The Blog.

FUTUREGAMES Warsaw – Game Dev and Tech School MATCHUP

strong>MATCH UP ’26: Building Connections That Matter

I had the chance to take part in MATCH UP ’26, and it was an incredible experience.

Meeting so many students, discovering a wide range of skills and specializations, and engaging with emerging talents from all over the world was both inspiring and energizing.

What makes this event truly special is its diversity.

With over 50 nationalities represented, it creates a unique space where different perspectives, cultures, and approaches to creation meet and interact.

For me, this goes far beyond recruitment.

It’s about building real connections, opening dialogues, and identifying people with whom we can genuinely create and grow.

From Warsaw, Poland to Martinique, these exchanges make complete sense.

They contribute to shaping new creative bridges between territories, and to imagining a more connected, collaborative ecosystem.

I deeply believe in a form of reconfiguration of the world, driven by those who choose to build together.

As I often say: “Work with those who want to build.” — Georges-Emmanuel ARNAUD

This is only the beginning, and I’m confident that strong and meaningful collaborations will emerge from this experience.

A New Chapter in South-South Collaboration: Remote Interns from KANEÉA in the French Polynesia Join the Journey

We are excited to welcome remote interns from KANÉA School in French Polynesia!

Two groups of four students — one from the first year and one from the second year — will join our workflow, bringing fresh energy, perspectives, and talent into a shared creative space that transcends distance.

This collaboration marks an important step in how we approach learning and production today.

Working remotely is no longer a constraint — it is a powerful framework that allows us to connect territories, ideas, and people across oceans, building new ways of creating together.

The students will work using Diversion and real-time pipelines with Unreal Engine, engaging with tools and processes aligned with industry standards.

They will experience what it means to collaborate in a distributed production environment, where precision, communication, and creativity go hand in hand.

Beyond the technical aspect, this is about connection.

Different cultures, different rhythms, different ways of thinking — all meeting in a shared space of creation. These are the moments where new ideas emerge and meaningful exchanges happen.

This initiative also strongly reflects our commitment to South-South collaboration.

Connecting Martinique and French Polynesia means building direct bridges between territories that share similar realities, while shaping a more autonomous and connected creative network.

This is a milestone moment — one to be marked.

A first step toward long-term collaboration, shared projects, and a new way of thinking about creation, education, and exchange across our regions.

Caroline Brambach: A Foundational International Collaboration

Caroline Brambach is the first international intern we have welcomed, coming from the Haute École Albert Jacquard in Namur.

Her three-month stay in Martinique marks an important milestone in the development of our international collaborations, and in building bridges between territories and creative institutions.

During her internship, Caroline fully integrated into our production environment, actively contributing to the development of the project Detective Philibert.

She notably worked on the partial reconstruction of a historical street, helping to design and build environmental elements with a strong focus on visual coherence and immersion.

Her work covered several technical areas.

She conducted photogrammetry sessions to capture real-world elements, which she then integrated into a 3D modeling workflow.

She also developed assets through modeling, adapting her work to the constraints of real-time production.

Caroline further explored animation and motion capture, participating in the integration and use of motion data within our pipeline.

This allowed her to understand the full production process, from capture to implementation in a real-time engine such as Unreal Engine.

Beyond the technical experience, this internship was also a strong human and professional journey.

Spending three months in Martinique, she evolved in a demanding creative environment while discovering a new territory, its culture, and its energy.

This first collaboration with Haute École Albert Jacquard opens the door to new opportunities.

It reflects our commitment to building long-term international collaborations, offering students meaningful, hands-on experiences rooted in ambitious creative projects.