Game development Memes

Posts tagged with Game development

Does This Marketing Strategy Work?💀

Does This Marketing Strategy Work?💀
Indie game devs be out here thinking "maybe if I refresh the Steam page ONE more time, someone will buy it." Meanwhile, they've completely abandoned any semblance of actual marketing—like posting on social media, building a community, or literally doing anything that might attract players. Five minutes into your first release and you're already checking the sales dashboard like it's a heart rate monitor. Spoiler alert: refreshing the page doesn't magically generate sales. But hey, at least you're getting really good at hitting F5. That's a skill, right? The real kicker is watching the "actually marketing the game" exit fly by while you speed down the highway of denial and compulsive page refreshing. Classic developer move—spend 2 years building the game, 0 minutes learning how to sell it.

Game Dev Logic

Game Dev Logic
Game devs will spend months perfecting realistic water physics and lighting effects, then slap up an invisible wall with a sign that says "PLEASE DO NOT SWIM - There isn't an animation for it." Because why animate swimming when you can just... not let players swim? The brutal honesty is what kills me. No lore-friendly excuse like "dangerous currents" or "shark-infested waters." Just straight up admitting they didn't feel like animating it. That's the kind of transparent laziness I can respect. Ship it.

I Guess The Minimum Is 500

I Guess The Minimum Is 500
When a game has 250 concurrent players, you wonder how it's still breathing. But once it hits 501? Suddenly it's thriving beyond comprehension. That magical threshold where "dead game" transforms into "actually has a playerbase" is apparently somewhere between these two numbers. The Steam player count is basically Schrödinger's matchmaking queue—below 500 and you're staring at the lobby for 45 minutes hoping that one guy in Australia will queue up. Above 500? You might actually find a match before your coffee gets cold. Fun fact: Many multiplayer games need a critical mass of players to function properly. Below that threshold, matchmaking becomes a dystopian waiting simulator. It's like trying to start a party when only three people showed up—technically possible, but nobody's having fun.

When Next Fest Is Over

When Next Fest Is Over
Oh honey, the absolute DEVASTATION of Steam Next Fest ending. You went in thinking "I'll just try a few demos" and came out with a wishlist longer than your backlog (which was already embarrassingly long). The sad person with 14,000 wishlists? That's the game developer who just watched their entire life's work get added to the digital equivalent of "I'll get to it eventually" while some other indie game casually strolled away with 300 wishlists and is somehow thriving. The disparity is BRUTAL. Welcome to gamedev, where your masterpiece gets buried under 47 cozy farming simulators and that one game about a sentient piece of bread.

Couldn't Agree More

Couldn't Agree More
You know what's wild? Warner Bros. has been sitting on a patent for the Nemesis System—that revolutionary AI mechanic from Shadow of Mordor where enemies remember you, evolve, and create emergent narratives—since 2015. It's one of the most innovative gameplay systems in decades, and instead of letting other devs iterate on it and push gaming forward, it's locked behind legal walls collecting dust. The whole thing is basically the software patent debate in a nutshell. Imagine if someone patented "for loops" back in the day. We'd still be writing GOTO statements like cave dwellers. The gaming industry (and honestly, the entire tech world) thrives on building upon each other's ideas. Patents like this don't protect innovation—they strangle it in its crib. So yeah, nobody cares about your corporate acquisition drama, Warner Bros. Just let the patent expire so the rest of us can actually make games better. Is that too much to ask?

Sorry, Can't Do Scarves

Sorry, Can't Do Scarves
Game devs will literally implement a complex physics engine with ragdoll mechanics, particle systems for explosive lava effects, and procedural demon summoning algorithms, but adding a cloth simulation for a scarf? That's where they draw the line. The complexity hierarchy in game development is beautifully backwards: rendering a hellscape with real-time lighting and shadows? No problem. Making fabric drape naturally over a character model? Suddenly we're asking for the moon. This perfectly captures the reality that what seems "easy" to implement versus what's actually easy are two completely different universes. Cloth physics is notoriously difficult—it requires sophisticated vertex deformation, collision detection, and performance optimization to not tank your frame rate. Meanwhile, spawning a giant demon is just instantiating a prefab with some particle effects. The demon doesn't need to realistically interact with wind or character movement; the scarf does.

