Protein folding and binding can be understood using energy landscape theory. When seeming deviations from the predictions of the funnel hypothesis are found, landscape theory helps us locate the cause. Sometimes the deviation reflects symmetry effects, allowing extra degeneracies to occur. Such effects seem to explain some kinetic anomalies in helical bundles. When binding processes were found to use apparently non-funneled landscapes this was traced to an inadequate understanding of biomolecular forces. The discrepancy allowed the discovery of new water-mediated forces - some of which act between hydrophilic residues. Introducing such forces into the algorithms greatly improves the quality of structure predictions.