

I am a game designer, game writer, and creative technologist working at the intersection of play, storytelling, and culture. My creative discipline uses games and interactive media as tools for expression, preservation, and connection. I view games not only as entertainment, but as living cultural artefacts that can hold memory, history, and identity.
My work focuses on designing games that tell African stories and reflect real, lived experiences that are often overlooked in mainstream gaming. Through narrative-driven gameplay, intuitive level design, and immersive world-building, I create interactive spaces that explore culture, emotion, community, labour, and belonging. Alongside my creative practice, I build inclusive pathways into game making through PlayLabs, a platform I founded to support Africans especially young people and underrepresented communities in learning, experimenting, and creating games through play. I also work with museums, introducing games and playful systems as tools for preserving digital heritage and reimagining how African culture is shared and experienced.
Pushing culture forward through my practice matters to me because African stories deserve to be told by Africans, with care, depth, and authenticity. My work challenges exclusion in the games industry while opening doors for new voices and ways of creating. By centring play as a cultural and educational tool, I aim to expand who gets to create, whose stories are valued, and how culture continues to evolve in digital spaces.