I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
just realized in massive chalice you can have a keep with two same sex rulers and they can adopt. bonus points massive chalice
I'm kind of addicted to the new Harvest Moon clone that just came out, World's Dawn. When you first start playing, the character creation lets you choose gender*, hairstyle (not even color), and then which gender you are interested in dating: Male, Female, or Both. I thought that was pretty awesome. The fact that the creation was so simple and limited, but that they made that choice and those options available was so great.
As addictive as it is, it's not perfect. The controls are pretty bad (keyboard only, arrow keys instead of wasd), and the graphics options (screen size) are non-existent. Also, your farming plot is pretty small and doesn't seem like it can be expanded. It's more about the town as a whole than just your farm though. Anyway, despite that, I've been having a lot of fun with it. I'm thinking it should tide me over until Stardew Valley finally comes out!
*
It even defaulted to female. It's so rare to see female as the default choice going into a game that it really stood out to me. And no, games shouldn't always have female as the default choice all the time. It was just quite refreshing to see.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
@Petesalzl Do you live in Los Angeles? I work in the film industry and might be able to give you some advice/help. If not, I may be able to give you some advice.
I got my degrees in Forensic Science and Philosophy, but immediately dumped those to work in film. I did A LOT of free gigs and experience does matter in the industry. Very few people get paid at first, but I may be able to point you in the right direction. If you (or anyone else) is interested, feel free to PM me.
I've brought a lot of people along in my career in different departments so depending on what you actually want to do in the industry, I probably know somebody.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
Unsuccessful writer here with a similar story arc, only swap call center for bank teller. Changing careers in my 30s has been difficult, to put it mildly, but you could not force me back into the trenches at gunpoint. Retail finance erodes the soul on a good day, and there were many not-good days after certain events in 2008.
Someday I'll get back to writing something other than fanfiction I have tried very hard to forget.
My dreams are to find a way to deal with the cinderblock sitting on my chest that is the crippling existential dread that has clawed its way into my soul and is the reason I haven't gotten a full night's sleep since the day I turned 30 and to adjust to the reality that my life is nowhere near what I thought it would be like or has the potential to be like and allllllso to work on my Steam backlog (not necessarily in that order).
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DaimarA Million Feet Tall of AwesomeRegistered Userregular
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
You're 35. Plenty of time. Don't give up.
Traditionally, a Corvette is the first step.
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Zxerolfor the smaller pieces, my shovel wouldn't doso i took off my boot and used my shoeRegistered Userregular
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
@Petesalzl Do you live in Los Angeles? I work in the film industry and might be able to give you some advice/help. If not, I may be able to give you some advice.
I got my degrees in Forensic Science and Philosophy, but immediately dumped those to work in film. I did A LOT of free gigs and experience does matter in the industry. Very few people get paid at first, but I may be able to point you in the right direction. If you (or anyone else) is interested, feel free to PM me.
I've brought a lot of people along in my career in different departments so depending on what you actually want to do in the industry, I probably know somebody.
I haven't played anything in forever. I just can't get into any of the games I have. Too much to do, not enough time.
I've had this problem.
My solution was to import my steam profile into HowLongtoBeat, and then start from the bottom and work my way up.
Next up? SimCity4. I'm not entirely sure how that showed up as such a short "time to beat" because as far as I'm aware, there's no "win" condition for that game.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
My dreams are to find a way to deal with the cinderblock sitting on my chest that is the crippling existential dread that has clawed its way into my soul and is the reason I haven't gotten a full night's sleep since the day I turned 30 and to adjust to the reality that my life is nowhere near what I thought it would be like or has the potential to be like and allllllso to work on my Steam backlog (not necessarily in that order).
Isn't that every adult ever? Because I thought it was.
I hope to make games with my wife, personally. Still working on figuring out a process.
I make art things! deviantART:Kalnaur ::: Origin: Kalnaur ::: UPlay: Kalnaur
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Zxerolfor the smaller pieces, my shovel wouldn't doso i took off my boot and used my shoeRegistered Userregular
edited January 2016
Oh, by the way, for those keen on installing the latest Nvidia drivers for raiding tombs. This may now show up in your eject devices menu:
Word on the street is that it is, in fact, kind of a bad idea to eject your GPU. Who would've figured?
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
You're 35. Plenty of time. Don't give up.
That's how I try to look at it. When I hit 32 and realized all of this, I started a music blog (to monitor my progress) and started taking some group lessons for new skills to give myself accountability as far as practice goes. I was always a guitar man but I started piano lessons and fell in love with it. Also doing vocal lessons, because why not?
