With the recent deployment of global experimental networking facilities, dozens of computer networks with large numbers of computers have become available for scientific studies. Multiple Replications in Parallel (MRIP) is a distributed scenario of sequential quantitative stochastic simulation which offers significant speedup of simulation if it is executed on multiple computers of a local area network. We report results of running MRIP simulations on PlanetLab, a global overlay network which can currently access more than a thousand computers in forty different countries round the globe. Our simulations were run using Akaroa2, a universal controller of quantitative discrete event simulation designed for automatic launching of MRIP-based experiments. Our experimental results provide strong evidence that global experimental networks, such as PlanetLab, can efficiently be used for quantitative simulation, without compromising speed and efficiency.