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You choose to pay 50 cents to save a little effort. It's debatable if the amount of effort you save is worth 50 cents, but it is a mathematical certainty that a lottery ticket is not worth 1 dollar.
One doesn't need to win the lottery for this.
Anyone who says this has not grasped the sheer amount of things there are to learn in this world.
As just ONE example, there's countless varieties of martial arts...most of the more obscure ones are very expensive to learn because schools are rare, teachers are rare, and in some cases in other countries, but with that much money thats not a problem.
You could learn to be the world's greatest non-chef chef. You could become a writer, a professional dancer, you could start a motorsport team and compete against Ford, Mitsubishi, McLaren, etc.
The possibilities are endless.
I work 45 hours a week. I could easily fill that time. And I could fill it without unlimited money, too.
Shit breeding the best tomatoes ever, or brewing your own beer from scratch beats what i do for a living
Note - being a professional Latin dancer is a job, but it is not a career. Until you're at the top, you can't live off what you make, and you certainly can't sustain a dancing hobby with the money you make from dancing.
2. pay off my parent's cars & maybe their mortgage
3. put aside about 300k for land/house.
4. take a handful of friends on a month long tour of europe
5. put about 50k into a general "splurging" account: new home theater/computer/etc
6. invest the rest
7. work part time / return to school for as long as I want
8. if that ever gets boring, open a hobby/game/comic shop
SWTOR: Allanna (Shadowlands) / TSW: Sara-Luna
Speaking of which:
You'd have to be nuts, or not care much about improving your skill level, to move on to new arts every five years. Most martial arts are different enough that after the five years you've spent training in one one, your skill in the art you practised beforehand will have decayed and been superseded by your skills in your current art to the point where it was barely worth learning. You'd still get the benefit of a long period of continuous martial arts experience, but not much else. If you had the 30 hours a week to spend, you'd be much better off picking one art and training in it, then after a little while taking up another while still training in the first, and so on, until you capped at whatever you felt best.
The same goes for anything else that takes dedication. If I were super rich, when I put my mind to something - music, writing, whatever - I'd want to stick at it, rather than giving in to the temptation to go frittering around like a playboy. Unless, of course, it was my intention to merely sample a wide range of things.
yeah, thats what I meant. Ultimately my goal would be to be proficient in seven or eight arts, and then create my own amalgamation of them all.
I just don't think it would work out terribly practically. I mean, you'd be trying to create an amalgam of eight martial arts, two of which you'd have trained in for five years 15-20 years ago. You wouldn't be proficient in them any more, especially with all the other arts teaching you conflicting stuff in the meanwhile. Sampling a bunch of martial arts for fun is something I can get behind, I would quite possibly end up doing something of the sort too, but I'd keep training in two or three core styles, just so I could feel like I was doing something practical.
By "work" I mean not sit around on my ass and play with my multi-million dollar toys all day, every day. Thanks.
I guess I'd stick maybe £10-£20Mill into investments from which I could live quite comfortably off the annual earnings. Then another £10-20Mill into a trust fund for my children, then the same again for their children, then the same again for their children.
After that I'd start scoping around for something interesting to do with my spare time/any money that was left over. Although I might just take the opportunity to be a full-time parent. But I guess I'd need to be careful to be a good role model. Being fiscally stable via gambling would seem to be a pretty bad example to set in the first place though.
See, I've worked for a few places already, and in my opinion, it's a mistake to immediately aim for a AAA title on a major console or for PC.
I would develop at least 3 shorter, simpler games (with development cycles of less than 1 year) so that the company could start making money sooner. Either simple puzzle games like what's on popcap.com, or original new gameplay for the likes of XBLA, WiiWare, or Nintendo DS (I've already done a little bit of DS programming, and I really believe that it's possible for a small team to make a kickass game in a short amount of time and on a tight budget.)
Once at least one of those three games starts making money above its production costs, I'll know that I can start working on "bigger" projects, but a part of the company would remain focused on these smaller, probably more casual games, because while I play a lot of hardcore-type games, I'm one of those gamers who does not look down on more casual games, and indeed, I love many of them.
With the kind of business I'm talking about, such a company could be started with an initial capital of less than 1 million$, assuming you can find a cheap enough office space, and a small but efficient team: 2 programmers, 1 artist, 1 designer (not counting me) and after a few months, 2-5 testers. Expansion only happens as the company starts making more money.
Check out my new blog: http://50wordstories.ca
Also check out my old game design blog: http://stealmygamedesigns.blogspot.com
I dunno about that, lottery tickets don't taste very good or offer much in the way of a buzz.
Drunks Against Mad Mothers
This is, of course, after I set up my mom for life since she can't work anymore and is raising my brother's kid.
Most of the rest of the money I would invest, with some going to each of my parents, some to my brother and sister, and probably a large portion (20%?) to charities or scientific reasearch that I think is important. With whatever I had left I would buy a nice (but not extravagent) house, where I would sleep, watch films, play computer games, eat, and learn martial arts. My strategy for learning would probably be to learn a number simultaneously; I would continue learning Ju-jitsu and start Karate, then after a year or two begin a third martial art, and so on. I'd also try to learn how to use shurikens and/or throwing knives, because they've always interested me.
Minis are pretty big and not very cool. Also shitty.
You mean Batman.
Sweet!
That's probably the wiser business investment, but if had a good 50 million dollars available for this sort of thing, I don't know if I would waste 2-3 years on casual games. I'd take a look at, say, the 160 page design document I've been revising for half a decade and say that today was the day. If anything, I'd just make a few cheap casuals at the same time to recoup some money if the big game idea doesn't pan out.
Here's a question. How do we theoretical multimillionaires actually date at this point? Obviously it won't matter if you already have a girlfriend/boyfriend, but otherwise I imagine it would be hard to avoid the obvious gold digger types, or even get privacy. On the other hand, if you don't provide the lavish gifts and trips to Europe, don't you look a little cheap? I suppose it doesn't matter if you're fine with casual relationships, and I'm not saying I wouldn't go the "lol two+ chicks at once" route for a year or so, but sooner or later it could get old.
-Buy a condo right in the heart of the city.
-Travel
-put 1m towards high stakes poker
-Buy a sailboat and take sailing lessons
-Buy a Porsche
Man, what could you not do.