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Can anyone offer advice on becoming a Beta Tester?
Im looking for a new side job I can undertake to supplement my 9-5 income and was wondering if being a Beta tester can work for me. But I have no idea where to start. can anyone offer any assistance?
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Game tester (the people who work for the company and play the games to try to break them) is a paid position, but I hear it's an awful job.
Depending on your participation in the beta testing, they might compensate you slightly. Not a guarantee however.
I beta tested a navigation system for android phones, all I got was the app for free once it was released to public instead of paying a couple dollars for it. Another time I beta tested a game, got a $25 amazon gift card.
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And read every one of the "Tales from the Trenches" posts to get an understanding of what this field is like. It will do more for understanding what you are asking than any real amount of advice.
In short: its a job where you do unfun, repetitive tasks that ruins your appreciation of games, givens you no job security (much less benefits), barely a living wage (if you are lucky), and typically is completely futile as half the time your reports are ignored and the other half of the time you are rewarded for your efforts with summary termination.
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Corporate QA (that is, for non-game related software)is, generally speaking, much better paid, and the conditions are a lot better. But again, it's a full time job, and not something you can just throw on for an afternoon.
There are a few places that will offer up testing gigs on a per-project basis (UTest is probabky the best known example), which typically comes with a nominal pro-rata for the project, and additional pay per defect found, submitted and confirmed by the client. This sounds more like what you're looking for. Certainly it's something you can do as an income supplement. That said, the pay won't ever be fantastic, and the competition to find and log defects quickly, before someone else gets that bug bounty, can be brutal. It's also not game testing - usually some variant of a business app. It's still good experience if you're looking to get into the industry, or as an adjunct to another job, mind you. But not exactly a bed of roses.
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You go in, play a game as someone watches you do it, and then answer some questions.
Focus groups don't even have to pertain to games, they happen all the time in all sorts of industries. Expect to get paid $20-50 per 1 hour session.
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If you want to make that much online, learn to code.
And after coding, do what exactly?
It's a loaded assumption and one that assumes that there will always be a massive demand for coding, that coding jobs will remain primarily remote access, and that the training and educational investment will actually pay off in the near future with immediate employment, all of which are questionable. The market varies from region to region and most tech companies we work with at our college refuse to hire anyone who isn't willing to work in office for a minimum of a year. So your miles may vary.
I guess i would have to do some research into what coding jobs are available and what is in demand in my region.
Thank you all once again.
As to what is in demand in your region, I thought you wanted to work remotely? If you want a job in your region, you are asking a whole different question.
Yes, good remote working jobs require you to be a programmer with great qualifications and a great track record.
But this guy wants to make money fast while working from home with no qualifications. Unrealistic, yeah, 100%. If he's good at selling himself and can make websites he might be able to get $10 an hour making crappy websites for small businesses. Maybe. That's all I can think of.