Neal Agarwal

American programmer and game designer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Neal Agarwal (born 1997) is an American programmer and game designer. He is known for his website, neal.fun, which hosts various browser games such as The Password Game and Infinite Craft. Many of his games have parodied internet conventions or served as educational games.[1]

Born1996 (age 2930)
EducationVirginia Tech (BA)
OccupationsProgrammer, game designer
Quick facts Born, Education ...
Neal Agarwal
Agarwal in 2023
Born1996 (age 2930)
EducationVirginia Tech (BA)
OccupationsProgrammer, game designer
Websitenealagarwal.me
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Early life and education

Agarwal grew up in Fairfax, Virginia. He later attended Virginia Tech and graduated with a degree in computer science.[2][3]

Career

In 2006, at the age of nine, Agarwal created his first website, called Kidcrash, using a WYSIWYG editor, which compiled several of his favorite Adobe Flash games.[2][4] He then began programming on Scratch and made a "knockoff" of Wipeout at the age of 12.[2] Afterward, he learned HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.[5]

In high school, Agarwal created a mobile game, called Toast Man. He then created web-based projects on the website Kamogo such as Silicon Valley Idea Generator and Text to Hodor.[2]

neal.fun

In 2017, Agarwal launched his website, neal.fun, after which he began programming and listing his games on it. He worked on several of his first few games, like Spend Bill Gates' Money, as a student at Virginia Tech at the time.[2] His creations had been inspired by his own upbringing with Adobe Flash games on the internet, or what he called the "Weird Web 1.0": "I would always go down these long rabbit holes. It felt like much more of an independent web."[3][2]

By the time Agarwal graduated from Virginia Tech, he was able to make a full-time living from ad revenue on neal.fun, after which he continued to create more games and commit to neal.fun as a contribution to a possible "Weird Web 2.0."[3] He additionally runs Just For Fun, a website that showcases other instances of "creative coding."[6]

Briefly, Agarwal worked at MSCHF before deciding to focus on neal.fun fully.[2]

Works

More information Game, Established ...
A list of current and former works on Neal.fun
Game Established Discontinued
Baby Map 2017 present
Spend Bill Gates’ Money
Wiki File 2017
Progresses present
Draw Logos From Memory
Papers 2018
Powerballs 2018
Speeding present
Hurricanes Maps 2018
Life Checklistings present
Draw Your Island April 2021
Where Does the Day Go? June 2018 present
Who Was Alive August 2018
Dark Patterns October 2018
Grandpa’s Art Show June 2019 April 2020
Share this Page September 2019 present
The Size of Space
The Deep Sea November 2019
Life Stats February 2020
Printing Money
The Auction Game March 2020
Universe Forecast May 2020
Conquer the World July 2020 June 2021
Macaroni Draw August 2021
Sell! Sell! Sell! January 2021 present
10 Years Ago February 2021 January 2024
Ambient Chaos September 2021 present
Rocks November 2021
Let’s Settle This January 2022
Earth Reviews May 2022
Absurd Trolley Problems July 2022
Design the Next iPhone September 2022
Days since Incident October 2022
Asteroid Launcher December 2022
Draw a Perfect Circle January 2023
Wonders of Street View February 2023
Space Elevator May 2023
The Password Game July 2023
Internet Artifacts November 2023
Infinite Craft February 2024
Eyechat July 2024 September 2024
Sun vs. Moon August 2024 May 2025
Stimulation Clicker January 2025 present
Internet Roadtrip May 2025
I’m Not a Robot September 2025
Size of Life January 2026
Sandboxels February 2026
Constellation Draw March 2026
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References

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