
The Trailhead Philosopher C. Thi Nguyen on Why Ultrarunning Is a Game, and Maybe the Meaning of Life
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Mar 17, 2026 C. Thi Nguyen, philosopher and author of The Score, explores games as art and agency. He discusses ultrarunning as a deep-form game, how scoring systems like Strava reshape desires, and when tech or rules enhance versus capture value. Short, lively takes on cheating, tool use, fishing, and why clear metrics both motivate and mislead.
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Value Lives In Efficient Struggle Inside Inefficiency
- Games create 'constitutive inefficiencies' where you must be efficient inside an inefficient constraint, and the value lies in that process.
- This explains why races or routes matter: they turn ordinary travel into a domain for skill, attention, and meaning.
Climber Pulled Gear Then Admitted He Lied
- Brendan recounts a trad climbing roof where a mentor 'pulled on a piece of gear' to get through a move and later joked 'there's no cheating, only lying'.
- Nguyen contrasts cheating with honest modification: skipping a move for beauty is fine if you don't misrepresent it.
Tech Choices Sculpt The Kind Of Skill Displayed
- Equipment rules aren't arbitrary; designers choose constraints to unlock different kinds of movement and experience.
- Downturned climbing shoes and carbon plates increase the resolution of human skill, opening new, more interesting possibilities.





