Episodes

  • Reinventing Yourself | Nico Castez
    May 5 2026

    In episode 10 Susan sits down with Argentine game maker Nico Castez to talk about cranking out 100 games at Avix, chasing strange ideas instead of trends, and turning that wild energy into his new studio, Goraku Club.
    They dig into hard‑won lessons about money, momentum, and community, plus what Nico wants the next wave of Latin American creators to build.

    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (01:28) - Meet Nico Castez
    • (03:47) - The Road to Avix
    • (13:04) - Making Games with Friends
    • (16:23) - What it was like
    • (20:43) - COVID Times
    • (23:37) - The End of Avix
    • (31:59) - Moving On
    • (35:31) - Goraku Club
    • (37:31) - Buenos Aires vs La Plata
    • (39:34) - The Future & Take Aways
    • (41:46) - Explore, Play & Stay Creative
    • (44:39) - Where to find Nico
    • (46:34) - Outro

    Guest Bio: Nico is a visual designer and entrepreneur from Argentina who successfully ran a small indie game studio for over a decade, reaching millions of players worldwide. After closing Avix, he’s been exploring new creative paths—focusing on photography, organizing live music events, and developing personal projects. Currently in a transitional stage, he’s rethinking how to balance creativity, independence, and sustainability while continuing to build things that feel meaningful.

    Follow Nico's journey!

    https://allmylinks.com/nicocastez

    This episode was brought to you in part by the University of Miami: School of Communications & the Knight Foundation.

    Join our Substack - https://tinyurl.com/GGJPodcastSubstack

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    48 mins
  • Payment Due | Alexis Jolis Desautels
    Apr 28 2026

    In episode 9 Susan talks with Alexis Jolis‑Desautels, a veteran designer and design leader who has spent two decades inside some of the world’s biggest game franchises helping studios actually understand their players. From starting as a QA tester at Ubisoft Montreal to building user research labs, leading design teams on major AAA projects, and mentoring the next generation of designers, Alexis brings a rare mix of craft, honesty, and cultural insight to every conversation

    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (01:20) - Meet Alexis
    • (05:26) - Mentors & Inspiration
    • (07:17) - Ubisoft
    • (11:06) - Crunch
    • (13:58) - Staying Sane
    • (15:49) - RLD
    • (21:30) - Jams
    • (26:13) - Burnout
    • (35:12) - The Ladder is a Lie
    • (38:54) - Community
    • (41:16) - Wrap-up
    • (45:23) - Outro

    Guest Bio: Alexis is a designer mostly interested in new applications of science and psychology in the field of interactive experiences. Focused on issues of creativity and design processes, but also, by using a background as an actor and journalist, developed skills as a trainer and a communicator, mostly about Game Design but also about games and digital interaction as a medium and human activity.

    Join our Substack - https://tinyurl.com/GGJPodcastSubstack

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    46 mins
  • Wayfinder | Darion Lowenstein
    Apr 21 2026

    In episode 8, Susan talks with Darion Lowenstein, a veteran game producer, marketer, and executive who has spent nearly three decades shipping hit titles and building publishing teams across console, mobile, and emerging platforms. He and Susan dig into what it actually takes to bring a game to market at scale, why marketing and publishing strategy matter as much as design, and how he approaches mentorship, leadership, and sustainability in an industry that is constantly shifting.

