

I’ve been passionate about computers since I was a child. What started as playing games quickly turned into an interest in how the technology worked. One of my first projects was setting up a multiplayer Minecraft server — I learned about networking, servers and many new technical concepts while building it. That experience pushed me to study IT at school, where I learned both hardware and software fundamentals and practiced languages like C#, Java, PHP, HTML and SQL. I keep learning by doing: building small tools, experimenting with new libraries, and shipping projects whenever I can.
It taught me a lot about product trade-offs and the importance of shipping small, reliable iterations. Today I split my time between coding, learning new technologies, and exploring creative projects.

Games shaped how I think about systems and design — I started playing with my dad on a PS1 and still play today. I enjoy strategic, team-based play and studying games to understand mechanics, pacing, and player experience. That curiosity led me to experiment with Unity and Blender; my first project was overly ambitious, but it taught me real skills in game logic, asset pipelines, and scope management. I’m now focused on smaller, well-scoped game projects that apply those lessons.



Travel taught me the value of leaving the familiar to discover new places. Growing up in a small town, each trip felt like opening a door to different cultures and perspectives. In my late teens I started following travel creators and began exploring landscapes, local food, and everyday life firsthand. Travel still energizes me — meeting people and seeing how environments shape ideas broadens my outlook and fuels my curiosity.

I’m deeply curious about how software is built and how it solves real problems. My IT education gave me fundamentals in programming and systems thinking, and I’ve kept learning through hands-on projects. I enjoy both the engineering and product sides of development: designing clear solutions, shipping small iterations, and iterating based on feedback. Building real features and improving them over time is how I continue to grow as an engineer.



I discovered parkour after leaving volleyball. From my first lesson I was hooked by the challenge: each move pushes both body and mind. Parkour is personal — you compete with yourself — yet it creates a supportive community where people encourage and motivate each other. Practicing parkour taught me discipline, resilience, and the satisfaction of steady, incremental progress.

Drones opened a new way to explore places from above. While I’m not primarily a photographer, flying reveals unique perspectives and small moments I wouldn’t otherwise notice. I began with a DJI Phantom and later moved to a compact DJI Mini for portability. Today my drone is a lightweight companion on trips and outdoor adventures.
