Tag Archives: profile

Dr. Mike Reddy

Mikereddy
 
Name and Twitter handle?
Dr. Mike Reddy FRSA / @DoctorMikeReddy
 
Birth place
I was born on the living room carpet in a small semi-detached house in Heswall on the Wirral in the UK
 
Currently residing where in the world?
Cwmaman, in South Wales – where the Stereophonics band hail from.
 
Favourite video game of all time?
Lunar Lander (Arcade)
 
What was the last game you enjoyed and why?
Hundreds (iPhone), frustratingly hard and a cruel mistress
 
Describe any of the bullying you experienced.
Where to start? I was massively tall for my age, but “different” (being on the Autistic spectrum) and completely lacking in social skills. Abuse ranged from sexual assault, physical battering and mental torture. I was an easy target, being afraid most of the time, and feeling broken; so it was my fault, right? Sadly, I came from a family where my father was more brutal than some of the kids, but part of that was his own inability to handle anger from his own stressful life. This is something I have to deal with myself now. One of the negatives of being bullied is that it echoes forever.
 
When did you manage the bullying?
It took a long time to truly get over it, and my wife (a trainee psychotherapist) still says I carry a lot of anger, but recognition that things were done to me that I did not deserve was the first step. It was an unhappy childhood, but check this out as a representation of how I see what could otherwise be a dark period from my childhood: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jFhgupR565Q
 
What effect do you think it had on you?
The positive part is the ability to stick to my guns when I know I’m right, even if winning is impossible. I still have to “strangle the serpent” as the default is to take criticism as an attack, which means I respond badly sometimes. Instinctively, I learned as a child to work out who was to blame, I guess to reassure myself it wasn’t me, but that inevitably leads to confrontational thinking, which can itself be a problem.
 
What do you do now?
I’ve learned that Fear is no longer an effective weapon. When people try to use it, which is more often than people may think (bullying happens in the work place and for adults too!), I can see it coming. I’m very highly principled as a result. I try (note “try”) to direct the anger into passion.
 
How is your life better now?
Hell, I get paid £50k a year to play and make games, construct robots and design toys. Eat that bully!
 
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
Not at the time. It was a long dark tunnel of sadness. But that just drove me to work harder, and released a creative side (as escape?) that has served me well in my adult life.
 
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
The bad as well as the good will forge who you will become as an adult. I’m strangely tied to the bullying I suffered, as it too became a part of who I am, even though I would rather it hadn’t happened and wouldn’t wish the same experience on anyone. The key is to recognise that you can choose how it affects you. Bullies were most often bullied themselves. They made the wrong choice. You don’t have to. Be creative. Tell your own story. In a video game, or a board game, or a piece of art or a poem. Most of all, talk to others about how bullying makes you feel. It’s hard to hate someone when you know their story. Oh, and if you ever see David Seaton, tell him I do regret smashing that chair on him, but he was still a dick. And Nicholas Such, hope your smashed nose grew back straight, as my broken knuckle never did. Fighting, you see, doesn’t really work.

Charlie Nash

Charlienash

 

 

Name and Twitter handle?

Charlie Nash / @MrNashington

 

Where were you born?

Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.

 

Which part of the world do you live in nowadays?

England, United Kingdom.

 

What’s your favourite video game of all time?

Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas.

 

What was the last video game you enjoyed?

The Journey Down: Chapter One.

 

Can you describe some of the bullying you experienced?

I used to get bullied for being quite nerdy and not being as athletically fit and ‘strong’ as everyone else. I really disliked Physical Education (PE) and would prefer to do more creative things such as draw and think of game ideas which led to lots of name calling etc.

 

When did you manage the bullying?

Around Year 9 I stopped getting bullied as much, as people started liking me because I was funny and a little bit odd, hehe. Then by the start of Year 10 I had developed a good bunch of friends who were also nerdy like myself, and also a few friends that were not nerdy who stood up for me.

 

What effect do you think bullying had on you?

