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PC Gamer taking a jab at the industry
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Almost none of this is unique to the gaming industry; it's all symptoms of under-regulated capitalism.Yes, but the game industry has faced severe layoffs the last couple years while profits sour ever higher and higher and executives get bigger boats. So it's relevant.
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Sauce https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/foolproof-ways-to-get-laid-off-in-the-videogame-industry/PC Gamer usually posts good takes, shame about the comment section sometimes
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Yes, but the game industry has faced severe layoffs the last couple years while profits sour ever higher and higher and executives get bigger boats. So it's relevant.How is this not a symbol of under-regulated capitalism?
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It shouldn't be legal to report high earnings and lay off a large portion of your staff, that feels like something a poorly performing company would do
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It absolutely is. I'm not denying that.
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PC Gamer usually posts good takes, shame about the comment section sometimes
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I have no idea but if I had to guess, I'd say the audience of PC Gamer is PC gamers, and the average PC gamer fucking sucksThe average vocal PC gamer also tends to have the top of the line components, so I just tend to think it's not the gaming part that makes them assholes; it's being rich.
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I have no idea but if I had to guess, I'd say the audience of PC Gamer is PC gamers, and the average PC gamer fucking sucks
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Almost none of this is unique to the gaming industry; it's all symptoms of under-regulated capitalism.
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I have no idea but if I had to guess, I'd say the audience of PC Gamer is PC gamers, and the average PC gamer fucking sucksHank Green actually posted [a video relevant to this](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvtEINcqc6c) yesterday. He was reading a Fox News article about a machine that can turn C02 into fuel that an internal combustion engine can use. He then scrolled to the comments and saw all the posts talking about climate change being a hoax. He says it would be very easy to assume the average Fox News reader is a climate change denier. If you were to ask him how many people in the US deny climate change is real, he'd guess around 50%. However, surveys have consistently shown it is less than 10%. It is a minority of people. His point was that people leaving stupid comments are not the average person, they're just really vocal, and try not to assume stupid comments are reflective of the average person's beliefs.
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PC Gamer usually posts good takes, shame about the comment section sometimeshow i see it, pcgamer sometimes has high effort posts like this and other times has some really low effort posts, sometimes almost cyclical as they often use the same image pool over several topics (e.g its a meme that anything witcher related, pcgamer will use geralt in a tub as a header image) because of the less serious posts, it kinda blots out the more serious ones.
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Sauce https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/foolproof-ways-to-get-laid-off-in-the-videogame-industry/
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Hank Green actually posted [a video relevant to this](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvtEINcqc6c) yesterday. He was reading a Fox News article about a machine that can turn C02 into fuel that an internal combustion engine can use. He then scrolled to the comments and saw all the posts talking about climate change being a hoax. He says it would be very easy to assume the average Fox News reader is a climate change denier. If you were to ask him how many people in the US deny climate change is real, he'd guess around 50%. However, surveys have consistently shown it is less than 10%. It is a minority of people. His point was that people leaving stupid comments are not the average person, they're just really vocal, and try not to assume stupid comments are reflective of the average person's beliefs.
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Sauce https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/foolproof-ways-to-get-laid-off-in-the-videogame-industry/
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Unionization is also super uncommon at these game development companies. Would definitely help prevent layoffs. True for every industry again, but they are underrepresented here.
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Almost none of this is unique to the gaming industry; it's all symptoms of under-regulated capitalism.It's not unique but the games industry is worse than most. There's a natural cycle to the development of a video game that's very atypical for most software products, involving a long slow ramp up of workforce followed by (unless you've been very very careful) a total lack of anything productive for 95% of any of those people to do for the forseeable future. What to do? Toss 'em on the street, that's what to do. Then couple that with it being a glitzy career that will attract lots of replacements for any of the hapless people you fired, which also applies to any way you want to abuse your employees or underpay them, and you have a recipe for lots and lots of abuse.