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Haroon Thantrey

Haroon Thantrey

Codemasters (part of Electronic Arts)

Career Roadmap

Haroon's work combines: Music, Engineering, and Being Creative

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Day In The Life

Experienced Audio Designer

I am a sound designer for games, and I get to work on a variety of projects that need audio attention or support.

Skills & Education

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

    Fernwood School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Sound Technology

    Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts (LIPA)

Here's the path I recommend for someone who wants to be an Experienced Audio Designer:

Bachelor's Degree: Sound Technology

Learn more about different paths to this career

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life took a while to figure out

  • 1.

    Going to university was a big milestone. My mum didn't go, and my dad graduated at 60. I found that it was a big deal getting into LIPA.

  • 2.

    Getting in not only once, but twice was really an honor. Thousands of people apply, and getting in twice was a big milestone.

  • 3.

    My first game releasing was another one. I worked a bit freelance on Madden 17, so it was really cool when I saw it come out. Although I didn't work on it very long, only two-three weeks.

  • 4.

    I worked on Sniper Elite for a year, and it was my first game which I worked really hard on. It came out, and it was reviewed really well, getting nominations for awards.

  • 5.

    We released Dirt 5 in 2020 which got reviewed really well. I took charge in the audio. It was the most involved I've been in a project, and it was a lot of pressure with the new consoles and pandemic.

  • 6.

    Now, I've been nominated for an award in the London Games Festival Ensemble, which has all been very surreal. It'll be highlighted on a national stage, and it is definitely my biggest milestone.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Society in general:

    I applied to LIPA, a prestigious school, and everyone told me I would not get in. I was also diagnosed with dysgraphia at age 18 or 19. So I faced doubt from that, and it also ties with the systemic racism and doubt against South Asians in the UK.

  • How I responded:

    In school, I've lost a lot of marks because people did not know what I was writing, and the help I needed was being overlooked. However, I'm a very stubborn person. When I applied to LIPA a second time, me and my family worked on an appeal letter, and I got invited down to have a chat, and they let me back on. Overall, I've heard "no" so many times because of reasons like prejudice that it doesn't affect me much anymore. I eventually didn't care and kept proving these doubts wrong.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • I persevered a lot through school with the prejudices and doubts I faced. There was a lot of resilience involved, and applying and getting into LIPA twice was difficult. I just didn't care what they said and continued to prove their doubts wrong.

  • I have struggled with Dysgraphia my whole life and was only diagnosed at 18.