I don't really know what my goals are at this point anymore...though I did recently knock out the "play in front of a crowd" goal. So progress IS being made .
I just need to be MORE on fire about it. I spent too much time playing games or thinking "I wish had progressed with the music stuff more by now" instead of working on it. It's always been a problem of mine. I need to do a lot more "deliberate" practice. On that topic, I always found this article inspiring: http://jamesclear.com/deliberate-practice
All of it, but the part about Kobe specifically (I don't know anything about sports or him as a person mind, so I was only focused on his success in his field, not any of the bad stuff he's been accused of).
I need THAT attitude if I want to succeed.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I was in my mid 30s when I realized I hated doing Software QA for A Major Truck Manufacturer and went back to school to get a degree. I am doing network security and so much happier these days.
Ok, so I'm not using my degree, and my new career came out of the part-time job I had doing help desk for the university, but it still counts. 35 is fine.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
You're 35. Plenty of time. Don't give up.
Alternately, give up on your dreams, accept your place as a cog in the machinery of society, spin better than the cogs around you, get paid to spin spin spin. Trade your soul for quarterly bonuses and merit raises: dead inside, but materially comfortable. Transform that wealth into steamgifts.
There's a certain depressing liberation in accepting your own unremarkableness in the grand scheme of things.
So... all these crazy anime games keep being put in my face on Steam. Are they just that popular or have I somehow wandered my way into an anime hellscape algorithm? No matter how many times I tell Steam I'm not interested, it keeps putting more of them in my discovery queues and recommended lists.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
I turned 40 last week, just left my job, and have a three-month-old baby. Safe to say my life didn't go as planned, but I wouldn't have changed a thing. Oh yeah, I made an iPhone game with my wife. Mission accomplished!
I plan on playing games with my daughter. That gives us daddy daughter time while allowing me to clear out my backlog. A win-win!
Need a voice actor? Hire me at bengrayVO.com
Legends of Runeterra: MNCdover #moc
Switch ID: MNC Dover SW-1154-3107-1051 Steam ID Twitch Page
Mid-thirties, going through a somewhat similar thing from the other end. I pursued my dream of being an artist for a living. I'm a graphic designer. But now that I've been doing it for a decent long while, I'm pretty burned out. I'd like to start something new, but not sure what. I've done online programming things, and generally got through them well. I've been thinking about that. I took an online course from MIT this year that's an intro to computer science course and I'm just not enjoying that at all... so I don't know.
I feel like I just want to say "fuck it" and just start doing metal sculpture while learning to weld or be an electrician. But hell if I even know how that would work.
So... all these crazy anime games keep being put in my face on Steam. Are they just that popular or have I somehow wandered my way into an anime hellscape algorithm? No matter how many times I tell Steam I'm not interested, it keeps putting more of them in my discovery queues and recommended lists.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
They're pretty popular. In addition to new games being made, there's a good supply of older games that have brought to the platform as people realized they could sell them there.
I find I actually like games which are like homework versions of what I do for work.
This is mostly because those problems are guaranteed to have actual solutions, unlike work.
An embarrassingly high amount of problems I encounter at work are fixed by observing it fix itself for no reason I'm able to empirically discern. I actually encountered my first area-maze in a newspaper while at work and really enjoyed it. Shame I can't play Pythagoria while I'm on the clock
So... all these crazy anime games keep being put in my face on Steam. Are they just that popular or have I somehow wandered my way into an anime hellscape algorithm? No matter how many times I tell Steam I'm not interested, it keeps putting more of them in my discovery queues and recommended lists.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
Did you play one - or even idle for cards in one - recently? Every time I play a hidden object game, I get nothing but HOGs in my discovery queue for weeks.
Also you should embrace Nep-Nep as your personal savior, but that's something you can work on later.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
You're 35. Plenty of time. Don't give up.
I kind of hate to say this but I dropped out of college because it was terrifyingly boring and I wasn't mature enough to deal with that sort of tedium on the regular. I got my degree the back way around, but not until after I'd wandered for a while. I was always content to be the guy with the stories. A lot of people around me panicked, but I never did. Anyone who says you can't approach life aimlessly has never lived. Trying to plan for life is what drives people crazy. Life does not give a crap what you've got planned, it's coming through and you can either get on board or get run over.
I guess I never got that "do the safe thing" programming. Safe isn't happy. Safe is safe. Happy is happy. I want to be happy.
