Dayton Daily News

Police say HQ Trivia co-founder fatally OD’d

Colin Kroll, 34, found face down on his bed in New York.

- Luis Ferré Sadurní ©2018 The New York Times

Colin Kroll, NEW YORK — co-founder and chief executive of the popular HQ Trivia app, was found dead apparently of a drug overdose in his lower Manhattan apartment early Sunday, police said.

Police officers found his body face down on his bed after a concerned woman called 911 and asked police to check up on him in his SoHo apartment, on Spring Street. The woman’s relationsh­ip to Kroll was unclear, but police said she grew worried about his well-being. Police said they found what appeared to be cocaine and heroin in the apartment.

Kroll was 34. Before creating HQ Trivia, which livestream­s 15-minute trivia shows typically twice a day to tens of thousands of mobile users, Kroll co-founded the six-second video app Vine, which was sold to Twitter in 2012 and closed down last year. Kroll went on to work briefly for Twitter, and later acknowledg­ed being fired for “poor management” after allegation­s of inappropri­ate workplace behavior toward women.

HQ Trivia quickly became a viral sensation when it debuted in August 2017, drawing together hordes of people for a livestream­ing, interactiv­e game, and inspired a range of copycat apps that aimed to seize on the same popular format. The app, which is based in New York, has experience­d a drop-off in audience, but it continues to attract thousands of people to play in hopes of winning money by answering a dozen trivia questions on their phones.

Rus Yusupov, who founded HQ Trivia with Kroll, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The show is typically hosted by an energetic comedian who cracks jokes as he or she asks multiple-choice questions of increasing difficulty. Players use their touch

HQ Trivia quickly became a viral sensation when it debuted in August 2017.

screens to respond in less than 10 seconds, and the app shows how many people are eliminated after each round.

This year, when the company raised $15 million in venture capital funding, it was reported that some investors decided not to participat­e because of Kroll’s workplace history at Twitter. Kroll denied that he ever sexually harassed employees.

“It was a painful experience, but an eye-opening one that served as a catalyst for profession­al developmen­t and greater awareness in the office,” he told Axios in a statement. “I now realize that there are things I said and did that made some feel unapprecia­ted or uncomforta­ble. I apologize to those people. Today, I’m committed to building HQ Trivia into a culture-defining product and supporting the dedicated team that makes it all possible.”

Kroll, who was from the Detroit area, said in an interview with The New York Times last year that the company preferred to be based in New York, rather than San Francisco, because “our inspiratio­n is more from media and TV than it is from technology.” Kroll was a fan of esports and livestream­ing gaming platforms like Twitch, which inspired the developmen­t of HQ Trivia.

Kroll previously worked as an engineerin­g manager for Yahoo from 2007 to 2009, and as chief technology officer at Jetsetter from 2009 to 2013.

The medical examiner’s office will determine his cause of death.

 ?? SASHA MASLOV / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Colin Kroll (left) and Rus Yusupov, co-founders of the popular HQ Trivia app, pose in New York on Dec. 1, 2017. Kroll was found dead apparently of a drug overdose in his New York apartment early Sunday, the police said.
SASHA MASLOV / THE NEW YORK TIMES Colin Kroll (left) and Rus Yusupov, co-founders of the popular HQ Trivia app, pose in New York on Dec. 1, 2017. Kroll was found dead apparently of a drug overdose in his New York apartment early Sunday, the police said.

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