Last October, a Highrise creator named Maya wanted to host a Halloween event for her community. She had a vision: a sprawling haunted mansion with hidden rooms, flickering lights, and a graveyard entrance. What she didn't have was 3D modeling experience.
From description to world
Maya opened Rosie and typed:
"A huge Victorian haunted mansion. Dark purple and black. Cobwebs everywhere. A graveyard out front with crooked tombstones. Inside, a grand staircase that splits into two wings. Hidden rooms behind bookcases."
Twelve minutes later, she had a first draft. She tweaked the lighting, moved some furniture around, added a secret passage behind the fireplace, and published.
The event
Maya promoted the event in her community Discord. She expected maybe 50 people.
500 showed up.
Players explored the mansion, discovered the hidden rooms, and spent hours hanging out in the graveyard. It became the most-attended event in her community's history.
Why this matters
Before Rosie, building a world like this would have required either professional 3D skills or weeks of manual placement using Highrise's basic builder tools. Maya did it in an afternoon.
This is what we mean when we say AI removes barriers to creativity. Maya's vision didn't change — she always wanted to build a haunted mansion. What changed was that the tools finally kept up with her imagination.
The bigger picture
Maya's story isn't unique. Every day, thousands of creators use Rosie to build worlds they couldn't have built before. Some are elaborate themed environments. Some are simple hangout rooms. All of them represent someone's creative vision made real.
That's the kind of impact we're building for at Pocket Labs.