
Video Game Degree: What are your Job Options?
If you're considering obtaining a video game degree, you may be wondering what your job options might be upon
graduation. Below is a list of some of the careers available for those with a video game degree.
1) Video Game Tester
This is a position in which you truly would get paid for playing video games. According to Doug Doine, a game
tester for Electronic Arts, as a game tester you would "go over different components of a game and look for things
that just don't make sense." You would also "break the game," meaning you would "do things a normal user would do
and inadvertently see something go wrong."
Doug Doine further adds that video game testing is a good place to start for young people who want to "break
into the industry." To get such a position in it is best to have a "passion for gaming" and some educational
background. Doug himself has a degree.
2) Programmer
According to Gameinformer Magazine, video game programmers are the "heart and soul" of the industry. They are
the ones responsible for creating the code necessary for getting video games to function. And contrary to popular
belief, their jobs aren't always easy. Video game programming often involves creating complex functions and
algorithms often times more challenging than programs created in Corporate America. Thus a talent for mathematics
along with a more analytically-inclined brain are absolute essentials.
Indeed, game programming may not be the appropriate course for everyone seeking a video game career, but if you
were deciding to go into the computer field anyway, which job would be more enjoyable... coding the next Halo, or
working on a boring, hum-drum piece of no-name software?
3) Animator
For a job as an animator for video games, you might want to obtain a video game degree or an animation degree,
which would also aid you in obtaining jobs in other facets of computer animation. Animators are responsible for
coordinating the movement of video game characters. Accomplishing requires more than drawing something on a piece
of paper, which according to Alex Drouin, an established game animator, occurs after a lot of "brainstorming,
chilling, playing, planning and testing" with the programmer. But when the busy work is done, the video game
animator will finally get a chance to do what he or she does best... animate. Alex Drouin says the thing he liked
best about his job was "being able to come |there| late in the morning, sit behind |his| computer, put on a great
CD, and then create crazy animation that will end up in a game that will be seen all around the world by
gamers."
4) Sound Designer
Sound designers are responsible for creating the music and sound effects of video games. Video game music is
created either from digital sources or real-life orchestration. As video game consoles become more advanced, many
sound designers favor the latter when deciding on what type of music they want in the games they are working on.
Creating appropriate sound effects, on the other hand, sometimes requires more creative experimentation.
To be successful at video game sound designing it is best to: 1) have an interest in both music and sound, 2)
possess knowledge of recording technology and 3) be familiar with the types of music and sound used in today's most
popular video games. A video game degree will help develop these talents and skills.
5) Producer
According to Gameinformer Magazine, a producer "functions as the glue that holds a development team together,
seeing to a variety of organizational tasks ranging from budgeting and planning to input on the direction of the
game itself."
A good producer must possess superior management and accounting skills. This is because not only does a producer
have to work with people on a regular basis trying to get them to meet deadlines, but they are also responsible for
the budget of the video game project. Not knowing how to best spend money, (a skill acquired through accounting and
economics), could result in financial failure.
Indeed, producers have a lot on their shoulders, but it is still a suitable option for non-technical persons who
desire to get into the game industry.
6) Game Designer
Video game designers are responsible for creating the 'experience' of a particular game. Evan Wells, a video
game designer, sums it up by saying "the main tasks of the designer is to make sure the game is fun."
Wells further adds that game designers are responsible for macro and micro level design. Macro level design
involves "figuring out the core mechanics of the game; the variety of level looks, power-ups, etc." Micro-design
involves creating the "actual levels and the moment-to-moment gameplay within those levels... the enemies, the
objects, and the particular way you encounter those enemies and objects."
Good game designers should obviously have an interest in video games along with some drawing and programming
skills.
7) PR Manager
If you would like to explore the marketing side of the video game industry, then consider becoming a PR manager.
PR managers are responsible for promoting video games. And according to Natalie Salmon, a PR manager for Midway,
part of this process involves "learning about the game that is going to be announced." So this boils down at some
point having to play the video game. Isn't that what you wanted to do anyway?
8) Fields not relating to video
games
Each of the career paths discussed above are fields that are not limited to the video game industry. If you
decide that you don't want to use your video game degree to find a job related to video games, you can always use
it to market yourself for other types of jobs. Of course, you may want to take a class or two to get a
certification to help further establish yourself in the latest technology, but this is recommended for anyone
pursuing an IT career. Bottom line, a video game degree, (just like any other computer-related degree), WILL lay
the foundation you need to teach you the basics for programming, testing, animation, software development and other
skills that are pertinent to the business world.
Synonyms: Degrea, deglee, deglea, degre, deger, degere, dergee, dgeree, edgree, ddegree, deeegree,
deggree, and degrree are all typos for degree.
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