It definitely made me tougher. But I also think it was all for the best as the bullying is what led me to meet some of my good friends today.

 

What do you do now?

I am currently still in full time education, whilst developing games and doing a little bit of Video Game journalism in whatever time I have.

 

How is your life better now?

As I am still rather young (Or a “Pre-beard Indie” as Mike Bithell calls me) these experiences were not long ago (Which is not a bad thing,

as I’m sure the people reading this will find my experiences easy to relate to). Anyway, since I have been in the games industry it has

boosted my confidence massively by having to talk to others in the industry face-to-face at events such as Eurogamer Expo, which is a great

skill/trait to possess as it boosts your morale and makes it much easy to talk to people confidently. And I have met a bunch of cool people

as well such as Mike Bithell, Simon Roth, and Peter Molyneux.

 

Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?

I still have a long life ahead of me, but so far my life has been incredibly awesome and lots better than I thought it would be!

 

What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?

I would say that there isn’t a better option to choose than Video Games, or any hobby really! When you have something that you are really

into, it creates something to look forward to when you are at school. Then when you are really into video games and are desperate to use your own ideas and create your own stuff, learn a programming language so that you can put all your ideas to practise!

 

 

cocos2d::CCObject *

Rob Fearon

Robfearon

Name and Twitter handle:
Rob Fearon / @retroremakes
 
What do you do now?
I’m a full time carer who makes videogames.  In that order. Sometimes I’m helping someone else live their life to the fullest, other times I’m flashing lights in people’s faces whilst sitting around in my underwear. Both of these things are good things, both of these things make me happy.
 
Birth place:
North West England

Currently residing where in the world?
England

Favourite video game of all time?
Space Giraffe

What was the last game you enjoyed and why?
Dishonored, a game which happily hands you the toys and let’s you muddle your own way through to the finale, but really, it’s a game about owning your mistakes and rolling with them. That’s when it’s at its best.

Describe any of the bullying you experienced.
I lived at the rough end of town at the wrong time for the town and the bullying there was constant. There were a couple of families where this stuff, it wasn’t just one lad gone awry, this was generational stuff. The same folks that bullied me, their parents bullied my parents and so it went before. Dad hit son hit whoever was passing and so it went on. One of the worst families for it lived at a house between mine and my best friends, they’d run out of the house when you passed it just to hurl abuse or to try and hit you.  It was so screwed up, the parents would join in. I still don’t know what to make of that.

Years later, when I was much older, they’d lurk outside pubs waiting for fights with strangers, sometimes carrying weapons, whatever it would take. Their younger brothers would be at home, earlier in the day or evening repeating the same behaviour they pulled. Weird and saddening way to live your life, really.

At school, I went to the “best” school in the area. Miles away from home, up the more luxurious end of town. And y’know, “we” weren’t supposed to go there, not those of us from our end of town so myself and the two people who didn’t live in the normal catchment zone copped it there too. We copped it for not coming from families with money, we copped it for often being better spoken than the bullies, we copped it just for looking like we had two brain cells to rub together, we just copped it – I could rationalise a million reasons why but really, we just existed and for some reason, that was bad enough. Every break time someone would try it on, either cornering one of us in the grounds or just walking past hurling abuse or randomly slapping someone, anything to make us feel more uncomfortable.

When did you manage the bullying?
At home that meant getting between my friends and my own house became a nightly chore of plotting routes, trying to plot safer routes. Do I go up past the flats, round the back of the shops and hope I can get through that way, all the time hoping they wouldn’t be at the shops? Do I go straight up the street and hope for the fastest route breaking into a run when I pass their house? Can I run fast enough tonight? Do I go down the avenue, up an alley, out the alley, across the road, into another alley, round the back and up again? How do I avoid making it look like this is the way I’m going to be going all the time because they would wait. They would be there. That’s just what they did.

