
The gameplay itself will be familiarly frustrating to QWOP veterans, as the slightest misstep causes CLOP to either fall to his horn or flip wildly onto his back. Foddy’s latest game, CLOP, emulates that same feeling of despair in a somewhat different setting.ĬLOP sees players taking control of a unicorn, with each leg mapped to one of the H, J, K and L keys. “Control” here is used in the loosest possible sense, as most players’ attempts ended with the runner being catapulted upside-down in a cascade of flailing limbs. And so begins the epic tale of one man, his unicorn, and an insurmountable hill.įour years go, Oxford University philosopher Bennett Foddy developed flash game QWOP, an exercise in videogame griefing in which players attempt to control a sprinter in a 100m race by moving individual leg muscles.
