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Andrew
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If I've got this right Andrew you've changed from a degree in civil engineering (in Manchester?) to a degree in computer game design at Preston? Got to be honest here, that doesn't sound like a great career move to me. Fair enough you may enjoy it more, but in three years time you run the risk of being seriously in debt with a degree many employers will not take seriously (rightly or wrongly).

 

It sounds to me you've taken a soft option where something more vocational, like, erm, civil engineering, might benefit you more in the long term. Hopefully I'm talking bollocks like.

 

On a wider note, I genuinely feel sorry for graduates this year. Prospects have never been bleaker.

 

I didn't exactly have a choice on that one like

 

also this "soft option" opinion is a right load as those whos done any software engineering/programming will testify especially to the level of current games being put out there

 

I realise it wasn't a voluntary switch but it's a bit of an odd one nonetheless, I can't see how the two subjects (engineering/computer game design) relate to each other. It might not be a soft option but that's how it might be perceived. Probably already been mentioned on this thread, but if you are genuinely interested in game design you really need to know how the large software houses would view this type of degree, I just have the feeling they may be skeptical and can vaguely remember some bad press about these degrees. I'd imagine the field is ultra-competitive too, so if you're not really interested or doubt your ability I'd strongly urge you to rethink.

 

Anyway, enough of me lecturing, hope it all goes well whatever you do. It used to be so much easier, pick a degree and jobs opened up to you regardless of what it was in. It's much more difficult now with so much competition and added to that you've got to contend with student loans. :rolleyes:

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If I've got this right Andrew you've changed from a degree in civil engineering (in Manchester?) to a degree in computer game design at Preston? Got to be honest here, that doesn't sound like a great career move to me. Fair enough you may enjoy it more, but in three years time you run the risk of being seriously in debt with a degree many employers will not take seriously (rightly or wrongly).

 

It sounds to me you've taken a soft option where something more vocational, like, erm, civil engineering, might benefit you more in the long term. Hopefully I'm talking bollocks like.

 

On a wider note, I genuinely feel sorry for graduates this year. Prospects have never been bleaker.

 

I didn't exactly have a choice on that one like

 

also this "soft option" opinion is a right load as those whos done any software engineering/programming will testify especially to the level of current games being put out there

 

I realise it wasn't a voluntary switch but it's a bit of an odd one nonetheless, I can't see how the two subjects (engineering/computer game design) relate to each other. It might not be a soft option but that's how it might be perceived. Probably already been mentioned on this thread, but if you are genuinely interested in game design you really need to know how the large software houses would view this type of degree, I just have the feeling they may be skeptical and can vaguely remember some bad press about these degrees. I'd imagine the field is ultra-competitive too, so if you're not really interested or doubt your ability I'd strongly urge you to rethink.

 

Anyway, enough of me lecturing, hope it all goes well whatever you do. It used to be so much easier, pick a degree and jobs opened up to you regardless of what it was in. It's much more difficult now with so much competition and added to that you've got to contend with student loans. :rolleyes:

 

tbh since I was doing my GCSEs everyone has told me i'd be great at engineering but that hasn't worked out

 

this decision is all me, something I've wanted to do my whole life so i'm going for it

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Go for it Andrew, passion and strong interest in something can take you a very long way.

 

Video games is a larger industry than movies now and I don't see that changing.

 

Consider how things have progressed in the last 20 years, when you graduate we may be playing online VR games and, sooner or later, people will start shagging over the internet. So make sure you do a module on realistic vaginas. :rolleyes:

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Go for it Andrew, passion and strong interest in something can take you a very long way.

 

Video games is a larger industry than movies now and I don't see that changing.

 

Consider how things have progressed in the last 20 years, when you graduate we may be playing online VR games and, sooner or later, people will start shagging over the internet. So make sure you do a module on realistic vaginas. :rolleyes:

 

It really isnt. Apart from a recent revival videogames have been in decline since the mid 90s

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Go for it Andrew, passion and strong interest in something can take you a very long way.

 

Video games is a larger industry than movies now and I don't see that changing.

 

Consider how things have progressed in the last 20 years, when you graduate we may be playing online VR games and, sooner or later, people will start shagging over the internet. So make sure you do a module on realistic vaginas. :rolleyes:

 

It really isnt. Apart from a recent revival videogames have been in decline since the mid 90s

 

Actually it's twice as big.

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Video-Game Sales Plunge to Nine-Year Low

 

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2350390,00.asp

 

Gameboy (1989) - 118million sales

 

Playstation (1994) - 102million sales

 

Playstation 2 (2000)- 140million sales

 

Xbox 360 (2005) - 30million sales

 

PS3 (2006) - 22million sales

Edited by Kid Dynamite
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this decision is all me, something I've wanted to do my whole life so i'm going for it

 

Good for you, get stuck in and give it a go. Hope it works out for you.

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Well unfortunately im a cunt! You may as well do america studies at sunderland uni!
:rolleyes: hit me where it hurts.

 

Each to their own Andrew, Im not sure that picking a course cos its easy is the way to go like. Are you having to shell out 3 years tuition fees for it too? Honest question, are there many prospects for computer game designers these days? Id have thought it was a pretty specialist job and there wouldnt be a particularly high turnover?

Should have done an English degree so he could become a nurse eh? <_<

 

Yeah cos English gets you a job in nowt. Teaching, Journalism, EFL just off the top of my head :)

So that's teaching, journalism and teaching again? And given decent jobs in journalism are rarer than hen's teeth, not to mention the pay not being great and a journalism qualification being preferable, plus the fact you'd need an extra qualification to become a teacher you've got an idea of how useful an English degree is. I should know, I've got one.

The main point is though Andrew is obviously delighted to have gotten on this course and all the likes of you and knicker-sniffer want to do is piss on his chips. Says it all tbh. :icon_lol:

Not really. This is a course specifically suited to an industry so American Studies is a ridiculous comparison. You are a cunt though. :razz:

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If i had my time again, i'd do a degree in Jingle Writing.

:rolleyes:

 

The biggest mistake of my entire life was not going to that RADA audition after memorising all the Shakespeare and shit. :)

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If i had my time again, i'd do a degree in Jingle Writing.

:)

 

The biggest mistake of my entire life was not going to that RADA audition after memorising all the Shakespeare and shit. <_<

 

Is this about you Parky :rolleyes: ?

 

withnail03_000.jpg

 

It all makes sense now......

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Video-Game Sales Plunge to Nine-Year Low

 

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2350390,00.asp

 

Gameboy (1989) - 118million sales

 

Playstation (1994) - 102million sales

 

Playstation 2 (2000)- 140million sales

 

Xbox 360 (2005) - 30million sales

 

PS3 (2006) - 22million sales

 

Surely a better indicator of the health of the computer games industry would be sales of games not consoles?

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The video games industry is massive and here to stay. What's more is that huge teams of developers are now required as anyone who has watched the credits after finishing a game will know. A far cry from the bedroom developers of the 1980s. Whether a degree specifically geared to suit the industry is useful is another matter though.

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The video games industry is massive and here to stay. What's more is that huge teams of developers are now required as anyone who has watched the credits after finishing a game will know. A far cry from the bedroom developers of the 1980s. Whether a degree specifically geared to suit the industry is useful is another matter though.

 

 

The current model (or at least the model of the last few years) is unsustainable.

 

The rate budgets are doubling at it'll be cheaper to actually send someone to Mars than to make a game about it. :rolleyes:

 

 

 

 

Having said that potentially other options are opening.

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