At school, we grouped up. Safety in numbers. A disparate group of people who liked computer games, didn’t fit in with the rugby playing, football to your face not-like-us. Sometimes I’d sit and draw in the grounds, sitting somewhere fairly visible so if anything kicked off, I could just grab stuff and move on. I was a cheeky git, I’d answer back. Not smartly, bluntly. Sometimes if they cornered another lad, I’d walk up and tell them to shift it and move on. Sometimes I’d get a whack but at least the other lad could duck off. I was just something they couldn’t wrap their head round so I got it easier, not easy, it didn’t stop, just easier. Where easier is the difference between all the time, every break time and not all the time, every break time.

The school had no systems in place to deal with bullying and when the bullies were often “star pupils” who upped the prestige of the school, no interest in dealing with it either.

I managed the bullying, eventually, the day I left that school. When I walked out the door and I never had to speak to these people again, when I never had to face them again. I managed it. I managed it because it wasn’t happening anymore.

I managed the bullying at home by not being at home. I managed it by living elsewhere, by being elsewhere.

I still can’t see any other ways out. I didn’t really manage it, I endured it the whole time. And then one day, I wasn’t there for it to happen to and everything was better, I chose who I surrounded myself with and I surrounded myself with better people. Sometimes you can’t just make it stop but you can get through. And it’s knowing that there’s another side, knowing that it won’t happen forever, y’know?

What effect do you think it had on you?
It made me terribly unhappy for very long periods of time. Dealing with all this, it didn’t make me a better, stronger person. It didn’t break me, it didn’t make me. It was just this constant undercurrent of nastiness that I’d have to deal with, day in, day out. This constant hum of people trying to make me more miserable for no other reason than they decided to make me more miserable. It wasted my time, the time I spent plotting routes down the street, that was time I could have been doing something better. The time I spent dealing with abuse at school was time I could have spent doing something that made me happy instead. It’s time I should have been happier instead but someone wanted to take that from me. For a while, about 2 or 3 years, they did. 

I don’t even hate them for it, I just feel terribly sad for them. 

How is your life better now?
So I make videogames and people seem to like them. That’s great. It wasn’t quite what I’d planned, for some reason I once figured that being a rock star would be my best shot (OK, I was a teenager, I had plenty of reasons…) but turns out, it wasn’t really. And that’s OK. I think the videogames thing was probably for the best. I’ve met enough rock stars, I’ll stick with the flashing lights and underpants thing I have, not theirs.

I’m a carer, I don’t have the quietest of lives, it’s long hours, sometimes sleep is thin on the ground and it can be draining physically and financially but that’s OK too. Because I’m not the only person on the planet who deserves to be happy.

I have good friends out there in the real world, I’ve met a myriad of good and wonderful people through writing videogames too. I run one of the oldest indie related news sites on the net so I can cheer myself up whenever I choose by helping someone else get the word out about their work. That never fails. We have a small forum of people who’d pull their fingernails out if it meant it’d help someone else. I’m surrounded by good people on the internet, even my Twitter feed is full of the most wonderful people. I see what they do, every day, what they fight for, who they fight for and I’m happy to see that.

And I have a wonderful, wonderful family where every day, even when things have been hard (and they have been hard), every day there’s something to smile about.

I wake up, no matter what else is going on around me, I wake up safe. Always. There hasn’t been a day in the past 13 years where I haven’t woken up and had a laugh, where something hasn’t happened to cheer me up, to keep me pushing on. A few years back, I nearly shuffled off this planet due to illness and even then, with oxygen mask on, fighting to breathe, I smiled every day. We keep each other safe, we encourage each other to be what we can be, to be what we want to be. To be happy.

Anything else I’ve done, anything else I’ve achieved, it’s nothing compared to knowing you’re surrounded by people who want you to be happy. My life is immeasurably better for that and for five or so years in my teens, it seemed like the thing I could never have. Now I only have to think about the bullying when someone asks “Rob, were you ever bullied?” because everything else is OK.

I’m free.

Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
No. There were times during the bullying where I couldn’t see an end in sight. Where I didn’t think it’d ever end. Where I didn’t think I’d ever get through it, where I didn’t see how I could get through it. When it’s every day, everywhere, and it’s all I knew, I couldn’t see outside of it.