Which is why, despite having a job I still like day in and day out I'm thinking about going back to school. To get a film degree, ironically. Maybe that means carrying someone's coffee for three years in my forties. I've done worse.
I... feel like I am about to humblebrag but I want to join in on this topic, maybe give some of you guys some hope.
I'm mid 30's, my life was total shit until the last few years where things slowly started to climb out. I finally figured out what I wanted to do with myself and in less than a years time I went from living in a tiny 600 sqft apartment with my wife and dog to a big beautiful home and everything I could ever want. It's not exactly where I pictured myself but I can not complain at all. I am truly blessed.
So, for some of you who are like "Ugh" right now, it honestly can turn around SO quick. Just keep pushing. Give yourself some purpose and you'll be amazed at what you can accomplish and be happy with.
And just remember that if you ever run out of games to play - we got you covered.
I don't wish ill to any of your friends or anyone who tries to better themselves... but I went to film school and then ended up a QA tester with not a lot of prospects. The idea that no matter what choice I had made for college, I might be screwed... is somewhat soothing.
i too went to film school and all of the jobs anyone ever offered my were none paying jobs (we're paying you in experience) and so the only paying jobs flexible enough to work around my film jobs were call center jobs and after a few years i slowly just took more hours doing that and less doing film work.
i still feel like i got screwed though, but i can see where youre coming from. it could always be worse.
That sounds like the exact tale of how my music dream died, right down to the call center.
Granted I've been trying to revive it lately after realizing I stopped pursuing my dreams in my 20s (which bummed me out). But I'm 35 now sooooooo...not looking good =p.
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
You're 35. Plenty of time. Don't give up.
Alternately, give up on your dreams, accept your place as a cog in the machinery of society, spin better than the cogs around you, get paid to spin spin spin. Trade your soul for quarterly bonuses and merit raises: dead inside, but materially comfortable. Transform that wealth into steamgifts.
There's a certain depressing liberation in accepting your own unremarkableness in the grand scheme of things.
I'm 38 (ugh soon to be 39) and I came to that realization over the summer. I finally settled into a job I like and realized I'm somewhat happy just living my life.
So... all these crazy anime games keep being put in my face on Steam. Are they just that popular or have I somehow wandered my way into an anime hellscape algorithm? No matter how many times I tell Steam I'm not interested, it keeps putting more of them in my discovery queues and recommended lists.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
I was in this phase in recommendations during the winter sale. I think owning anything remotely anime or Japanese makes Steam think you want all the games about fucking catgirl maids and shit. No matter the amount of not interesteds I'd push, I'd even get sequels to those games recommended to me after.
Part of it is that they have extremely dedicated fanbases so that means lots of very positive reviews so they seem to be flagged as well reviewed and popular.
So... all these crazy anime games keep being put in my face on Steam. Are they just that popular or have I somehow wandered my way into an anime hellscape algorithm? No matter how many times I tell Steam I'm not interested, it keeps putting more of them in my discovery queues and recommended lists.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
I was in this phase in recommendations during the winter sale. I think owning anything remotely anime or Japanese makes Steam think you want all the games about fucking catgirl maids and shit. No matter the amount of not interesteds I'd push, I'd even get sequels to those games recommended to me after.
Part of it is that they have extremely dedicated fanbases so that means lots of very positive reviews so they seem to be flagged as well reviewed and popular.
Well, maybe you didn't want the one with cats... what about the one with dogs?
Yeah, anime VNs are all over the place. (And I say this considering that I've liked some VNs in the past.)
( < . . .
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Dr. ChaosPost nuclear nuisanceRegistered Userregular
Think I'm going to try to wait for the final product but very curious to see how impressions turn out.
Looks a lot better than Wasteland 2 which I enjoyed but thought was pretty rough around the edges and felt like it could have used more down time (instead of what felt like 90% combat) and a better dialog system.
So... all these crazy anime games keep being put in my face on Steam. Are they just that popular or have I somehow wandered my way into an anime hellscape algorithm? No matter how many times I tell Steam I'm not interested, it keeps putting more of them in my discovery queues and recommended lists.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
I was in this phase in recommendations during the winter sale. I think owning anything remotely anime or Japanese makes Steam think you want all the games about fucking catgirl maids and shit. No matter the amount of not interesteds I'd push, I'd even get sequels to those games recommended to me after.
Part of it is that they have extremely dedicated fanbases so that means lots of very positive reviews so they seem to be flagged as well reviewed and popular.
