bang at ROBLOX: Universe Creation". Roblox Corporation. Archived from the original on 8 March 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ↑ Haak, Andrew (18 December 2013). "Game Universes and the Quest for Massive Scale". Roblox Corporation. Archived from the original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
- ↑ Teel, Toby (24 August 2012). "ROBLOX's Mobile Site, m.roblox.com, Now Live for Testing". Roblox Corporation. Archived from the original on 8 March 2013. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
- ↑ Haak, Andrew (5 June 2012). "The Water Is Running in ROBLOX". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ Bromley, Dylan (11 December 2012). "ROBLOX Mobile Is Out of Beta: Download and Play Today!". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 14 December 2012.
- ↑ Bryan, Karen (26 December 2012). "MMO Family: Roblox CEO David Baszucki talks mobile app, plans for the future". Massively.
- ↑ Grubb, Jeffrey (12 December 2012). "Roblox goes mobile in time for the holidays". VentureBeat.
- ↑ Clark, Matt (12 December 2012). "ROBLOX Brings Millions of User Created Games to iOS". Mac|Life.
- ↑ Konrad, Alex (12 December 2012). "The World's Most Popular Kids Site Takes Its Games Mobile". Forbes.
- ↑ Fackler, Alan (8 December 2012). "iPad Activity We Look at What Users Traded to get iPads". Roblox Corporation.
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in Authors list (help) - ↑ Brown, Tim (30 July 2013). "Social Feature Bonanza!". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
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- ↑ Knapp, Alex (30 January 2012). "Roblox Lets Kids Build Their Own Worlds Online". Forbes. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
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- ↑ Baszucki, David (15 January 2010). "Description of Blue Hat for Haiti On Roblox.". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
- ↑ Baszucki, David (15 January 2010). "Description of Red Hat for Haiti On Roblox.". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
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- ↑ Baszucki, David (15 February 2013). "Erik Cassel Apparel: Proceeds go to Cancer Research". Roblox Corporation. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ Justus, Brad (18 November 2013). "$3,330.30 Raised for Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda Relief". ROBLOX Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
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- ↑ "ROBLOX is bringing BLOXcon to London on 27 July, 2013!". Roblox Blog. ROBLOX Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
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- ↑ "ROBLOX is hosting a Virtual BLOXcon for all on September 21st, 2013!". Roblox Blog. ROBLOX Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
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- ↑ https://www.twitch.tv/roblox/v/82282466
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