25 years old · Budapest, Hungary
I'm a full-stack developer at MTVA, though I rarely stop at the code. I take each project from the first prototype all the way to the servers it runs on. My team lead calls me a one-man army, and that kind of end-to-end ownership is how I work best: full control over a project, and the freedom to choose the tool that fits rather than the one I already know.
My interest in programming started before secondary school. I took on an admin role on a game server where the community plugins kept breaking. Rather than wait for someone else to fix them, I dug into the code myself: I read other developers' SourcePawn, learned from it, and refined things through trial and forum threads until everything ran the way it should.
By the time I finished school I was taking on paid commissions alongside a steady stream of open-source work. Around five years and roughly 500 freelance projects later, I joined MTVA, worked my way up, and now mentor both junior and senior colleagues. I went back to university along the way, where I'm doing well. These days my evenings belong to reverse engineering.
What drives me most is building software people genuinely rely on, whether open-source or in production, ideally something with lasting value. I'm proudest of the messages I get almost every day thanking me for my open-source work, sometimes from developers whose own projects I look up to. It means a lot that colleagues and clients come to me when something needs to be done right.
I handle every project end to end: architecture, code, tests, deployment, and the servers beneath it. That ownership lets me design the cleanest path from specification to release. It works solo, and in a senior role I just as happily mentor junior and senior colleagues and design things together.
I work iteratively: a quick prototype to validate the idea, a proper test-driven implementation, then as many UI iterations as it takes to get it right.
My broad stack is a deliberate choice. For each project I select the technology that fits best, rather than forcing one I already know.
With music or a background video playing and distractions removed, I'm most productive in my own environment at home, where I can concentrate on a problem for hours.
I keep pace with the leading models and bring them into my work with intent, so what I ship comes out better. I write my own agents and MCP servers to automate the repetitive parts and speed up research, which lets me move faster across several projects at once. AI is the tool; the engineering and the decisions stay mine.
I don't just ship code. I take the time to understand how the organisation works and aim each solution at the problem that carries the most real value, not the one that is merely the most interesting technically.
MTVA - Médiaszolgáltatás-támogató és Vagyonkezelő Alap
I am the sole developer on every project I handle at MTVA, where my team lead refers to me as a one-man army. The systems I build serve roughly 5,000 employees, each one designed to streamline the work of a specific department. To date I have delivered the web layer of the building access-control system, a fleet-management application, a complete conflict-of-interest declaration workflow, a taxi dispatch tool, and a license-management platform. I also operate the entire server ecosystem, from provisioning to DevOps.
Modder Communities
Around eight years building for Source Engine communities, from CS:GO to CS2. A large share of the game's servers run at least one of my plugins, and a good chunk of the community's core tooling started with me. This is where my low-level instincts, and my love of taking things apart, come from.
Kodolányi János University
Engineering informatics at Kodolányi János University, a strongly practice-oriented program. Two-thirds of the coursework is hands-on, students work on real corporate problems from the first semester, and the curriculum is developed together with IT companies.
BMSZC Neumann János IT Technical School
Software development, networking and media fundamentals at BMSZC Neumann János IT Technical School. This was the groundwork everything else was built on.
Away from the screen: gaming when something worthwhile comes along, and riding my motorcycle.