The name of the business is ZebraFox Games. Itโs a simple pairing of the nicknames of its co-creatorsโtwo men who are not as different from one another as are their animal soubriquets. In fact, long before they began creating childrenโs books and games together, David (Zebra) and Russell (Fox) Dorn were just twin brothers who shared a love for scary stories.
โWeโve always loved the horror genre,โ Russell said. โWe liked animated shows when we were kids. We liked Aaahh!!! Real Monsters, Beetlejuiceโโ
โMysteries, Scooby Doo, a lot of Tim Burtonโs early work as well,โ David added.
As children, the brothers also shared a passion for drawing. And this pastime served as an introduction to the kind of work they do now.
โWe used to spend our weekends making knock-off Pokรฉmon cards,โ David recalled. โWe called it Dokรฉmon, because our last name is Dorn, with a D.โ
During their teenage years, David and Russell tried their hand at filmmakingโin the horror genre, of course. But eventually, their interests began to diverge. While David remained a steadfast visual artist, Russell moved into writing.
โIn late high school, I got into poetry, just to express myself,โ Russell said. โI kind of wantedโas a twinโto set myself apart. So I started going toward the poetry way, and that led into prose eventually, later in college.โ
At the University of Nevada, Reno, Russell pursued a degree in psychology and continued his writing on the side. David studied digital media and began focusing his time on game design. The pairโs work together was put on hold for several years. But when David decided to leave his job designing games for a slot machine company to teach English in South Korea a few years ago, he and Russell saw an opportunity to begin collaborating again.
ZebraFox Games was born.
Fun and games
Russell and David designed their new venture to play to the strengths they developed independently, but the spirit of ZebraFox Games is rooted in their mutual appreciation for all things scary. With Russell providing the stories and David the illustrations, they hope to pass that fondness on to todayโs kids.
There are five Felipe Femur books and a new one in the works.
PHOTO/Courtesy of ZEBRAFOX GAMES

โWe decided to team up to make games, and so we wanted to do games that were more like educational,โ David said.
โ[It was] right before David was going to South Korea to teach,โ Russell explained. โSo, yeah, we wanted to do something that maybe he could use. I mean, he didnโt end up using it, I donโt believe, but we wanted to focus on kids that way. We really fell in love with the horror-comedy genre โฆ So we wanted to make that [palatable] for children, tone it down, make it not scary but use the theme of Halloween, monstersโclassic monsters.โ
The first monster they came up with was Felipe Femurโa skeleton in a sombrero, whoโs the star of several of the brothersโ games and is also featured in the books theyโve branched out into.
โOnce we had Felipe, the skeleton, we thought, โWhat other classic horror monsters are there?โโ David said. โSo we made a list of them, like werewolves, vampires, witchesโand then just decided to make different characters based on those, but theyโre all kind of ironic in some way.โ
Felipeโs cohort of ghoulish friends includes Gummy, a toothless werewolf; Sunny, a sun-loving vampire; and Runny, a witch who is perpetually sick. Itโs a cast of characters whose quirks are absurdly sweetโand made all the more endearing by how ludicrously adorable they look. The illustration is something, David said, that took a lot of work.
โThe first drafts of what they looked like were more human-like,โ he said. โIt was not as cute. It was kind of creepy, so we tried to make it more cute as we went on. So this is like the third draft of what [Felipe] looks like, and it finally stuck.โ
The brothers have created five Felipe Femur books in total. They also have two young adult books, a handful of other books and almost a dozen games. The games are free to download in the GooglePlay store, and the books are regularly offered for free during promotional weeks on Amazon. On the Felipe Femur website, thereโs a host of related content, including printable coloring pages and instructions for crafting projects.
David recently returned home from South Korea, and the brothers are busy working on new material, including an upcoming Felipe Femur: Choice Adventures book (think Choose Your Own Adventure for little kids), YouTube content and new games.
โWe even have a new [character]โFrankenstein, but like the monster,โ David said. โHeโs actually the coach of the school, but on his mug itโs going to say โNumber one coach.โ And it says, โp.s., not a doctor.โโ
โEverybody confuses itโin realityโthinking that the monster was Frankenstein, when it was the doctor, so in this world everybodyโs thinking heโs the doctor,โ Russell added.
With so many winning characters rooted in the monsters they loved as kids, one has to wonder if the brothers have arrived at favorites of their own.
For David, the answer was easyโGummy, the werewolf. Russell was not so forthcoming.
โI donโt play favorites,โ he said. โBut if I had to say, Iโd say either Felipe Femur, because heโs the original, or Joe Miller, the average down-to-earth-guy, whoโs totally not an alien.
