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PC games
WarCraft III Modding
My 1st, 2nd, and 3rd model....
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<blockquote data-quote="TerranUp16" data-source="post: 124330" data-attributes="member: 5920"><p>Food for thought:</p><p></p><p>TerranUp16's birthday: 23 March 1990. 16 years old.</p><p>A professional game designer at age 16. He has not graduated from a post-secondary institute, nor does he have a high-school diploma. Hell, he doesn't even have A+ or MCSE certification. Not even profession training in project management, or human resources. But what he is educated in is not in question. It's what he <strong>claims</strong>.</p><p></p><p>How could he possibly manage to work on at least one other game project on top of GTW, do well in high-school, and manage to keep a healthy social life with friends and family? Simple answer: He can't. It's impossible. At least one of those activities have to be thrown out. The real professionals in the video game industry only work on one project (two at most) at a time. A single project requires the full attention of a person in a team environment over a period of 20 - 30 months. That person doesn't go to school, puts in extra hours at home, and barely has time for his/her friends and family. Do you really think that you, a high-school student, can consider yourself a "professional game designer" when you're working on a mod for a game? Hell, you're not even being paid for it (and if you are, that's illegal and you could be heavily fined).</p><p></p><p>A professional is one that makes a living using his/her skills in exchange for money. TerranUp16, you are not a professional game designer. You are a professional student, and a mod maker.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TerranUp16, post: 124330, member: 5920"] Food for thought: TerranUp16's birthday: 23 March 1990. 16 years old. A professional game designer at age 16. He has not graduated from a post-secondary institute, nor does he have a high-school diploma. Hell, he doesn't even have A+ or MCSE certification. Not even profession training in project management, or human resources. But what he is educated in is not in question. It's what he [b]claims[/b]. How could he possibly manage to work on at least one other game project on top of GTW, do well in high-school, and manage to keep a healthy social life with friends and family? Simple answer: He can't. It's impossible. At least one of those activities have to be thrown out. The real professionals in the video game industry only work on one project (two at most) at a time. A single project requires the full attention of a person in a team environment over a period of 20 - 30 months. That person doesn't go to school, puts in extra hours at home, and barely has time for his/her friends and family. Do you really think that you, a high-school student, can consider yourself a "professional game designer" when you're working on a mod for a game? Hell, you're not even being paid for it (and if you are, that's illegal and you could be heavily fined). A professional is one that makes a living using his/her skills in exchange for money. TerranUp16, you are not a professional game designer. You are a professional student, and a mod maker. [/QUOTE]
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PC games
WarCraft III Modding
My 1st, 2nd, and 3rd model....
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