Jump to content

Maeljin

Members
  • Posts

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation

0 Neutral

About Maeljin

  • Rank
    (0) Nub
    (0) Nub
  1. yeyeman9 - I highly recommend this book: The Game Development Business and Legal Guide It has a ton of great information... Even if your not interested in the legal aspects of the industry, the business information it contains is pretty interesting.
  2. Hiya tr-Thanatos, I'm a Developer and a HUGE fan of Black Isle / Obsidian games. About five years ago I broke into the industry via a Production Assistant internship at a fairly high profile strategy game company (who I won't name here). I believe that I got my big break because of my approach and my background. I had an *extremely* refined and articulate cover letter / resume. At the time I realized that this would be extremely important because of the sheer amount of competition that I would be facing for the internship position. I took the time to make sure that the presentation of my resume was really slick. I really put a lot of time into the effort and spared no expense when making copies and mailing my resume. I used the best possible paper the local copy shop had access to, enclosed it in a pretty nice report-binder, and shipped it via FedEx. I also had a fairly unique educational background. I created my own major in college within a program called Integrative Arts (keep in mind this was well before the days of the game design degrees that are springing up nearly everywhere now). This major allowed me to combine both programming and fine art. I did this assuming that I could specialize in either direction later on, or simply do production if I felt it suited me. I drove for several hours out of state to interview for the position. Despite being a bucket of nerves, I think that my enthusiasm for the industry was apparent to the Producers. To make a long-story short: I was offered the position, quit my full time job at the university - and then the wife and I had to make an extremely scary transition to a large city with only one income (it was an unpaid internship). Three months into my internship (read: extended interview) I was offered a job as an Associate Producer, and the rest is history.
×
×
  • Create New...