Peter Molyneux parody account shut down because games are too weird now



After 16 years spent poking fun of video game legend Peter Molyneux, one of social media’s great shitposters is going dark. Peter Molydeux, a popular X account created by artist Adam Capone, has gone offline in part because Capone says that video games are just too hard to satirize these days.

Created in 2009, the long-running Peter Molydeux account routinely lampooned Molyneux’s reputation for out-there video game ideas, like his infamous Kinect experiment Project Milo. The account gained popularity in the early 2010s for absurd pitches like “Imagine a fishing game where rivers are other different dimensions in time” and “Platformer where if you fall in a pit you’re trapped forever unless you can emotionally manipulate nearby enemies to pull you back up.” The account currently has more than 60,000 followers on X.

In a final post on Jan 13., Capone, a 3D environment artist who recently lost his job when Ubisoft shuttered its Halifax studio, announced that he had decided to close down the account in a blog post.

“I started this account back in 2009, around the Xbox Arcade era, when indie games were beginning a real resurgence such as Braid, Limbo, and others,” Capone wrote. “Back then, Molydeux-style ideas felt genuinely outrageous. Over time, so many indie games emerged that even Peter Molyneux’s wildest concepts stopped feeling unusual. You could play as a hole (Donut County), progress by taking photos (Viewfinder), or experience mechanics no one would have greenlit years earlier.”

It’s easy to understand where Capone is coming from when you look back through some of the account’s old tweets. “You play a garbage truck driver who pieces together people’s letters at night to learn more about them” doesn’t sound like much of a joke in 2026. Even something like “Imagine a game where that is entirely played from the perspective of doorbell cameras” just sounds like a normal Sam Barlow game.

Capone also cites Peter Molyneux’s impending retirement as a reason for the shutdown. Molyneux has previously stated that he plans to retire after the release of his next game, Masters of Albion. The perspective-shifting strategy game is set to launch on April 22.

“I hope every generation creates its own Molyneuxs,” Capone wrote. “Joseph Fares at Hazelight reminds me an early Molyneux, i.e developers who get carried away talking about their ‘baby’ instead of selling a product. I’ll always be grateful for Molyneux and what he gave to the industry.”

While it’s a sad day for satirists, Molydeux’s retirement from posting has a silver lining. Let it be a symbol of how far video games have come creatively. The independent video scene is weirder and bolder than ever in 2026; you just can’t make up a game more absurd than Clickolding, you know?



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