Laxity (C64/Amiga) — same person?
category: residue [glöplog]
Hi everyone, I’ve been doing a bit of demoscene archeology and came across something I’d like to share (and verify, if anyone here has more info).
There's a classic YouTube upload: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YfsiyZ4QebQ 👉 Laxity – Desert Dream (Amiga Music) In the first minute of the video, a photo appears — presumably of the Amiga musician known as Laxity.
Separately, I found this excellent interview on Recollection: https://www.atlantis-prophecy.org/recollection/?load=interviews&id_interview=98 👉 Interview with Laxity (Domination #7) In it, Thomas Egeskov Petersen (Laxity from the C64 scene) says: > “At this time I am living in Norway, where I work as in-house composer at a software developer’s house called 'Funcom'...”
I’ve compared the two photos — from the YouTube video and the Recollection interview — and I’m convinced they depict the same person. That, combined with the biographical detail (moving to Norway, working in music professionally), strongly suggests the Amiga and C64 Laxity are indeed the same individual.
Some databases (like Demozoo and CSDb) still treat them as two separate entities — which may need correction.
If anyone has more context or can confirm/deny this, I’d love to hear your thoughts! Cheers — and long live the scene 💾🎧
There's a classic YouTube upload: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YfsiyZ4QebQ 👉 Laxity – Desert Dream (Amiga Music) In the first minute of the video, a photo appears — presumably of the Amiga musician known as Laxity.
Separately, I found this excellent interview on Recollection: https://www.atlantis-prophecy.org/recollection/?load=interviews&id_interview=98 👉 Interview with Laxity (Domination #7) In it, Thomas Egeskov Petersen (Laxity from the C64 scene) says: > “At this time I am living in Norway, where I work as in-house composer at a software developer’s house called 'Funcom'...”
I’ve compared the two photos — from the YouTube video and the Recollection interview — and I’m convinced they depict the same person. That, combined with the biographical detail (moving to Norway, working in music professionally), strongly suggests the Amiga and C64 Laxity are indeed the same individual.
Some databases (like Demozoo and CSDb) still treat them as two separate entities — which may need correction.
If anyone has more context or can confirm/deny this, I’d love to hear your thoughts! Cheers — and long live the scene 💾🎧
No, they are not the same person.
https://demozoo.org/sceners/656/
vs
https://demozoo.org/sceners/655/
What tickles me is that apparently they both - independently - worked as AI programmers on different Hitman games.
vs
https://demozoo.org/sceners/655/
What tickles me is that apparently they both - independently - worked as AI programmers on different Hitman games.
Thanks for your response — and fair point if you have other info.
Just to clarify why I believe they are the same person:
In the Recollection interview, Laxity says he's living in Norway and working at Funcom as an in-house composer — that’s a very specific real-world detail.
The Desert Dream demo was created by the Danish Amiga group Kefrens, and the person credited as Laxity — responsible for code, music, and design — was part of that team. So, in the context of Desert Dream, Laxity was from Denmark.
Later, as confirmed in a Recollection interview, he moved to Norway to work as an in-house composer at the game company Funcom. So while his demoscene roots are Danish, his professional career took him to Norway.
The demo was released in April 1993 and won first place at The Gathering 1993, a demoparty held in Norway.
The YouTube video (Laxity – Desert Dream) shows a photo of someone identified as "Laxity" — and visually, to me, it appears to be the same individual as in the Recollection interview.
The timing also fits: both references seem to stem from around the same era (late '90s–early 2000s), when many sceners moved into the game dev world.
Of course, I'm open to being wrong — but do you have anything concrete that points to them being two different people? For example: – another real name? – conflicting biographical info? – a source stating there were two Laxitys active independently?
Happy to dig deeper with any leads. I really just want to clarify the history as accurately as possible 💾🔍
Just to clarify why I believe they are the same person:
In the Recollection interview, Laxity says he's living in Norway and working at Funcom as an in-house composer — that’s a very specific real-world detail.
The Desert Dream demo was created by the Danish Amiga group Kefrens, and the person credited as Laxity — responsible for code, music, and design — was part of that team. So, in the context of Desert Dream, Laxity was from Denmark.
Later, as confirmed in a Recollection interview, he moved to Norway to work as an in-house composer at the game company Funcom. So while his demoscene roots are Danish, his professional career took him to Norway.
The demo was released in April 1993 and won first place at The Gathering 1993, a demoparty held in Norway.
The YouTube video (Laxity – Desert Dream) shows a photo of someone identified as "Laxity" — and visually, to me, it appears to be the same individual as in the Recollection interview.
The timing also fits: both references seem to stem from around the same era (late '90s–early 2000s), when many sceners moved into the game dev world.
Of course, I'm open to being wrong — but do you have anything concrete that points to them being two different people? For example: – another real name? – conflicting biographical info? – a source stating there were two Laxitys active independently?
Happy to dig deeper with any leads. I really just want to clarify the history as accurately as possible 💾🔍
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do you have anything concrete that points to them being two different people? For example: – another real name?