This happens to me every time I dive into a doujin shmup. It's pretty annoying. I'll play an hour or two of Crimzon Clover or ReFlex and get weeks of Sakura game recommendations.
Honestly the discovery queue is kind of a mess, since apparently telling them you don't want to see a specific game does nothing more than remove that particular game from the pool of things it will recommend instead of maybe taking a hint that you have said no to every single zombie survival game that has come up and stop suggesting those at all.
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Dr. ChaosPost nuclear nuisanceRegistered Userregular
Honestly the discovery queue is kind of a mess, since apparently telling them you don't want to see a specific game does nothing more than remove that particular game from the pool of things it will recommend instead of maybe taking a hint that you have said no to every single zombie survival game that has come up and stop suggesting those at all.
It's better than I thought it would be still pretty dumb.
Reccomends a lot of modern military shooters (which I hate) like Call of Duty or Battlefield for some reason. I guess because I have a lot of first person games in my library with gunplay. Fair enough I guess but still abit off the mark.
Posts
I'm 43. I stopped pursuing most of my dreams a long time ago. Now that I'm looking down the barrel at the end of a 17-year relationship (with all the chaos that that entails), I find myself questioning a lot of life choices. And in that is a growing desire to start picking up where I left some of those dreams in my 20s. I figure I've a few good decades left.
You're 35. Plenty of time. Don't give up.
I'm kind of addicted to the new Harvest Moon clone that just came out, World's Dawn. When you first start playing, the character creation lets you choose gender*, hairstyle (not even color), and then which gender you are interested in dating: Male, Female, or Both. I thought that was pretty awesome. The fact that the creation was so simple and limited, but that they made that choice and those options available was so great.
As addictive as it is, it's not perfect. The controls are pretty bad (keyboard only, arrow keys instead of wasd), and the graphics options (screen size) are non-existent. Also, your farming plot is pretty small and doesn't seem like it can be expanded. It's more about the town as a whole than just your farm though. Anyway, despite that, I've been having a lot of fun with it. I'm thinking it should tide me over until Stardew Valley finally comes out!
*
@Petesalzl Do you live in Los Angeles? I work in the film industry and might be able to give you some advice/help. If not, I may be able to give you some advice.
I got my degrees in Forensic Science and Philosophy, but immediately dumped those to work in film. I did A LOT of free gigs and experience does matter in the industry. Very few people get paid at first, but I may be able to point you in the right direction. If you (or anyone else) is interested, feel free to PM me.
I've brought a lot of people along in my career in different departments so depending on what you actually want to do in the industry, I probably know somebody.
Unsuccessful writer here with a similar story arc, only swap call center for bank teller. Changing careers in my 30s has been difficult, to put it mildly, but you could not force me back into the trenches at gunpoint. Retail finance erodes the soul on a good day, and there were many not-good days after certain events in 2008.
Someday I'll get back to writing something other than fanfiction I have tried very hard to forget.
Now playing: Teardown and Baldur's Gate 3 (co-op)
Sunday Spotlight: Horror Tales: The Wine
Traditionally, a Corvette is the first step.
yo are we gifting jobs in the steam thread now
that is some next level shit
I've had this problem.
My solution was to import my steam profile into HowLongtoBeat, and then start from the bottom and work my way up.
Next up? SimCity4. I'm not entirely sure how that showed up as such a short "time to beat" because as far as I'm aware, there's no "win" condition for that game.
No thanks. I'm a MOPAR girl, heart and soul.
Isn't that every adult ever? Because I thought it was.
I hope to make games with my wife, personally. Still working on figuring out a process.
Word on the street is that it is, in fact, kind of a bad idea to eject your GPU. Who would've figured?
That's how I try to look at it. When I hit 32 and realized all of this, I started a music blog (to monitor my progress) and started taking some group lessons for new skills to give myself accountability as far as practice goes. I was always a guitar man but I started piano lessons and fell in love with it. Also doing vocal lessons, because why not?
I don't really know what my goals are at this point anymore...though I did recently knock out the "play in front of a crowd" goal. So progress IS being made .
I just need to be MORE on fire about it. I spent too much time playing games or thinking "I wish had progressed with the music stuff more by now" instead of working on it. It's always been a problem of mine. I need to do a lot more "deliberate" practice. On that topic, I always found this article inspiring: http://jamesclear.com/deliberate-practice
All of it, but the part about Kobe specifically (I don't know anything about sports or him as a person mind, so I was only focused on his success in his field, not any of the bad stuff he's been accused of).
I need THAT attitude if I want to succeed.
