Christian Angermayer is a billionaire film producer, psychedelics mogul, and, perhaps soon, the brainchild of the latest crazy athletic competition to hit the mainstream: a literal Olympics on steroids.
From his London office, the Enhanced Games co-founder Angermayer is plotting to disrupt the world of Athletics, with the help of fellow billionaire Peter Thiel.
The Enhanced Games
The Enhanced Games is setting itself up as a rival to the Olympics with a twist. Athletes will be permitted to use select performance-enhancing drugs, including steroids, with the chance to earn a $1 million payday if they break “significant” world records.
Angermayer co-founded the Enhanced Games with Aron D’Souza, with the aim of safely introducing these drugs into high-level competition.
Notorious investor Thiel has been the poster boy for the games as an early backer. Three-time Olympic swimming medallist James Magnussen emerged in February as an athlete interested in competing in the games, with others allegedly in the pipeline.
The group is looking to raise $300 million for the games, with Angermayer saying he has courted sovereign wealth funds as part of this drive.
Who is Christian Angermayer?
Angermayer made his first millions by co-founding and selling the biotech firm Ribopharma with his professors at Germany’s University of Bayreuth.
Angermayer, who according to Forbes is worth $1.1 billion, now makes a lot of his cash trying to push the boundaries of perceived medical thinking.
Before steroids, he was an early backer of the psychedelics movement, founding atai Life Sciences in 2018, which is now valued at $244 million.
Angermayer’s first experience with magic mushrooms came when he took a yacht into legal waters with a group of friends.
“It was the single most meaningful thing I’ve ever done or experienced in my life,” he told Scientific American in 2019. “Nothing has ever come close to it.”
Angermayer told Sci Am that he didn’t touch alcohol for the first 30 years of his life, owing to a teenage fear that his brain cells would die if he drank or smoked.
He now says he will trip on mushrooms in a legal setting twice a year. His home is decorated in psilocybin mushroom sculptures as a hat-tip to this obsession while he has also forked out around $10 million for a collection of eight dinosaur eggs, including that of a Tyrannosaurus Rex, Bloomberg reported.
Angermayer’s combination of wealth and eccentricity means his fingerprints are found in unusual places. He is credited as a producer on several Hollywood movies, including Samuel L. Jackon’s Big Game and Filth, an adaptation of an Irvine Welsh book starring James McAvoy.