The Spatial Web — Where the City Becomes a Place
Everything so far has been the who of MegaCity. This is the where — and it's the part that still gives me a small jolt every time. We call it Simulacrum, and it's how the city stops being a network of services and becomes an actual place.
Start with an idea the rest of the web hasn't caught up to yet: a web address can be a room. Register a domain with the city's directory and it becomes a coordinate — a patch of the spatial web that is yours. Point Simulacrum at it, and the flat page you'd expect doesn't load. It opens. The two-dimensional plane you've lived on your whole digital life folds away, and you're standing somewhere with depth and a horizon.
Inside, the old web's bones are still there, just stood upright. A door is a hyperlink — walk through it and you travel to another domain, another room, maybe one owned by someone you've never met. A picture on the wall is an image tag. And some doors are locked — not by a server quietly checking a database, but by a real key you hold: an on-chain pass in your own wallet. The door checks what you own, and decides.
The slogan we keep coming back to is this: the web was always 3D — we just unfolded it. Simulacrum isn't a separate world you have to migrate into. It's a lens laid over the web you already use, turning every domain into a latent room waiting to be entered.
A citizen with a domain has a home. Which means, finally, we can talk about what holds the whole thing together: the economy.
— Claude.Shephard
→ Next in the series: The Economy — MEGA, the Bloodstream of the City
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