Submitted by No-Drawing-6975 t3_zx9yji in technology
CaterpillarReal7583 t1_j1zua9f wrote
Reply to comment by Svoboda1 in Activision's Boston studio workers announce unionization by No-Drawing-6975
Last I heard they were skirting around laws by making them employees report all their work and firing the ‘low performers’ or something like that - basically just slowly ridding the company of union employees under the guise of performance reviews.
This is my best recollection of a tweet from a employee months back. Not 100% sure the details, could be confusing it with another company’s bullshit but know they were getting unusually strict to have a reason to fire that wasnt union related.
ComfortableProperty9 t1_j23vjao wrote
My 11 year old wants more than anything to be a video game programmer and stuff like this kills me. The kid is BRILLIANT to the point where we can't take him to coding camps and events locally because his skill level put him in the class with the high school kids and he is no where near emotionally mature enough for that (did I mention he was a programmer?)
I just really hope the union thing catches on by the time he is ready to start looking for a job because I've worked with people who worked at big studios and none of them have good things to say about their time there.
CaterpillarReal7583 t1_j24ao2b wrote
I work in games. Ive avoided specific companies and had a great career so far. For the last maybe 15 years the games industry has pushed against crunch and bro culture. The places that are famous for crunch are even relaxing because devs realized they have high paying options that don’t require it.
There are a number of big name studios that operate with compassion, at least toward their employees. (Did you know that EA is actually not a horrible place to work? Ive never worked there but have worked with plenty of people who have in the socal office) theres an insane amount of small to medium sized studios that are amazing places to work though.
Your son, with a little luck at the start and practice will make 6 figures easily as a programmer early in his career. Engineers make a lot and are always needed. The biggest hurdle is breaking into the industry.
The industry is changing for the better. I wouldn’t worry too much. Hopefully unions will come back in all industries - but so far for me Ive managed to do very well even with out them (but would join one in a heartbeat).
tickleMyBigPoop t1_j24jbqh wrote
> My 11 year old wants more than anything to be a video game programmer and stuff like this kills me.
bruh, tell him sure you can do that just got to learn C++.
Then eventually he'll turn 20 and be like "oh wait these normal tech companies offer 4x the pay and equity, lol fuck video games".
Video games outside of indie startups or companies like Epic (who make engines) dont offer the same pay. Mainly because they cant because revenue is so hit or miss and overhead costs are higher.
> union thing catches
ehhh unless our laws change to more nordic style union laws where unions are less rent seeking and more okay with efficiency improvements.....i'd say nah to a US styled union.
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