Spectre Complex AKA Sceptre Complex Ω
Proto-digital mall developed by Knight Ridder and designed exclusively for use on the second generation of AT&T's Sceptre console. Sceptre Complex, as it was initially known, followed on the heels of the Viewtron system, layering skeletons of the previous
videotex coding structure with updated (and often malformed) graphic skins to create the illusion of three dimensional space. This process, known as ray casting or billboarding [1], was inspired by the original iteration of DOOM, a hyper-violent gaming platform released by id in 1993. The mall was navigable by user-generated conversable avatars - a functionality whose development reportedly swallowed over 80% of the project's overall budget. As with Viewtron, the project was by any metric a failure, in part due to the commercial ineptitude of many of the mall's corporate tenets, a floundering cadre of enterprises including, but not limited to,
Radioshack, Bed, Bath, and Beyond, and
Abercrombie & Fitch. Additionally, the mall featured what it referred to as "Ad Zones" - lightly interactive and often buggy graphic banners geared towards blatant promotion. Ad Zones were presented on a revolving basis and focused mainly on debut or limited time products, including McDonald's Shrimp McBites™, Diet 'Zona Honey Ginseng tea, Abercrombie's overpriced luxury perfume Cerulean Mist, and the IROC Z sports car [2].
By the time of Knight Ridder's dissolution in the late 1990's, the Spectre Complex had for all intents and purposes been abdicated. However, the platform's functionality [3] proved attractive to hackers, as did Videotex's veritable sieve of a security system. The mall was subsequently squatted, experiencing a "pink twilight" of unofficial and unsanctioned use. This transition was signified by the neologistic respelling of the mall's forename as "Sceptre" by its new inhabitants.
href#[Knight Ridder] :: Spectre Complex.
href#[Hyperbolic Time Chamber] :: Pink Twilight.