Gen Z CEO has turned filing taxes into a fun Pokmon battle

A twenty-something has turned tax season into a Pokémon-style boss battle.PokéTax, released just in time for the April filing deadline, is a free, online, open-source game that you can use to file your taxes.

It’s the creation of Pryce Adade-Yebesi, the 24-year-old co-founder and CEO of the AI-driven fintech startup Open Ledger.“It’s like a joke that’s not a joke,” Adade-Yebesi told NYNext.While TurboTax has users tediously inputting income, credits, deductions and the like, PokéTax reframes the process as successive battles against “Tax Trainers.”Players advance through the game by answering tax-related questions — “How much did you receive from pensions and annuities?” and “How much did you receive in unemployment compensation?” — posed by the trainers.Answers are organized by the game’s built-in AI assistant.Along the way, players can pick up deductions in the form of shimmering “Gym Badges.”When the final battle ends, the player is left with a completed return that they can review and file.

Though still in beta, the game is live and functional and more than 5,000 users have visited the site.Adade-Yebesi wouldn’t say how many have actually filed returns using the game.He and his six-person team built the game in about three weekends — mostly outside of work hours.“We’ve got a core accounting company to run here, we can’t play Pokémon all the time,” the Washington University dropout said.

For the most part, he said, developers had no qualms coming in on Sundays to “jam on [the project].”Most of them are fans of the Japanese game.“We’re a bunch of nerds here,” Adade-Yebesi said.

But Pokètax was more than an excuse to revel in nostalgia — it was an opportunity to showcase the work Open Ledger was built to do.Much like Stripe simplifies online payments, Open Ledger provides the building blocks for businesses to create customized accounting tools that automate bookkeeping, filing taxes and creating fina...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles