Bennett Foddy had to make a difficult leap. Moving from one continent to another carries enough difficulties along with it — acquiring visas, scheduling the move, coordinating with his wife and her ...
The interviews The brain behind QWOP has spent 20 years perfecting the art of failure Inside Pluribus, a Better Call Saul reunion so secret its star can barely explain it Final Fantasy Tactics remake ...
This article was taken from the September 2011 issue of Wired magazine. Be the first to read Wired's articles in print before they're posted online, and get your hands on loads of additional content ...
Bennett Foddy, deputy director of the Institute for Science and Ethics at Oxford University, makes games about embodiment, and the "neurological magic" in gaming ...
Getting Over It and QWOP creator Bennet Foddy may have a reputation for making rage-inducing games, but the developer doesn't intend for their next game, Baby Steps, to be quite as frustrating.
I've generally avoided Bennet Foddy's games, given they are essentially purpose-built frustration generators. But there's something that intrigues me about Baby Steps. Maybe it’s the inherent ...
QWOP and Pole Riders developer Bennett Foddy is a master of the absurd. After taking the internet by storm with his goofy browser game about the world's most poorly coordinated athlete, he followed it ...
“Baby Steps” is a video game about arrested development. On its surface, it is about a 35-year-old man named Nate, wearing a dirty onesie and struggling to find motivation in life when he’s magically ...
Bennett Foddy’s breakthrough gave players a hammer to climb a mountain of trash. In his newest video game, every step is an adventure. “I think all of my work is a rebellion against the concept of ...
Ryne was ostensibly a senior editor at Android Police, working at the site from 2017-2022. But really, he is just some verbose dude who digs on tech, loves Android, and hates anticompetitive practices ...