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I'm going for a Bachelor's Degree in Game and Simulation Programming. Is the position of the industry stable enough to base a degree on?

2006-07-31 20:37:06 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

15 answers

yes
go ahead

2006-07-31 20:41:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Are you a general programmer or specialized (such as, artificial intelligence, sound, 2D or 3D graphics, etc)? It makes a difference to the answer.

What specific "industry" are you speaking of by the way? If you are not just focusing on the game side of the major, then you have a wider range of choices. Simulations are used widely in such industries as the motor vehicles and meteorology as they need to design and test cars in a virtual sense at the concept stage and weather is all done by simulations and predictions. Simulations are also commonly used in movies for special effects.

In the video game area of the market, the demand varies. For qualified programmers in 3D and artificial intellegence, the demand is high... but so are the requirements that they look for in a person to fill the job. Previous experience such as an internship or projects through the school will boost your chances of entering. The demand in sound designing is not so high.

There are a variety of areas this plays into so I can't specify how stable it is. The infomation you are looking for is best found by talking to a job councilor at the school you are attending.

2006-07-31 22:47:58 · answer #2 · answered by randomnight 2 · 0 0

If that is something that you have a passion for, then continue and get a degree. You would still be able to find many jobs in computer related fields. If you are simply getting that degree to get a job, you may want to consider a more general computer science degree, or one in a field such as networking, internet security, or VOIP which are all in high demand and with good pay.

2006-07-31 20:41:20 · answer #3 · answered by Garth 6 · 0 0

Sounds like something made up at a technical school. I would think something like BA in computer science would be a little more concrete.. but there will be games as long as people have hands to play them. I don't know about actual job openings though because a lot of programming jobs are going to India because they work for a lot less money.

2006-07-31 20:40:30 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

First, finished disclosure: I also have a Ph.D. and a pair of grasp's tiers. I artwork for a school and characteristic a love of touch with the form of individuals you describe. in fact, they are additionally basically human beings at coronary heart. They nonetheless take out the rubbish and consume fortunate Charms. some are short-tempered jerks and continually have been. some are very youthful and don't have a good style of life journey or have been narrowly concentrated in basic terms one area. This surprises people who anticipate extra out of those with extra tiers. I each so often get "the type you don't be responsive to that, healthcare expert?" do no longer mistake me or every person i be responsive to for the Professor from Gilligan's Island. this is basically an expression of a cultural stereotype. additionally, i ought to have been absent whilst they lined recommendations-analyzing. to place my researcher hat on, however, you could need some rather good documents to assist your "quote" and make it extra desirable than a sound chew. My hypothesis: those with progressed tiers don't have much less common experience than everybody else. they have the comparable quantity, meaning some have surely none and a few have very almost none. it is unquestionably one of those small team, however, that they stand out extra.

2016-11-03 10:44:02 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Health care is the safest industry. One of them. People always need it. Teaching is safe as well. It just is not safe in the usa. I would say that your degree is not safe because our economy is not safe and we do not know if we will have money for fun things. Illness we will always have and teaching we will always need, but teaching in the usa is a thankless job and you might as well not have a degree, but if you are in another country I would look into it. Your degree is too specialized most likely.

2006-07-31 20:42:09 · answer #6 · answered by adobeprincess 6 · 0 0

Yes, the video game industry is a multi billion dollars industry now. But choose your college after a good research

2006-07-31 20:41:09 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

actually. I was reading a article in a economic magazine, and there is a shortage of people in this field . not everybody in Computer science is into this field so there are more jobs in computer games than talent. So it is a nice field to get in to.
Check for new companies that are poping up ( France , Italy and some other places in central Europe )

2006-07-31 20:44:30 · answer #8 · answered by Nestor 4 · 0 0

I don't know off hand. But go to bls.gov, that is the Department of Labor's website and do some research. Also do some search engine searches on mamma.com or aj.com to determine the employment outlook/trends for this major.

2006-07-31 20:44:27 · answer #9 · answered by In God's Image 5 · 0 0

Not really in practicality, but yes of course in principality. Subject to advantage derived out of it.

2006-07-31 20:43:50 · answer #10 · answered by JD 4 · 0 0

Maybe if you're going to school in Japan.

It's a highly competitive field.

2006-07-31 20:39:19 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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