The names are on their respective Demozoo pages.
But to be fair noone's seen them in the same room together, so...
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The YouTube video (Laxity – Desert Dream) shows a photo of someone identified as "Laxity"
Judging by the video description, whoever made that video also has the two Laxitys confused, as they're linking to the C64 Laxitys FB-profile
Thanks for the observation — interesting detail.
It’s true that the two Laxity profiles on Pouët have consecutive IDs, but that doesn’t necessarily imply they are different people. On Pouët, party/artist profiles are added manually by users, and the ID numbers are simply sequential based on when the entries were created — not evidence of identity themselves.
In fact, the fact that they were created one after the other might suggest someone deliberately entered them as separate entries for Amiga and C64 activities — possibly before clearer biographical info was available.
Meanwhile, what we're looking at is:
A direct quote from the C64 Laxity interview confirming he moved to Norway and worked at Funcom.
A publicly circulated photo in an Amiga-related upload (Desert Dream – Music) matching that timeline and appearance.
A highly distinctive and uncommon nickname across both platforms.
Those are strong, verifiable clues tying the two identities together. If someone has concrete evidence or alternative sources suggesting otherwise, I'm absolutely open to reviewing them!
It’s true that the two Laxity profiles on Pouët have consecutive IDs, but that doesn’t necessarily imply they are different people. On Pouët, party/artist profiles are added manually by users, and the ID numbers are simply sequential based on when the entries were created — not evidence of identity themselves.
In fact, the fact that they were created one after the other might suggest someone deliberately entered them as separate entries for Amiga and C64 activities — possibly before clearer biographical info was available.
Meanwhile, what we're looking at is:
A direct quote from the C64 Laxity interview confirming he moved to Norway and worked at Funcom.
A publicly circulated photo in an Amiga-related upload (Desert Dream – Music) matching that timeline and appearance.
A highly distinctive and uncommon nickname across both platforms.
Those are strong, verifiable clues tying the two identities together. If someone has concrete evidence or alternative sources suggesting otherwise, I'm absolutely open to reviewing them!
Not the same person.
And there is a C=64 group Laxity, as well... ;)
And there is a C=64 group Laxity, as well... ;)
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A publicly circulated photo in an Amiga-related upload (Desert Dream – Music) matching that timeline and appearance.
Or it could just be someone using the first photo they found by googling "Laxity" whenever that video was made, so very very weak evidence
Also take a look at this photo...
Good point — it’s entirely possible the YouTube video author used a random image. However, this exact photo appears in more than one context tied to Laxity — not just the YT video, but also older Amiga-related sites and even possibly group archives. That repetition makes it less likely it was randomly picked.
But here's the twist: When you actually do search for “Laxity” on Google Images — even using filters like "C64", "Amiga", or "Funcom" — there are no other usable photos out there. This one image seems to be the only recurring photo associated with the name, and it matches the interview on Recollection where Laxity (Thomas Egeskov Petersen) mentions working at Funcom in Norway.
More importantly:
We have a verified interview with Thomas Egeskov Petersen (Laxity/C64) mentioning his move to Norway and work at Funcom — clearly a professional step into the Amiga/games domain.
The photo in question shows a man in a studio setting, which aligns with someone working in music composition.
The timing, nickname and career trajectory all converge toward this being the same individual.
So the photo alone may not be conclusive, but in the broader context, it reinforces an already strong continuity between the two identities.
But here's the twist: When you actually do search for “Laxity” on Google Images — even using filters like "C64", "Amiga", or "Funcom" — there are no other usable photos out there. This one image seems to be the only recurring photo associated with the name, and it matches the interview on Recollection where Laxity (Thomas Egeskov Petersen) mentions working at Funcom in Norway.
More importantly:
We have a verified interview with Thomas Egeskov Petersen (Laxity/C64) mentioning his move to Norway and work at Funcom — clearly a professional step into the Amiga/games domain.
The photo in question shows a man in a studio setting, which aligns with someone working in music composition.
The timing, nickname and career trajectory all converge toward this being the same individual.
So the photo alone may not be conclusive, but in the broader context, it reinforces an already strong continuity between the two identities.
Just have a look at the photo from the interview with the Amiga Laxity, that's definitely NOT the same person
Thanks for pointing that out — I see where you're coming from.
You're right that the person in the Hugi SE #3 interview photo looks different from the one in the Recollection interview with Thomas Egeskov Petersen (C64 Laxity). But that's exactly the issue: the photo in Hugi appears with no caption, no attribution, and no context. It doesn’t seem directly connected to the text — and could very well have been added illustratively by the editors, without being a confirmed portrait of the Amiga Laxity.
Compare that with the Recollection interview:
It includes a clear quote confirming his move to Norway and work at Funcom.
That aligns closely with the professional timeline many sceners followed transitioning into the games industry.
The Desert Dream – Amiga Music video used a photo that matches the Recollection one, and now we have no known alternate photo tied to the Amiga Laxity. That absence makes the Hugi photo more suspect — especially since it's never reused in other contexts.