I appreciate the motivational words, Pixie .
Yes.
Steam profile.
Getting started with BATTLETECH: Part 1 / Part 2
You win this time.
/enters giveaway
I imagined a GPU being launched from a case and opening a tiny parachute into safety.
I kind of want that option now.
I was in my mid 30s when I realized I hated doing Software QA for A Major Truck Manufacturer and went back to school to get a degree. I am doing network security and so much happier these days.
Ok, so I'm not using my degree, and my new career came out of the part-time job I had doing help desk for the university, but it still counts. 35 is fine.
Handmade Jewelry by me on EtsyGames for sale
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Alternately, give up on your dreams, accept your place as a cog in the machinery of society, spin better than the cogs around you, get paid to spin spin spin. Trade your soul for quarterly bonuses and merit raises: dead inside, but materially comfortable. Transform that wealth into steamgifts.
There's a certain depressing liberation in accepting your own unremarkableness in the grand scheme of things.
[edit] Holy shit this thread is heavy. I was not prepared.
I plan on playing games with my daughter. That gives us daddy daughter time while allowing me to clear out my backlog. A win-win!
Legends of Runeterra: MNCdover #moc
Switch ID: MNC Dover SW-1154-3107-1051
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I feel like I just want to say "fuck it" and just start doing metal sculpture while learning to weld or be an electrician. But hell if I even know how that would work.
They're pretty popular. In addition to new games being made, there's a good supply of older games that have brought to the platform as people realized they could sell them there.
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3DS: 3454-0268-5595 Battle.net: SteelAngel#1772
An embarrassingly high amount of problems I encounter at work are fixed by observing it fix itself for no reason I'm able to empirically discern. I actually encountered my first area-maze in a newspaper while at work and really enjoyed it. Shame I can't play Pythagoria while I'm on the clock
Did you play one - or even idle for cards in one - recently? Every time I play a hidden object game, I get nothing but HOGs in my discovery queue for weeks.
Also you should embrace Nep-Nep as your personal savior, but that's something you can work on later.
I guess I never got that "do the safe thing" programming. Safe isn't happy. Safe is safe. Happy is happy. I want to be happy.
Which is why, despite having a job I still like day in and day out I'm thinking about going back to school. To get a film degree, ironically. Maybe that means carrying someone's coffee for three years in my forties. I've done worse.
I'm mid 30's, my life was total shit until the last few years where things slowly started to climb out. I finally figured out what I wanted to do with myself and in less than a years time I went from living in a tiny 600 sqft apartment with my wife and dog to a big beautiful home and everything I could ever want. It's not exactly where I pictured myself but I can not complain at all. I am truly blessed.
So, for some of you who are like "Ugh" right now, it honestly can turn around SO quick. Just keep pushing. Give yourself some purpose and you'll be amazed at what you can accomplish and be happy with.
And just remember that if you ever run out of games to play - we got you covered.
I'm 38 (ugh soon to be 39) and I came to that realization over the summer. I finally settled into a job I like and realized I'm somewhat happy just living my life.
Switch FC: SW-7588-7027-0113, Steam/PSN: Halfazedninja
Twitch: KoopahTroopah - Steam: Koopah
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ChZN8SDbwo
Now playing: Teardown and Baldur's Gate 3 (co-op)
Sunday Spotlight: Horror Tales: The Wine
Steam ID: Good Life
I was in this phase in recommendations during the winter sale. I think owning anything remotely anime or Japanese makes Steam think you want all the games about fucking catgirl maids and shit. No matter the amount of not interesteds I'd push, I'd even get sequels to those games recommended to me after.
Part of it is that they have extremely dedicated fanbases so that means lots of very positive reviews so they seem to be flagged as well reviewed and popular.
Well, maybe you didn't want the one with cats... what about the one with dogs?
Yeah, anime VNs are all over the place. (And I say this considering that I've liked some VNs in the past.)
Think I'm going to try to wait for the final product but very curious to see how impressions turn out.
Looks a lot better than Wasteland 2 which I enjoyed but thought was pretty rough around the edges and felt like it could have used more down time (instead of what felt like 90% combat) and a better dialog system.
This happens to me every time I dive into a doujin shmup. It's pretty annoying. I'll play an hour or two of Crimzon Clover or ReFlex and get weeks of Sakura game recommendations.
Reccomends a lot of modern military shooters (which I hate) like Call of Duty or Battlefield for some reason. I guess because I have a lot of first person games in my library with gunplay. Fair enough I guess but still abit off the mark.