I hear undertakers rarely run out of business too.

Having had to just replace a geyser I suggest he becomes a plumber. There
will never be a shortage of work as people always have to drink, bath
(some folks more then others) and they definitely need to use the toilet
fairly often.

Should that be we paying he can in his spare time start playing with
things like unity, blender etc.

;)

On 2013/06/18 10:54 AM, "Stefan Kubicek" <s...@tidbit-images.com> wrote:

But saying he wants to get into game development is a lot better than
what
he said the first time I asked what he wanted to do with his life.  He
said, "dunno... haven't given it much thought yet..." - this is an 18
year
old saying this to the father of his girlfriend when asked about his
future
plans....  So hearing any sort of direction was a big plus for me!

LOL! Well, it's not all about farmers, carpenters, and cooks anymore, is
it? Preofessions have become so diverse, abstract and hard to describe
that most kids are overwhelmed when asked to make a choice. The only
smart answer to the question about future plans a 14 year old can give
these days is: "What are my options?". An 18 year old could know better,
but from what I can tell, most actually don't.

To me, and as others have said, it's about finding out what he's really
interested in. You won't make it far if you don't really love what you
are doing. If it's the (3D) art side of things he might be better off
going into Film, TV or commercials work, especially if he's not so
techically minded. At least I always felt that creating CG for movies and
the likes was more straight forward and less convoluted than making art
for games (depending on size of company and specialisation of individual
work places there, the smaller the company the broader your
skills will need to be, including wrangling congiguration files and bug
fixing models that would render fine but just don't live up to the
restrictions and technical requirements of the game engine). An art
related job in a games studio usually pays less than a similar position
in a film studio.

The best thing would be to get him into a games company for a few days or
better weeks (the shop I worked for used to temporarily hire testers now
and then) so he gets an understanding of what positions exist and what
they actually mean and do. After that he should have understood...

1) ...that making games is not about playing games!
2) ...that making games is time consuming and requires excessive
attention to detail and technical knowledge in pretty much any position.
3) ...what position he finds most interesting and what he will need to
learn in order to get there.

My 5 european cents.

Stefan






-Paul





On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 10:24 AM, <pete...@skynet.be> wrote:

  Dissuade him - advise him to get a medical degree.
Your daughter will hate you for it short term, but thank you long term
-
when paycheck has more importance than some childhood disillusion.

If she stays with him, that¹s the long term, so you win.
But i
f she breaks up, that¹s the short term  her hate for you dissuading
the
boyfriend will turn around when she breaks up anyway.

Eventually - if he sticks with the medical degree  once he¹s
established
a profitable practice, he can just buy a games company and ask his new
employees to show him how things work.

I¹m sure Bradley can give some helpful pointers for where to get a
medical
degree.

 *From:* Raffaele Fragapane <raffsxsil...@googlemail.com>
*Sent:* Monday, June 17, 2013 2:57 PM
*To:* softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
*Subject:* Re: OT: (sort-of) getting in to game dev

 Saying "I want to get into games" is like saying "I want to have
something to do with buildings". Laying the bricks, engineering
anti-seismic structures, or decorating the interiors? :)

First thing I'd try and push him for is to form some rough idea of
what he
likes in a game and how he feels he'd like to contribute (code, art,
assets, level design etc.).
If he says he wants to be the one that comes up with the ideas (lead
game
designer), then I think you're allowed to slap him in on the neck
repeatedly. If he wants to become a producer you need to change your
daughter's mind in regards to this boy :p

--
Our users will know fear and cower before our software! Ship it! Ship
it
and let them flee like the dogs they are!




--
---------------------------------------------
  Stefan Kubicek                   ste...@keyvis.at
---------------------------------------------
           keyvis digital imagery
          Alfred Feierfeilstraße 3
       A-2380 Perchtoldsdorf bei Wien
        Phone:  +43 (0) 699 12614231
                 www.keyvis.at
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--
---------------------------------------------
  Stefan Kubicek                   ste...@keyvis.at
---------------------------------------------
           keyvis digital imagery
          Alfred Feierfeilstraße 3
       A-2380 Perchtoldsdorf bei Wien
        Phone:  +43 (0) 699 12614231
                 www.keyvis.at
--   This email and its attachments are    --
-- confidential and for the recipient only --

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