David Baszucki (born January 20, 1963), also known by his Roblox username builderman, or david.baszucki is a Canadian-born American entrepreneur, engineer, and software developer.
He is best known as the co-founder and CEO of Roblox Corporation.
Baszucki was born on January 20, 1963, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada to Helen and Paul Baszucki, who met at the University of Saskatchewan before moving to Eastern Canada and the United States.
Both of Baszucki's parents were descended from Ukrainian immigrants who had settled in Saskatchewan.
He grew up in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.
As a child, he was interested in dirt bikes, go-karts, and science fiction.
He attended Eden Prairie High School in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, where he was the captain of his high school TV quiz team.
1980
In the late 1980s, Baszucki, together with his brother Greg Baszucki, founded the company Knowledge Revolution and developed and distributed a simulation called "Interactive Physics", which was designed as an educational supplement that would allow the creation of 2D physics experiments.
1985
He graduated in 1985 as a General Motors Scholar in electrical engineering.
1990
As a follow-up to Interactive Physics, Knowledge Revolution launched the mechanical design software Working Model in the early 1990s.
1998
He previously co-founded and served as the CEO of Knowledge Revolution, which was acquired by MSC Software in December 1998.
In December 1998, Knowledge Revolution was acquired by MSC Software, a simulation software company based in Newport Beach, California, for $20 million.
2000
Baszucki was named vice president and general manager of MSC Software from 2000 to 2002, but he left to establish Baszucki & Associates, an angel investment firm.
2003
He later went on to host his own talk radio show for KSCO Radio Santa Cruz from February to July 2003.
Baszucki studied engineering and computer science at Stanford University.
While there, he did a summer internship at General Motors where he worked in a lab focused on controlling car engines with software.
Baszucki led Baszucki & Associates from 2003 to 2004.
While an investor, he provided seed funding to Friendster, a social networking service.
In December 2003, Baszucki, along with Erik Cassel – who worked as Baszucki's VP of Engineering for Interactive Physics – began working on an early prototype of Roblox under the working title DynaBlocks.
2004
It was later renamed Roblox, a portmanteau of "robots" and "blocks", in January 2004.
The website officially launched in 2004.
2016
In a June 2016 interview with Forbes, Baszucki stated that the idea for Roblox was inspired by the success of his Interactive Physics and Working Model software applications, especially among young students.
2020
Baszucki owns a roughly 13% stake in the Roblox Corporation, the company that owns Roblox, a stake estimated to be worth roughly $470 million as of 2020.
He said he would donate any future compensation he earns from Roblox's listing on the New York Stock Exchange for philanthropic purposes.
In December 2021, a New York Times investigation alleged that he and his relatives used a tax break intended for small business investors in order to legally avoid tens of millions of dollars in capital gains taxes.
According to Business Insider, Baszucki was the seventh-highest-paid CEO in 2021, making $232.8 million.
In March 2021, after Roblox's listing on the New York Stock Exchange, Baszucki and his wife launched the Baszucki Group, a philanthropic organisation, and started the Baszucki Brain Research Fund to provide grants to bipolar research programs.
In December 2021, the University of California, San Francisco launched the Baszucki Lymphoma Therapeutics Initiative, with $6 million in donations from Baszucki over five years, to increase the effectiveness and availability of chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy for lymphoma patients.
In September 2022, Baszucki, Google cofounder Sergey Brin, and Keystone Capital chairman Kent Dauten donated a combined $150 million toward bipolar disorder research and treatment.
Baszucki lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife, novelist Jan Ellison, and their four children.