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Entry Level Game Industry Salaries

An anonymous reader writes "Game Tycoon has posted some informal information about entry-level salaries for students entering the video game industry." From the article: "Students who applied for engineering jobs seem to be getting offers in the 70s -- in some cases, the high 70s. The same students got offers approximately 10K higher from companies in other industries; i.e. Oracle, Microsoft, etc. So the gap between game company offers and non-game company offers appears to be narrowing for engineers. In general, I was amazed at how high the offers were!"

7 of 82 comments (clear)

  1. Take it with a grain of salt by fistfullast33l · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The opening line of the article was "I was speaking to some MIT students."

    So basically, these salaries are probably inflated because they're from MIT and can fetch top dollar. I just graduated with an MS in CS (not from MIT) and I was getting offers in the high 60's,low 70's from Microsoft, IBM and the like. I didn't talk to any game companies so I can't say anything about that, but don't expect to go into CS and come out from any school other than an MIT or CMU and fetch high 70s. If you're going for a BS, I wouldn't get my hopes past 60, MS past 75. There is a ton of hiring going on right now though, so you might get lucky. Everyone and their brother is hiring.

  2. Pointless by Threni · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The linked-to story is just some guy babbling on a blog about how he chatted to `a few` people. Perhaps if some sort of representative survey had been carried out, and the terms he is using were slightly more well defined this article would have some merit.

  3. Location, location, location by fastgood · · Score: 2, Insightful
    When particular fields are tied to a few specific regions, it is no surprise to see a salary difference get explained for the wrong reasons.

    At one time over 90% of US actuaries lived within 100 miles of Hartford, CT. Pay level statistics reflected the high cost of living there.

  4. But note by LightningTH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    High $70k salaries in the western side of the US where cost of living is high. Over on the south/east side, it is around $50k average. However the burn-out rate for the game industry seems to be around 5 years due to the large number of hours. But why get paid $70k a year when you work 60 hour weeks (or more)? You actually make less per hour than someone working $50k salary at 40 hours a week.

  5. My experience... by MaestroSartori · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...in the UK:

    on graduating, most games companies would not take on recent graduates, and required a minimum of 12 months experience and a published title. How to gain 12 months experience and publish a title when nobody will hire you is left as an exercise for the reader.

    I eventually landed a job in one of the most expensive parts of the UK to live in (Surrey), earning £20,000 - at the time approximately $30,000 - which I'm told was a decent wage for a graduate programmer at the time. This was less than the average national wage which was £24,000 or thereabouts if I recall correctly. Other graduates from my university class going to work for investment banks or web companies were getting offers of up to £35,000 or thereabouts, and the ones who've become sysadmins rather than programmers all earn more than me even now.

    The games industry isn't one where you go for high wages. You do it for the love of games, and then because even if you wanted to change career paths it's tricky when you don't have "serious" coding experience...

  6. Re:not normal students - MIT students by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It also does not mention where these jobs were physically located. 70-80k in say, Austin, goes a whole lot farther than it does in San Jose or Boston.

  7. Re:not normal students - MIT students by EggyToast · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Exactly. Friend of mine graduated from my program and moved out to California to work for IBM. Starting salary for her? $75k. But she worked in Silicon Valley... and the only place she could afford was a shared apartment with 3 other new employees. Granted, it was a nice apartment...

    I moved to the other coast, make about half what she does, and I'm buying a house this summer. She may be making more money, but that doesn't mean she has more money.