Hear Me Out. Highguard, But The Horses Are Anime Girls

Hear Me Out. Highguard, But The Horses Are Anime Girls
Fortnite keeps desperately clawing at relevance after each failed launch, throwing everything at the wall hoping something sticks. Meanwhile, Highguard said "you know what? I'm good" and walked away from the game dev grind to pursue a life of pure diamond mining. The real joke here is the perseverance difference: Fortnite has Epic's infinite money printer backing it, so they can afford to faceplant repeatedly and still come back with another collab or season. Highguard (presumably an indie dev or smaller studio) looked at their launch numbers, checked their bank account, and made the rational decision to pivot to literally anything else that pays better. It's the classic tale of "big studio privilege vs indie reality" – one gets to fail upward indefinitely while the other needs to actually make rent.

Devs Reading Steam Reviews

Devs Reading Steam Reviews
Game devs scrolling through Steam reviews at 3 AM, desperately searching for validation after months of crunch, and finding someone who played for 1.4 hours but got so hooked they lost track of time. The glowing eyes moment hits when they realize the player praised the graphics AND the flashlight implementation. THE FLASHLIGHT. You know you've made it when someone notices your lighting system. That "You are a good man. Thank you" response? That's every dev who's ever had their soul crushed by "Not Recommended - 2,847 hours played" reviews. This one positive review from someone with barely any playtime but genuine enthusiasm is worth more than a thousand "it's okay I guess" from players with 500+ hours. It's the emotional support we didn't know we needed but absolutely deserve.

"It Would Be So Cool To Make My Own Game" Vs "I'M Burned Out And Exhausted"

"It Would Be So Cool To Make My Own Game" Vs "I'M Burned Out And Exhausted"
The journey from "I'm gonna make the next indie masterpiece!" to "why did I choose violence?" in visual form. One side is literally staring into the abyss of game development hell—physics engines, collision detection, asset management, and the eternal question of "why won't this sprite just MOVE CORRECTLY?" Meanwhile, the other side is blissfully daydreaming about their future Steam bestseller, completely unaware of the nightmare that awaits. It's the difference between innocence and trauma, between hope and despair, between "how hard could it be?" and "I haven't slept in 72 hours and my main character is clipping through the floor." Game dev will humble you faster than a failed production deploy on a Friday afternoon.

Game Dev Logic Is Just Arcane Chaos

Game Dev Logic Is Just Arcane Chaos
Game development: where summoning a demon from a lava explosion is "trivial" but adding a scarf to the player model requires a 6-hour meeting with the art team, three engine restarts, and possibly a blood sacrifice to the physics gods. The complexity hierarchy in game dev is completely inverted—rendering a photorealistic apocalypse? Child's play. Making a hat stay on a character's head? That's dark sorcery nobody dares attempt. It's because the demon is just particle effects and a pre-baked animation, but that scarf? That needs cloth physics, collision detection, bone rigging, and the willingness to watch it clip through the character's neck for the rest of eternity. Game devs will casually implement procedural terrain generation but then panic at the thought of customizable accessories. Priorities? We don't know her.

My Game Flopped So Hard It Is Hilarious

My Game Flopped So Hard It Is Hilarious
The indie game dev journey in four panels of pure pain. You start out following all the "right" advice: network at conventions, get those sweet industry validation points, build hype. Then you land a publisher and think you've made it—only to discover they're broke and have the marketing budget of a lemonade stand. Plot twist: turns out your own marketing skills are somehow even worse than theirs, and you're so introverted you'd rather debug memory leaks than talk to humans. The final panel hits different though. Two seconds of TikTok watch time? Reddit downvoting your promo posts into the shadow realm? Single. Digit. Player. Count. That's not just failure—that's your game being so invisible it might as well not exist. At least when games crash, people had to run them first. This is the gamedev equivalent of shouting into the void and the void actively scrolling past you. Fun fact: The average indie game on Steam gets around 1,500 sales in its lifetime. So if you're hitting single digits, congratulations—you've achieved statistical improbability in the wrong direction.

Graphics Programming

Graphics Programming
You write some completely incomprehensible OpenGL code with function names that look like keyboard smashing—glCreateShader, glCreateBuffer, glDraw(gdjshdbb)—sprinkle in some magic numbers like 69 and 420 because why not, and somehow a beautiful gradient triangle appears on screen. Graphics programming is basically alchemy where you sacrifice readability to the GPU gods and get rewarded with pretty colors. The best part? You have zero idea why it works, but you're not touching that code ever again.