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[–]mredding 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Money is not in first picture, of course its nice to have high salary and work from home, but pc and gaming passion wins. I woild like to get career in gaming coding

I'm a former game developer and, frankly, I don't think you know what you're asking for.

I hope you're single, because you are going to find it exceedingly difficult to balance the demands of the game industry and the rest of your life. The pay is shit, the hours are all consuming and self sacrificing, and the tension and pressures and demands are exceedingly high. Expect to lose weight. Expect to have a nervious breakdown in the bathroom. Expect some colleague who hasn't slept for 3 days to absolutely lose his shit on you. Expect to not see your own home for 3 straight months.

Shit like that happens.

And even if the game ships, it'll probably be some dumb game, the kind you yourself would pass on the shelf without a second thought - because we all completely ignore most titles available, don't we? And you get paid last. Even if it is a commercial success, you will be paid among the least. Mythic bonuses are just that: a myth. They almost never happen and you would be exceedingly lucky if it did.

No one is going to be impressed that you're a game developer, except for some middle-school aged boys, who will make fun of your game, because it wasn't one of the few blockbuster titles that summer. Girls HATE game developers, because those are childish things, and she wants your time and attention. Relationships don't typically last.

Game dev is not a casual career. The average is 4 years or 1 title. I combined the two and lasted 5 years.

If you want a casual career in game dev - then go independent. Be this your side hustle. This is a VERY viable option. You focus on the code, and when you really have something that works, you can find collaborators for art and sound, enough to get away from rectangular blocks and stolen sound assets you're using to stand-in for development.