Turns out though, yeah, you can get through it and the other side is much nicer too.

What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
Make videogames. Go to your local library and ask them to stock a copy of this book. Or if you have ten pounds spare, buy a copy of the book. It’s the videogame equivalent of The Manual and that’s important to remember because The Manual is the best book on making videogames that isn’t about making videogames.

Or don’t. And make videogames anyway.

Just make videogames if that’s what you want to do because I want to play the videogames you make and I won’t be alone in that. Don’t let anybody tell you you can’t or shouldn’t make games. Of course you can and of course you should.

Find your voice. Make games. Be you.


What do you do now?
I’m a full time carer who makes videogames.  In that order. Sometimes I’m helping someone else live their life to the fullest, other times I’m flashing lights in people’s faces whilst sitting around in my underwear. Both of these things are good things, both of these things make me happy.

Mark Kilborn

Mkilborn

Name / Twitter handle:
Mark Kilborn / @markkilborn

What do you do now?
I work for Activision. I’m one of the Audio Directors for the Call of Duty franchise. I get to work on games that are heard by millions of people. I get paid to record weapons and vehicles, to make neat sounds, to work with musicians and voice actors. And I’m surrounded every day by people who are just as passionate about gaming as I am.

Birth place:
Santa Ana, CA

Where in the world are you now?
Madison, WI

What’s your favourite video game of all time?
Metal Gear Solid

What was the last game you enjoyed and why?
Papo & Yo. It dealt with subject matter so rarely touched by our industry. It’s refreshing to play games that deal with real world stories and problems, not just blowing things up.

Describe some of the bullying you experienced.
It manifested in various ways. Teasing due to my weight or being a “nerd” because I played video games (ironically even the so-called “cool” kids play them now). Occasionally there was a bit of physical intimidation. There were girls who pretended to like me, only to embarrass me when I reciprocated for the entertainment of their friends.

When did you manage the bullying?
Sometime around 8th to 10th grade, it’s been a while. The turning point was discovering that I was good at something. That allowed me to build confidence. By learning more about sound, learning an instrument and making music, I had something to value in myself. Bullies are largely effective because your self-worth is tied to the perceptions of others. When you take control of that and define your own self-worth, their taunts became far less effective. And when they’re ineffective, they get bored and move on.

What effect do you think bullying had on you?
It was a major turning point in my life. Had I not found that spark to build a fire of confidence, I can’t imagine where I’d be right now. I know it wouldn’t be good though.

How is your life better now?
It’s better in every way. I get paid to do what I love every day. I met a wonderful woman who also plays games, was a guitarist in a metal band, has tons of tattoos and a hilarious sense of humor. We have kids we love dearly. We collect video games and have almost 2,500 of them. I live in a nice house, drive a nice car… my life now is 100x better than it was in high school.

Some people look back on high school or college as the best years of their lives. For me, those years were just stressful periods on the way to a much happier life. The rest of my life will be the best years of my life.

Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
Not when I was in the thick of it. I hoped it would be this good, but I didn’t think it was realistic. Looking back, it all seems perfectly realistic. I put in a lot of effort and I ended up with a great reward for it.

What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
I won’t lie to you, getting into the games industry is difficult, but it is realistic. You just have to focus and work hard. Work towards it in some small way every single day. Use whatever talents you have as a source for your confidence, and don’t worry about what others think of you. You determine your self worth, you determine your future. While they’re bullying people and being popular and doing whatever it is that bullies do, you focus on building a better life for yourself.

School is nothing like the outside world. Out here, all that matters is your abilities and your results. So if you invest in yourself and become amazing at what you want to do, you will find success and live the life you want.

 

Stephen McGreal

StephenMcGreal
 
Name and Twitter handle?
Stephen McGreal. I don’t have a Twitter handle (but could get one if it would be useful to people?)
 