So while I completely respect your view, I'd argue the Hugi image shouldn't be treated as definitive until we know where it came from. If anyone knows the origin of that photo or has better documentation, I’d be really keen to follow up!
You're right that the person in the Hugi SE #3 interview photo looks different from the one in the Recollection interview with Thomas Egeskov Petersen (C64 Laxity). But that's exactly the issue: the photo in Hugi appears with no caption, no attribution, and no context. It doesn’t seem directly connected to the text — and could very well have been added illustratively by the editors, without being a confirmed portrait of the Amiga Laxity.
Compare that with the Recollection interview:
It includes a clear quote confirming his move to Norway and work at Funcom.
That aligns closely with the professional timeline many sceners followed transitioning into the games industry.
The Desert Dream – Amiga Music video used a photo that matches the Recollection one, and now we have no known alternate photo tied to the Amiga Laxity. That absence makes the Hugi photo more suspect — especially since it's never reused in other contexts.
So while I completely respect your view, I'd argue the Hugi image shouldn't be treated as definitive until we know where it came from. If anyone knows the origin of that photo or has better documentation, I’d be really keen to follow up!
sigh... so you're just trolling
I’m not trolling — quite the opposite. I’m genuinely trying to understand and document the historical identity of a sceneperson who used the nickname “Laxity” across multiple platforms. If some of the evidence turns out to be misleading or inconclusive, that’s completely fair — and I’m happy to adjust my assumptions if better information emerges.
The only reason I’m digging into this is because I care about preserving accurate scene history. If that’s unwelcome here, I’ll step back — but I hope we can continue the discussion in good faith.
The only reason I’m digging into this is because I care about preserving accurate scene history. If that’s unwelcome here, I’ll step back — but I hope we can continue the discussion in good faith.
The C64 Laxity is still active, so how about you ask him directly instead of this conspiracy like bullshit?
Totally fair suggestion — and you're right, asking directly would be the most conclusive way to settle this.
I tried to build the picture based on publicly available sources because I honestly didn’t know whether the C64 Laxity was still around or reachable — if you (or anyone else) has a direct contact or can confirm he's responsive these days, I’d be more than happy to get in touch and ask him personally. That would clear up the whole thing better than any amount of cross-referencing.
Just to be clear: this was never meant as a “conspiracy.” I just care about documenting scene history as accurately as possible — especially in cases where identities or credits might have been blurred over time. But yes, asking him directly beats any guesswork. Thanks.
I tried to build the picture based on publicly available sources because I honestly didn’t know whether the C64 Laxity was still around or reachable — if you (or anyone else) has a direct contact or can confirm he's responsive these days, I’d be more than happy to get in touch and ask him personally. That would clear up the whole thing better than any amount of cross-referencing.
Just to be clear: this was never meant as a “conspiracy.” I just care about documenting scene history as accurately as possible — especially in cases where identities or credits might have been blurred over time. But yes, asking him directly beats any guesswork. Thanks.
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I honestly didn’t know whether the C64 Laxity was still around or reachable
In that case you haven't done ANY research into the matter
I can understand the frustration — you're clearly much closer to the active scene than I am, and I respect that. I based my search on publicly available interviews and archives rather than personal networks, so if that’s not enough in your eyes, that’s fair.
That said, I’ve shared every source I could find — Recollection, Hugi, CSDb, etc. — and when you pointed out that Laxity is still around, I immediately agreed that asking him directly is the best path forward. I’ve already started looking for a contact channel (CSDb PMs, mostly).
If you have a direct way of reaching him or know where he’s active, I’d genuinely appreciate a nudge in the right direction.
That said, I’ve shared every source I could find — Recollection, Hugi, CSDb, etc. — and when you pointed out that Laxity is still around, I immediately agreed that asking him directly is the best path forward. I’ve already started looking for a contact channel (CSDb PMs, mostly).
If you have a direct way of reaching him or know where he’s active, I’d genuinely appreciate a nudge in the right direction.
I'm not going to do your work for you, because you've already been told by people in the know that they're not the same person, and that should be enough.
I get it — and I appreciate that you and others close to the scene are confident they’re different people. That carries real weight.
My only hesitation has been that, despite those assertions, I haven’t seen any published source, interview, credit list or party record that clearly distinguishes the two — which is why I started trying to connect the dots myself.
If I’ve missed something obvious or overlooked a reliable source, I’d love to be pointed toward it. I really do want to get it right — and not waste anyone’s time.
My only hesitation has been that, despite those assertions, I haven’t seen any published source, interview, credit list or party record that clearly distinguishes the two — which is why I started trying to connect the dots myself.
If I’ve missed something obvious or overlooked a reliable source, I’d love to be pointed toward it. I really do want to get it right — and not waste anyone’s time.
Why does it matter at all whether they're the same individual or not?
Also the cracker group Laxity is something different. It would be nice if people could come up with original names.
I can assure you, they are different persons. Because I know them both.