For two days I surveyed the estate sims for bots and campers. I chose randomly, by map location. On the second day of surveying I collected data during hours I did not collect on the previous, so this data fairly uniformly covers 24 hours, including both high and low concurrency times. The raw data has timestamps, so I could break it into low and high concurrency, but I haven't done that. Once again, I'd expect the low-concurrency percentage to be higher than the number I'm reporting and the high-concurrency percentage to be lower. The results are as follows, detailed under the cut: 524 sims 953 avatars, 481 of them bots and campers 50% bots and campers, overall For sims with 5 or fewer avatars there was an average of 13% bots and campers (42 bots out of 325 avatars). For sims with more than five avatars there was an average of 70% (439 bots out of 628 avatars). The overall percentage of bots was 50%. Some observations:
While visiting it really felt like there was going to be far fewer bots. I thought I'd be able to report less than 40%, but the large bot farms just dominate the numbers. Even if you remove the largest of them (79) from this data set, the overall percentage is still 46%. And the 79-bot farm isn't even the largest I found. One of the 50-bot farms in this survey was adjacent to a 94-bot farm and a 98-bot farm (those weren't included in this survey).
All but two of the twenty five avatars in the Ocean Waves sim were on a platform at 3600m, over a store that sells prefabs. Bots. There are no walls or guard rail. I couldn't resist. Sent one over the edge. You know...for science.
Seven people in the Niseko4 sim were in voice chat at about 4pm SLT. And also playing with some explosives. These were Real Live People.
Paid a visit to the French Quarter sim this evening at about 3:30pm SLT. It's a shame to have to call this one Bots and Campers because I actually found three live people here (one standing outside a club he said he owned and two in a store), but there were more bots than people here. Four of them, in a box over a store.