Birth place:
Cambridgeshire, UK
 
Where are you currently residing in the world?
Surrey, UK
 
What’s your favourite video game of all time?
There’s an old game called Chaos, that came out on the ZX Spectrum in 1983. It’s a turn-based strategy game about duelling wizards summoning creatures to attack each other, and it’s brilliant. It’s really old and it looks terrible by today’s standards, but it’s great fun. The guy who did it is working on a remake, which is pretty exciting.
 
What was the last game you enjoyed and why?
There are newer games that I liked, but the one that keeps me coming back is Minecraft. You can play it however you like, from a lone-wolf survival horror FPS to a massively multiplayer collaborative city-building game, and pretty much everything in between, and however you want to play it, you can just get lost in it. For months, sometimes…
 
Please describe very briefly any of the bullying you experienced.

I’ve been the perpetrator of bullying as well as the victim.
 
In primary school, I was the bully. I was socially awkward, clumsy (which made me frustrated), and smart (which made me bored), and had “stuff” going on in my home life. I didn’t feel like I had a lot of control over my life or my body. So I used to lash out at other kids, and at teachers. 
 
A teacher introduced me to programming in BBC BASIC. Having control over a thing without the mess of human interaction or the constraints of physical dexterity had a massively soothing effect on me, turned me into a nerd, and set me on the path that I’m still following to this day.
 
In secondary school, I was bullied, for being a nerd. I wouldn’t say that it was severe, but it was there, and it kind of soaked into every strand of my everyday life. Although on a few occasions there were kids who instigated fights, I had a reputation for being scrappy, and fearless about giving bigger kids as good as they got. I rarely started fights, always ended them, and was not challenged to rematches. The verbal abuse was reasonably constant though, from a handful of kids. I never found a way to make that stop.
 
The really pervasive bit was the sense of social ostracism from the other kids as a whole. I was a computer nerd, and as such was unworthy of friends (except the three other computer nerds, none of whom I particularly liked but we stuck together because we had nobody else). Once, when the school ran a mock election, I stood as a candidate and spoke in front of a room full of kids who thought I was a twat (which was tough, but, I thought at the time, character building). The candidate who came onstage after me eschewed his talk of his policies in favour of calling my sexuality into question. Four or five hundred kids laughed. It was only when it transpired that one of the “cool kids” was also kind of into computers that I had the beginnings of a social circle open up for me. By the time I got to college I was popular, and accepted, although crippled with paranoia and self-harm issues that took a few more years to get out of my system.

When did you manage the bullying?
Do you mean when did I experience it, or when did I overcome it? I experienced it as a perpetrator during primary school (between the ages of about 7 and 11), and as a victim throughout secondary school (aged 11 to 16). Even though my situation improved after I left school, and I wasn’t bullied (and didn’t bully anybody else), it took me until my twenties to really feel better. The difficulties you face in school can come from other sources as well as bullying – a difficult home life, a lack of confidence in social situations, self-doubt, paranoia. Being a kid and a teenager is tough, and anybody who says otherwise is lying, or has forgotten what it was like. As I went through my college and university years, I found friends who accepted me for who I am, I found more confidence in myself and better ways to cope with what the world threw at me, and slowly but surely, school just faded away.
 
What effect do you think it had on you?
I was an unhappy kid anyway, but the bullying didn’t help. It’s impossible for me to say now how much of how I felt came from the bullying and how much came from my own awkwardness at the time. But, you know, I went through phases of wearing black and cutting myself and writing really terrible poetry. I contemplated suicide. I felt paranoid and isolated and worthless. I thought that things would never get better.
 
What do you do now?
I program games :) I made console and handheld games for a few years (including some Harry Potter games and some Grand Theft Auto games – which your parents shouldn’t be letting you play, by the way), and then I decided that mobile and social games where what I really wanted to do. I like the smaller teams and projects, it gives me a really good feeling that I played a big part in each game that comes out. Tomorrow I’m starting a new job at a company making iPhone and iPad games, which I’m pretty excited about. Also, I found a soul-mate girlfriend a few years ago, and became a dad a few months ago, which I suppose is my real job now, regardless of what I do for a day job. It’s pretty exciting.
 
