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We can thank a Jim Henson Company puppeteer for some of Valve's best animation work

While Deadlock’s sort-of-launch last year was proof that Valve does, in fact, still make videogames, its immaculate vibes served as a different sort of reminder: That the studio remains among the best in the business of characterful animation. From Meet the Heavy’s moments of tender minigun affection to the cyclopean gesticulation of Portal 2’s Wheatley, Valve’s artists and animators are masters at the subtle craft of imbuing even virtual and inhuman characters with humanity.

Which is why it felt fitting to learn that Valve’s house style has Muppet DNA in the mix, thanks to a Jim Henson Company puppeteer that helped the studio bring its characters to life.

(Image credit: Valve)

I learned about Valve’s rainbow connection while doing a regular reappraisal of the studio’s lore, as all professional writers on the PC games beat are dutybound to perform. In Geoff Keighley’s The Final Hours of Portal 2, an interactive book about the project’s closing stages and its developers that was originally released for the iPad in 2011, there’s a moment where the nascent Game Awards magnate mentions the presence of “the puppeteer who played the character of Red Fraggle on the 1980s television show Fraggle Rock.”

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