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Original post by Bru
i am lazy.but when i said it sounds like a lot to learn i meant it sounds like too much effort to learn something that i am not sure will help me.
So I have to ask, why do you want to work in the games industry? Statistically speaking, it fares poorly for programmers in terms of salary received and work-life balance compared to "normal" jobs. Of all the people I know in game development, they are all there because they loved making games. By making games, I don't mean dreaming about being a game designer while playing Halo on their XBox. I mean they actually went out, studied, learned, and experimented with making games because it was fun.
If its a motivation problem, I'm completely sympathetic. I personally lost a lot of motivation around the time I graduated from college, and didn't really do any game development for five years afterward. I'm trying to make up for lost time now (and having a blast doing so). But what you're telling us is that the only reason you'd bother to study or tinker with something is if you got something out of it. That's a huge red flag that game development is a career mistake for you.
And to re-iterate, making games is completely, utterly different than playing games. Just because you're a gamer doesn't mean you belong in the game industry.