    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (01:20) - Meet Darion Lowenstein
    • (04:49) - Darion's Journey into Games
    • (09:05) - Taking Risk
    • (13:41) - Life at Rockstar Games
    • (23:11) - The Role of a Producer
    • (25:27) - What Success Feels Like
    • (27:17) - Recognizing the Time to Pivot
    • (31:39) - Experimental and Controvertial
    • (38:08) - Advocating for Games
    • (39:20) - Diversity in Games
    • (42:09) - Resilience Through Networking and Finding your Own Path
    • (44:55) - How do you Define Yourself?
    • (47:32) - Don't be a d*ck
    • (50:08) - Where to find Darion

    Guest Bio: Darion Lowenstein is a veteran gaming executive with 30 years of experience and 90+ shipped titles, contributing to $9B+ in revenue across major franchises like Pac-Man, Red Dead Revolver, Hogwarts Legacy, & NBA Jam at companies like Rockstar Games, EA, Activision, and Scopely. As CEO of Secret Code, he consults for top companies including Dr. Seuss, Warner Bros., PBS, and major studios and serves on the BAFTA Games Committee.

    tiktok: darionl IG: darionl1

    www.secretco.net

    Join our Substack - https://tinyurl.com/GGJPodcastSubstack

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    52 mins
  • Shaping a Humanitarian | Lual Mayen
    Apr 14 2026

    In episode 7, Susan talks with Lual Mayen, a South Sudanese game developer, entrepreneur, and humanitarian whose journey from being born on the run from civil war to founding his own studio shows what happens when opportunity finally meets talent and persistence.Growing up in a Ugandan refugee camp with no reliable electricity or formal tech education, he taught himself to code, created the peace-focused game Salaam, and launched Junub Games to use interactive experiences to build empathy and support for refugees and communities affected by conflict.


    Lual talks about life growing up in a Ugandan refugee camp with scarce food, limited infrastructure, and no reliable electricity. He shares early memories of building a life from cleared land, finding joy in community and play, and developing a fascination with electronics. He recounts how his mother saved money for years so she could give him his own laptop, the responsibility that it represented, and how he became motivated to create games about peace and conflict resolution. Lual talks about discovering video games, teaching himself coding and design without mentors or internet, and about how he shared his early APK via Facebook, leading to global attention.


    • (00:00) - GGJPodLualMayen
    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (01:30) - Meet Lual Mayen
    • (07:29) - The Life of a Refugee
    • (11:02) - Introduction to Technology
    • (13:26) - A Sense of Responsability
    • (16:09) - Turning to Video Games
    • (18:07) - Building Resilience
    • (26:38) - Mentors, Mentees and Networking
    • (29:56) - Impact & Milestones
    • (35:01) - The Future
    • (36:23) - The Foundation
    • (38:22) - The Power of Sharing your Games
    • (41:27) - Lual's Plans for the Future
    • (43:08) - What Little Lual Would the be the Most Proud of
    • (45:17) - Outro

    Find Lual and follow his story!

    LinkedIn
    Janub Games

    Play Salaam on itch.io!

    Join our Substack - https://tinyurl.com/GGJPodcastSubstack

    This episode is sponsored by the University of Miami School of Communications and the Knight Foundation

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    46 mins
  • The Jungle Gym | Terry Redfield
    Apr 7 2026

    In episode 6, Susan talks with Terry Redfield, a veteran game developer, creative director, and three‑time founder with more than 25 years in console, PC, mobile, and live ops experience. From building worlds at Double Fine on Psychonauts, to leading live ops and skins teams on League of Legends, Terry’s career is a jungle gym of studios, startups, and platforms that she has navigated while parenting, caregiving, and insisting that games make room for grown‑up players with full, complicated lives.

    Terry discusses developing Rise of Elements over a decade as a competitive match-three hybrid described as “Puzzle Quest meets League of Legends,” her early love of games from LED football to Atari and arcades, and breaking into the industry at 3DO before joining Double Fine to help ship Psychonauts, where internal jams helped the game in development. She recounts bootstrapping startups, fundraising challenges for women founders, raising millions, and pausing a launch to prioritize her family. Terry reflects on leading large Live Ops and skins teams at Riot, the stress and health impacts that led her to resign, learning to set boundaries, prioritize, and use her voice, and focusing her future work on building platforms and opportunities for others, particularly in her home: Hawaii.