How is your life better now?
The biggest thing is that I can look back on that time when I thought things would never get any better, and know that they did. And although my life isn’t perfect now, I know that I can make sure that things will keep getting better. I’ve had great jobs, and continue to do so, and they help pay for a nice flat and cool stuff to fill it with and interesting hobbies. I’ve played in a bunch of bands, built robots and synthesisers, planned and performed my own massive fireworks displays, won prestigious prizes, made a thousand people laugh all at once, made games that millions of people have enjoyed, and met some of my childhood heroes… I’ve got a decent amount of friends, including some really good ones who I know would do anything for me (and they know I’d do the same for them). I’ve got a beautiful girlfriend and an awesome baby boy. I’ve got confidence. I know myself well, and although I’m not proud of every little thing about me, overall I know that I turned out pretty well. 
 
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
Nope, I had no idea. For a long time I thought that things were never going to get better, or that I’d be dead before I experienced anything good. But life, even at its darkest points is a fantastic adventure.
 
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
In school, it’s the kids who are introverted, smart, creative, or just different who the bullies consider to be easy targets. Out in the wider world, and particularly in careers like the games industry, those are the exact same people who can really thrive. Amongst the people who make games, being a “nerd” or a “geek” is a badge of honour rather than shame, and some – maybe most – of the most talented people I know were bullied in school and overcame it to go on to have fantastic lives and careers. We turn thoughts and ideas into fun that’s enjoyed by millions, we get to work with other people who know what bullying is like and work against it to be respectful and supportive. If you get into games, you’ll be in good company. And although life isn’t a competition, you’ll generally find that the people who make it their mission to be the most feared kids in the playground will find it a lot harder to find their place in the world than those who have a passion for something and want to see it through.
 

Charlotte ‘Chaz’ Conopo

Charlotte conopo

Name and Twitter handle?
 
Charlotte ‘Chaz’ Conopo / @BlueBerriMoon
 
Where were you born?

Northampton, UK

Which part of the world are you in now?
 
Birmingham, UK
 
What’s your favourite video game of all time?

Legend of Zelda Majora’s Mask- it’s that amazing I have the mask tattooed on my foot!
 
What was the last game you enjoyed and why?

Pokemon White 2- because it was (and very embarrassingly) the first Pokemon game I finished!
 
Can you describe some of the bullying you experienced?

The bullying was more mental than physical. It was happening in secondary school, when I was having to go through my parents divorcing in 2001. What made it worse was that people found out that my Dad was gay so I got a lot of names called because of him coming out. Being gay at that time was shocking and frowned upon by some so I had to deal with major family issues at home, with surrounding family members and who I thought was my best friend decided to blurt this information out. It started a few years of feeling worthless, helpless and eventually suicidal. Also because I was a student who kept their uniform neat and actually did work in class, people decided that I would be perfect for their ‘abuse’. After dealing with that, I still got bullied by people for unknown reasons. Some friends decided to turn on me because I wouldn’t hang out with them, so it wasn’t until I left for college that I actually felt like I could be myself without being judged. I had no self confidence either as people at school called me the usual names of ‘ugly and ‘fat’, which then moved on to just taking the mick out of my surname and other things. 
 
When did you manage the bullying?

ASAP. I started seeing a councilor in school hours a few months after starting secondary school and the bullying began. I told my tutor about what was happening, and then he forwarded me to a group within the school grounds. I went there every week just to talk about how things were at home, but that quickly ended when my councilor got a job far away. My next tactic was actually playing computer games when I got home. I didn’t trust anyone with my problems so playing a game removed me from the real world to another where I felt safe.
 
What effect do you think bullying had on you?

The bullying made me very paranoid of others opinions about me, my actions and bought out the feelings of suicide so many times. I felt alone, unsafe, insecure, worried and useless. It also made me feel like I couldn’t trust anyone at all. 
 
