A small, chaotic, and unreasonably talented team. We write code, break things, fix them at 3AM, and somehow still ship on time.
The mastermind. The legend. The man who decided at age 14 that he needed his own game engine and operating system — and actually started building both. Muhammed spends 50% of his time coding, 30% raging in CS2 (he swears his AWP misses are server-side), and 20% showing everyone his knife skins that cost more than the company's first server. Once accidentally pushed to production while clutching a 1v3 on Mirage. The deploy worked. The round didn't. His Slack status has been "brb 1 more game" for approximately 11 months. When asked about work-life balance, he opens his Steam profile. He types faster than he thinks, which explains both the brilliant code and the occasional commit message that just says "asdfjkl". If INEXX Interactive has a soul, it's probably hidden somewhere in his inventory between a StatTrak Fade and an AK-47 Neon Rider.
Dmitri emerged from the depths of St. Petersburg with a PhD in "making GPUs cry." He is the architect behind NEXEN's rendering pipeline and speaks exclusively in shader code after midnight. His idea of "a quick optimization" once resulted in a 3-week rewrite that made the engine 400% faster. Nobody complains. Drinks more black tea than a human should be capable of. Has a framed picture of Vulkan API documentation on his desk. Unironically.
Alexei is the reason NEXOS exists and the reason it doesn't crash. Born in Moscow, raised on Arch Linux ("btw"), and has opinions about init systems that could fill a novel. He once rewrote the entire NEXOS package manager in a 72-hour energy-drink-fueled session and called it "a light weekend." His terminal font size is 8px. He can still read it. Has configured his desktop environment 347 times and is never satisfied. Sleeps in a hoodie. Possibly hasn't removed it since 2021.
Nikita keeps the servers alive so you don't have to think about it. Originally from Novosibirsk, he joined the team after Muhammed found his GitHub — a terrifying collection of self-hosted everything. He runs the entire Middle East server fleet from a ThinkPad that has seen better decades. His monitoring dashboards have monitoring dashboards. Once detected a server anomaly 4 minutes before it happened (still unexplained). Believes "uptime is a lifestyle, not a metric." Has a tattoo of a Kubernetes logo. Probably.
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