It is ironic, then, that no one in the competitive Madden sphere saw him coming.
Johnson rose from irrelevance to prominence overnight, qualifying for the Madden NFL 20 Challenge and winning the whole thing in 2020 at just 17 years old. Johnson toppled two elite players — Wesley Gittens and Dwayne “Cleff The God” Wood — on his way to his first belt, a triumph that stunned the Madden world.
“We thought it was a fluke,” Wood told me. “We’re like, ‘Man, it’s just a one-hit wonder. He’ll never be back to this point.’ Because nobody knew who he was.”
They soon learned. So did the collegiate esports community; in 2021, the player known as NoahUpNxt took home a national title as a representative of West Virginia University.
No one disputes Johnson’s legitimacy anymore. The only question that remains is: How much higher he can climb as an esports star?
Send this to anyone who told you video games won’t get you anywhere. 😏
Was awesome seeing @noahupnxt recognized as last year’s #LevelNextMadden national champion at today’s @WVUfootball game against Towson! 🏆🤩 pic.twitter.com/9kxbyK3Af7
— WVU Esports (@WVUEsports) September 17, 2022
‘They thought it was a scam’
“He would call me down in the middle of the night because he’d be playing at 2, 3 in the morning, because everyone else is asleep in the house and he’s playing,” Johnson recalled. “He’d come down and be like, ‘I’m losing to this guy, you gotta come help me beat him!’ So he’d wake me up in the middle of the night when I’m in fifth, sixth grade, and I’d be like, ‘Dad, I got school at 7 in the morning, I gotta wake up!’
“He’d wake me up, I’d beat (the online opponent), and then he’s like, ‘All right — don’t tell your mom.’ “
The bond shared between father and son birthed a passion for competition both in the virtual and real worlds. Johnson played multiple sports growing up as one of three siblings in Ellicott City, Maryland, and he spent his younger years chasing a dream of becoming a professional baseball player. On the diamond, he learned just how badly he wanted to win.
That same competitive fire can be seen in every Madden game Johnson plays. Many players talk to some degree during their Madden games, but few are as boisterous as Johnson was in his earlier years of esports. Johnson established his presence on the Madden scene by both winning and shouting at the television screen, using catchphrases like, “Go get seven,” and, “One stop,” in key moments. His youth was impossible to hide, thanks to his floppy, blond hair and boyish face, but according to Rob, his son was well-prepared for the moment.
“We went to an underground tournament in Pennsylvania,” the elder Johnson told me. “Noah’s 13, a chubby little kid, and he’s playing against 20-, 25-year-old guys, and he would just start talking trash. I knew at that point, there’s something about him. He’s so determined.
… “His voice hadn’t even really changed yet. … (but) here’s this little kid, talking trash!”
Since then, he’s grown up a bit. He is a college student now, after all.
“I don’t scream too much (anymore),” Johnson said with a smile. “I go through the YouTube comments, and it’s like, ‘Why is this guy always screaming?’ I still like to scream a little bit, but younger Noah liked to scream a lot.
“I like doing it too because it gets in a lot of people’s heads. If the guy next to you is just yelling the whole time, you’re like, ‘Why is this guy yelling?’ Then you’re not focused on the game, you’re focused on me, so I feel like that’s another advantage I can have on you. It’s kind of like a mental thing, get the other person out of their game.”
Johnson spent his formative years just minutes outside the city limits of Baltimore, but don’t presume he’s a Ravens fan. Johnson is a diehard backer of all things Philadelphia, thanks to his neighbors, who handed down team gear to Johnson and guided him on his path to becoming a fanatic. The support remains visible in Johnson’s attire: He wore an Eagles jersey for his maiden title belt victory and sported an Eagles hoodie during his interview with me in October.
His favorite Eagles memory wasn’t their first Super Bowl triumph at the end of the 2017 season, but their shocking 2010 victory over the Giants in East Rutherford, New Jersey, a game forever known as the Miracle at the New Meadowlands, in which DeSean Jackson — one of Johnson’s all-time favorites — returned a punt for a walk-off touchdown.
This is where Johnson’s preferences differ from those of his father, whom Johnson says is more of a fan of players — Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady, specifically — than teams. It’s not the only topic on which they didn’t see eye to eye, at least not initially.
When Johnson began playing Madden competitively, Rob and Shelley, Johnson’s mother, were unaware of the potential it carried. And when Johnson qualified for his first live event, the Madden 20 Challenge, they didn’t take the opportunity seriously, either.
After all, what company flies out teenagers to play video games for money?
“They thought it was a scam,” Johnson said of his parents. “They were like, ‘Man, no company is doing that!’ I’m like, ‘EA is one of the biggest gaming companies in the world. It’s not a scam, I promise you!’
“Me and my dad went because I wasn’t 18 and so you go with a guardian. It obviously wasn’t a scam and they saw, ‘OK, you can make some money playing these games? All right, that’s pretty cool. Yeah, you can keep on pursuing it.’ “
That’s exactly what Johnson did, taking home a coveted Madden title belt by defeating the established veteran Wood in the Madden 20 Challenge final. The triumph was a stunning result that not only netted Johnson $35,000, but also launched his competitive Madden career to heights even he likely didn’t imagine were possible just a few years earlier.
“It all turned out to be legit,” Rob Johnson said. “I thought we’d be flying on some strange airline that didn’t exist, because how is a 16-year-old kid going to go there and do this? But it all worked out. It’s been incredible for him.”