What do you do now?

After graduating in Concept Design from Staffordshire University, I’m now working for Dojit Games.
 
How is your life better now?

Apart from graduating, I’ve moved out, found myself someone who loves me for who I am and I’m surrounded by family and friends who support me.
 
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
No, never.

What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?

Keep strong. It might sound strange but playing your favourite game and making up stories helped me cope. I used to sit and play Legend of Zelda for so many hours making up my own adventures just to forget what happened at school. You will discover who your true friends are if they stick by you through thick and thin. Also it might sound like a bad idea but report the bullying to someone you can trust. Being bullied is horrible and scary especially if it happens every day. No one deserves to be bullied and those who bully will get their comeuppance one day. That’s karma for you.

Rami Ismail

Rami ismail
 
 
Name and Twitter handle?
 
 Rami Ismail / @tha_rami
  
Where were you born?
 
The Netherlands.
  
In which part of the world do you currently reside?
 
The Netherlands
  
What’s your favourite video game of all time?
 
Metal Gear Solid.
  
What was the last game you enjoyed (feel free to list more than one!)
 
Dishonored, Antichamber and Clairvoyance.
  
Can you describe some of the bullying you experienced?
 
Bullying was constant – as it seems to be for most creative and intelligent kids. My things would be hidden, I’d be shoved around and told I was weird.  I taught myself to bury emotions away as deep as I could. Of course I did not want to show I was ‘weak’ or ‘bothered’. That’s the way a young mind works, and all I really wanted was to fit in with the cool kids. The most vivid memory I have is one of the few friends I had back then walking up to me and telling me I’d no longer be invited to his birthday party, because we were no longer friends or the other kids would find him lame. 
  
When did you manage the bullying?
 
By the time I turned fourteen, I had enough of pretending to be strong, or wanting to fit in. I had hoped college would be better, but things just continued to be terrible in general. I decided to intentionally flunk most of my tests so that I wouldn’t pass the year and I could start over in another class.  When that worked out and I went to school for the first day in that new class, I decided to no longer take any abuse and instead of trying to adapt to what people felt was cool, just to be myself. When I wrapped up college, I was the honor student that got to do the final speech on behalf of my year.
 
What effect do you think bullying had on you?
 
Managing the bullying was such a relief. I learned to never adapt to societal norms, never yield to anyone you don’t want to yield for and never take any abuse. More importantly, I learned to be myself. I sometimes look at a picture of my younger self and wonder why I ever thought was doing something wrong. I was just being me – and they couldn’t deal with the way I wanted to learn, work and explore the world. Ambition is scary to those that do not have it – and seeing someone achieve something through hard work is terrifying to those who believe they will achieve great things through being lazy. 
 
What do you do now?
 
Nowadays, I am the Business & Development Guy at Vlambeer, an award-winning two-man indie studio in the Netherlands. Besides that, I developed presskit(), a tool many indies use for their marketing and I spend my time equal parts working at Vlambeer, giving talks around the world and with my friends and my amazing girlfriend.
 
How is your life better now?
 
My life is great. It’s busy, it’s stressful and I work long days, but I do what I love without compromise. I spend my days making games I am extremely proud of, I’ve won awards on national and international levels, I’ve given lectures at universities, I’ve traveled around the world, I’ve been in the New York Times, on national television, in magazines I used to read as a kid. 
 
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
 
I still don’t quite believe it.
 
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
 
The reason you’re being bullied isn’t because you’re different – it’s because your bullies can’t deal with that. You’re most likely smarter, more creative or more ambitious than those that bully you. You, unlike them, have the ability to see the world through a perspective most people could never see. That gives you the capability to do amazing things, to see the world in a different way, to achieve things no one would ever think of. It gives you the power to create things – whether those are games or anything else. Spend your time honing those skills, finding people like yourself and reaching out to people you respect. You’re different – but that’s actually something amazing. It’s something to be proud of. Just don’t forget that you’re not the only one – that you are not alone.