    • (00:00) - GGJPodTerryRedfield
    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (01:22) - Meet Terry Redfield
    • (03:44) - Wicked Fox Gamess & Rise of Elements
    • (12:32) - From 3DO to Double Find
    • (14:10) - Jamming in the Office
    • (17:48) - Terry the Founder
    • (21:16) - Build your Network & Find your Tribe
    • (25:38) - Navigating the "Unpolished" Side of the Industry
    • (26:51) - Live Ops
    • (29:44) - Learning to Balance it All
    • (31:58) - Choose your Battles
    • (34:19) - The Journey
    • (41:01) - Wrap-up
    • (41:55) - Outro

    Guest Bio: Terry Redfield is a passionate and creative leader with a career that has spanned 3 decades. Her focus is on creating fantastic, innovative and engaging collaborations with talented people.

    Find Terry online!

    LinkedIn
    Discord: WickedLilith

    Checkout Wicked Fox Games


    Join our Substack - https://tinyurl.com/GGJPodcastSubstack

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    43 mins
  • Evolving the Way we Work | Pablo Quarta
    Mar 31 2026

    In episode 5, Susan talks with Pablo Quarta, an Argentine writer, narrative designer, and game producer whose work sits at the intersection of games, politics, and queerness. From co‑founding "Matajuegos", Argentina’s first video game workers’ co‑op, to producing the award‑winning surreal documentary game "Atuel", Pablo’s journey is about using games to talk honestly about labor, climate justice, identity, and Latin American realities.

    Throughout the conversation, Pablo discusses "Matajuegos’" origins as a bilingual blog and dev collective formed to push Argentine indie games toward real-world, Latin American perspectives and more inclusive community conversations, later becoming Argentina’s first video game workers’ co-op in 2021. They describe co-op operations, benefits, challenges, and explains why and how "Matajuegos" came to an amicable end in March 2024. Then, Pablo talks about "Atuel, "a 20–30 minute surreal documentary game where players embody Argentina's Atuel river and its ecosystem. He narrates how the game is contextualized amid climate crisis themes, was created alongside the 12.01 Project’s film, and has been shown widely at festivals and museums around the world. Finally, Pablo outlines hyperlocal storytelling and his enduring interest in queerness and feminist issues, climate justice and neocolonial extractivism.


    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (00:48) - Partners & Sponsors
    • (01:28) - Meet Pablo Quatra
    • (04:40) - Matajuegos
    • (09:01) - The Co-op Model & Video Game Development
    • (20:21) - Making Atuel Documentary Game
    • (26:09) - Hyperlocal Games
    • (28:04) - A Museum Piece
    • (31:31) - The Issues at Hand
    • (36:36) - What the Future Holds
    • (40:38) - The Throughline
    • (41:59) - Where to find Pablo
    • (45:39) - Outro

    Guest Bio: Pablo F. Quarta is a narrative designer and game producer who specializes in the development of videogames with strong social, political, and cultural perspectives that draw from Latin American culture and identity. They are part of the development team of the award-winning surrealist documentary game Atuel, and were one of the co-founders of Matajuegos, Argentina’s very first indie game workers’ co-op.

    Where to find Pablo:
    LinkedIn
    BlueSky

    Check out Atuel and Matajuego's other games on itch.io


    Join our Substack - https://tinyurl.com/GGJPodcastSubstack
    This Episode was Sponsored by the University of Miami's School of Communications & the Knight Foundation

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    47 mins
  • Forever Punk | Thorsten S. Wiedemann
    Mar 24 2026

