Virtual Tour - Encarta
Modern games are seamless. Encarta made you feel the data traveling. That friction is what we remember. Encarta killed the virtual tour around 2003. By then, the web had Wikipedia (free) and faster broadband made QuickTime VR obsolete. Microsoft pulled the plug on Encarta entirely in 2009.
Let’s step back into the polygon. Before Google Street View, before VR headsets, there was QuickTime VR . Encarta licensed this tech to let you “walk” through historical locations. You didn’t control a character with a joystick. Instead, you clicked hotspots on a grainy, 360-degree panoramic photo. encarta virtual tour
It was humble. It was clunky. But it treated you like an explorer, not a consumer. There were no achievements. No ads. No microtransactions. Just a bear in a foyer and a door that might take eight seconds to open. Want to feel the chug? Search YouTube for “Encarta Virtual Manor Walkthrough.” Put on headphones. Wait for the dissolve. And when you finally step into the drawing room, ask yourself: Who turned down the bed in the master suite? Modern games are seamless