Article 2EB70 Frog Fractions: inside the mind behind the world's strangest video game

Frog Fractions: inside the mind behind the world's strangest video game

by
Chris Priestman
from Technology | The Guardian on (#2EB70)

Jim Crawford is a self-confessed dilettante who moves from project to project in the blink of an eye. How did he create the most anarchic video game ever made?

When Jim Crawford released a browser game named Frog Fractions in 2012, half the people who played it called him a genius; the rest thought he was deranged. What most of them seemed to agree on however, was that they loved it. When influential site Rock Paper Shotgun covered the game, it did so under the header: "Frog Fractions might be the greatest game of all time".

Unpredictable and absurd, Frog Fractions starts out under the guise of a piece of edutainment software in which you control a frog sat on a pond scooping up bugs and defending fruit. Then after buying a few upgrades, you're suddenly riding a dragon through an underground tunnel that takes you into Crawford's own bizarre version of video game wonderland. Many read it as a comment on the absurd conventions of video games. Many others read it as weird frog game.

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