It’s that time again for the Forbes list that names young people who are notable achievers. The 2016 list includes 600 people under 30 in 20 different sectors, from food to commerce to health care—to video games.  

The 30 under 30 in the games category are:

  • Jordan Maron, cofounder of XREAL and YouTube personality (Captain Sparklez)
  • Alex Beachum, creative director at Mobius Digital
  • Finn Brice, founder of Chucklefish Limited
  • Tommaso Checchi, game developer at Mojang (Minecraft)
  • Adriaan de Jongh, independent game designer
  • Eefje Depoortere, eSports host at Riot Games
  • Andy Dudynsky, community manager at 343 Industries (Halo)
  • Mark Essen, cofounder of Messhof LLc
  • Carl-Arvid Ewerbring, Founder of Resolution Games
  • Christopher Floyd, cofounder of the Indie Megabooth (PAX)
  • Nina Freeman, game designer at Fullbright
  • Tyler Glaiel, owner of Eyebrow Interactive,
  • Devin Horsman, technical director at River Studios Canada
  • Meg Jayanth, writer
  • Ben Kane, cofounder of Steel Crate Games
  • Trent Kusters, cofounder of League of Geeks
  • Naomi Ladizinsky, chief creative office of Nix Hydra
  • Aradhya Malhotra, cofounder of Skyless Game Studios
  • Nate Mitchell, cofounder of Oculus VR
  • Zoe Quinn, Cofounder of Crash Override Network (which fights against online abuse)
  • Sonja Reid, independent content creator
  • David Rosen, CEO of Wolfire Games
  • Ashley Ruhl, cinematic designer at Telltale Games
  • Thomas Silloway, director of development, Psyonix
  • Andy Sum, cofounder of Hipster Whale (maker of Crossy Road)
  • Jordan Tyler, influencer relations manager at Twitch
  • Adriel Wallick, game developer, MsMinotaur
  • Gavan Wilhite, cofounder, Altspace VR
  • Lydia Winters, brand editor, Mojang
  • Matt Zitzmann, cofounder, Kamcord

The 2016 judges for the gaming list were Sean “Day[9]” Plott, an eSports caster; Brenda Romero, CEO of Loot Drop; and Phil Spencer, the head of Microsoft’s Xbox division.

 

 


This article was written by

Linda learned to play video games as a way to connect with her teenaged kids, and then she learned to love video games for their own sake. At Pixelkin she wrangles the business & management side of things, writes posts as often as she can, reaches out on the social media, and does the occasional panel or talk. She lives in Seattle, where she writes, studies, plays video games, spends time with her family, consumes vast quantities of science fiction, and looks after her small cockapoo. She loves to hear from people out there. You can read more about her at her website, Linda Breneman.com or her family foundation's website, ludusproject.org.