    In episode 4, Susan talks with Thorsten S. Wiedemann, founder and artistic director of AMAZE, the international art house games and playful media festival that helped redefine how the world sees independent games. From Berlin bar nights and DIY talk shows to a global network of experimental, subversive, and deeply personal games, Thorsten’s journey is about building spaces where artists, punks, and misfits can treat games as culture, not just products.
    As A MAZE approaches 15 years, Thorsten traces his path from Berlin nightlife and DIY talk shows to festival-making, endeavor that began after attending GDC in 2007 and discovering indie games. He then discusses launching A MAZE with a focus on game art and cultural critique, key milestones including early bar-based events, the first full festival in 2010, A MAZE Indie Connect in 2012, and adopting an arthouse games focus around 2016–17. He reflects on struggles with funding, a 2024 code-of-conduct breach, personal growth, and how the community came together in 2019 to save A MAZE with a Kickstarter campaign. Thorsten also shares about his international work including A MAZE Johannesburg (2012–2017) and supporting Playtopia a in Cape Town, South Africa, plus goals like broader Global South representation and an arthouse game archive.

    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (01:18) - Introducing Thorsten S. Wiedemann
    • (03:30) - What is A MAZE?
    • (04:28) - The Accidental Path to Games
    • (07:17) - The First A MAZE Events & Discovering a Passion for Games
    • (11:25) - Building Something from Nothing
    • (14:28) - The Arthouse Games
    • (16:06) - The 2018 Global Game Jam Keynote
    • (20:16) - Crisis and Personal Growth
    • (26:50) - A MAZE South Africa
    • (32:32) - The Future of A MAZE
    • (35:01) - What A MAZE Wants to See Next
    • (38:21) - Where to find Thorsten
    • (40:49) - Outro

    Guest Bio: Thorsten S. Wiedemann is the founder and artistic director of the games culture brand A MAZE., an international platform and festival curating the intersection of independent and arthouse games, playful media, and experimental game culture.

    Thorsten's Socials

    LinkedIn
    BlueSky
    X (Twitter)
    Instagram
    Facebook
    YouTube

    Checkout A MAZE

    LinkedIn

    BlueSky

    X (Twitter)

    Instagram
    Facebook

    Youtube


    www.a-maze.net
    www.amaze-berlin.de
    www.amaze-magazine.de
    www.amaze-space.com


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    42 mins
  • Embracing Boldness | Limpho Moeti
    Mar 17 2026

    In episode 3 Susan talks with Limpho Moeti, South African producer, business developer, Playtopia co-founder, and the first IGDA chair from the global south, about how she’s spent her career making things happen for other developers. Limpho describes her path from theater, film, and comics into games via Free Lives and Nyamakop, where she supported community meetups, game jams, and biz dev. She advocates for developers outside North America and Europe, highlighting barriers in South Africa and across Africa: limited access to tools, internet, and career pathways; high hardware costs; small, historically white industry; funding and data gaps; monetization challenges; and limited government support. Moeti emphasizes community, kindness, mentorship, and “finding your people” as elements to finding success.

    • (00:00) - Intro
    • (00:48) - Sponsors and Partners
    • (01:36) - Meet Limpho Moeti
    • (03:22) - The Connector Mindset
    • (06:16) - The “Hunger” for Non-Western Stories; Advocating for African Games
    • (08:12) - Breaking into Games
    • (10:17) - Barriers in the African Video Games Industry
    • (15:57) - Mission, Ubuntu & Leadership
    • (23:10) - Kindness and Community
    • (25:11) - Mentors
    • (27:27) - Belonging and Confidence
    • (29:40) - Why Lead and Advocate; Building a Safer Industry
    • (36:56) - The Future
    • (40:47) - Key Take Aways
    • (43:19) - Where to find Limpho
    • (44:41) - Thank you!

    Guest Bio: Limpho Moeti is a South African game producer, business developer, community organizer, and the Chair of the International Game Developers Association (IGDA), and is the first person from the global south to hold that role. She has worked with studios including Free Lives and Nyamakop, helped create and run the Playtopia indie games and playful media festival in Cape Town, and is a consistent champion for developers across Africa and beyond.


    Check out Limpho's Linkedin
    IGDA
    Playtopia

    Join our Substack!

    This episode is sponsored by The University of Miami, School of Communications and the Knight Foundation

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    46 mins