Gamedev Memes

Posts tagged with Gamedev

How It Feels Looking At Other People's WIPs

How It Feels Looking At Other People's WIPs
You know that crushing feeling when someone casually drops their "just started last night" WIP and it's a photorealistic fantasy landscape with volumetric lighting and atmospheric perspective? Meanwhile, you're over here celebrating because you finally figured out how to make a basic capsule object move in the right direction after two months of fighting with transform matrices and quaternions. The contrast here is brutal. They're out here building entire civilizations while you're still in tutorial hell trying to understand the basics of 3D space. But hey, at least your capsule moves now. That's progress, right? Right? Game dev is a humbling experience where everyone else seems to be a digital Michelangelo while you're just happy your primitive shapes aren't clipping through the floor anymore.

I Miss When Gamers Felt Like The Priority, Not AI Data Centres

I Miss When Gamers Felt Like The Priority, Not AI Data Centres
Gamers: "Pretty please, can we have reasonably priced GPUs that actually render our games instead of relying on AI magic to make up pixels?" Nvidia: *sweating nervously while counting billions from AI data center sales* "I do as the crystal guides" — and by crystal, they mean the literal fortune they're making selling H100s to tech companies for $40,000 a pop instead of gaming GPUs to you peasants. The icons on the forehead? Those are various AI upscaling technologies (DLSS and friends) that Nvidia keeps pushing so they can sell you weaker cards at premium prices while the REAL hardware goes to train ChatGPT's cousin. Gaming went from being Nvidia's golden child to the awkward stepchild they only acknowledge at family gatherings. The audacity!

Marketing Strategy

Marketing Strategy
The indie dev scene in a nutshell. Real solo devs grinding away in obscurity get a few drops of recognition while studios with entire marketing departments cosplay as "just a solo dev working from my bedroom" and get showered with attention. Nothing says authentic like a team of 20 people with a PR budget pretending they're a scrappy underdog. The upvotes flow to whoever tells the better story, not necessarily who's actually coding alone at 2 AM surviving on instant ramen and spite.

Current Status

Current Status
You start with grand ambitions of building the next indie hit, ready to fight through all the technical challenges. Then you discover that implementing proper hand animations, inverse kinematics, and skeletal meshes is basically a PhD thesis. Suddenly you're sitting there, defeated, wondering if stick figures are really that bad. Every gamedev's journey begins with "I'll make something amazing" and ends with "why do hands have so many bones?" It's the circle of life, except with more rage-quitting and tutorial hell.

Whiplash Whenever It Happens

Whiplash Whenever It Happens
You spend thousands on a GPU that could probably run a small country's power grid, optimize your game to run buttery smooth at 4K 120FPS, and you're just vibing through gameplay like it's a casual Tuesday. Then a cutscene starts and suddenly you're watching a PowerPoint presentation from 2003. The jarring transition from silky smooth gameplay to choppy cinematic feels like your brain just got rear-ended by a truck. Game devs really said "let's pre-render these cutscenes at 720p 24FPS to save on file size" while your RTX 4090 sits there crying in the corner, begging to be utilized. The whiplash is real—it's like going from a luxury sports car to a shopping cart with one wobbly wheel. Bonus points when the cutscene is unskippable and you're forced to watch it in all its stuttery glory.

In The Light Of Recent News Regarding DLSS 5...

In The Light Of Recent News Regarding DLSS 5...
NVIDIA just announced DLSS 5 with "AI Frame Generation" that literally generates entire frames out of thin air, and now we've crossed the Rubicon where people are genuinely accepting that they're not even watching real game graphics anymore—just AI hallucinations pretending to be pixels. The existential dread is real. We went from "hand-crafted pixel art" to "neural networks making up what they think you want to see" in like two decades. Artists spent years perfecting their craft, and now we're all just... cool with the machine doing its best impression of reality? The normalization is complete. It's like watching the Boiling Frog Experiment speedrun any% category. First it was upscaling, then frame interpolation, now full frame generation. Next year DLSS 6 will just show you a slideshow while whispering "trust me bro, the game is running."

Video Games Must Always Have An Offline Mode

Video Games Must Always Have An Offline Mode
Oh, the AUDACITY of game developers who actually respect their players' ability to, you know, play the game they purchased without needing a constant internet connection! Imagine being so revolutionary that you let people enjoy single-player content on a plane, in a basement, or during an internet outage. What absolute legends! Meanwhile, the rest of the gaming industry is out here requiring always-online DRM for single-player games like they're guarding nuclear launch codes. Nothing screams "player-first experience" quite like being unable to play your story-driven RPG because your WiFi hiccupped for 2 seconds. But sure, tell me again how this is about "preventing piracy" and not about forcing everyone onto your ecosystem. Those rare devs who build proper offline modes? They're basically unicorns at this point. Respect the grind. 🎮

How It Feels To Try And Market Your Game As An Indie Dev

How It Feels To Try And Market Your Game As An Indie Dev
You spent 3 years coding your masterpiece in Unity, debugging physics engines at 3 AM, and crying over memory leaks. Now comes the easy part: marketing! Just casually begging strangers on Steam to maybe, possibly, if they're feeling generous, add your game to their wishlist. Not even buy it—just acknowledge its existence. The desperation is real. You've gone from "I'm building the next indie hit" to literally begging for breadcrumbs of validation from the Steam algorithm gods. A single wishlist? That's a dopamine hit that'll sustain you for weeks. Five wishlists? Time to pop the champagne and update your LinkedIn to "Successful Game Developer." Meanwhile, some asset flip gets 10k wishlists because it has "anime" and "waifu" in the title. The indie dev struggle is truly a humbling experience.

Modders Have 3 Jokes

Modders Have 3 Jokes
Ah yes, the holy trinity of game modding creativity. Whenever a new PC game drops, you can set your watch by these three showing up: someone putting Shrek in it, someone adding CJ from GTA San Andreas, and someone cramming Thomas the Tank Engine into places he has absolutely no business being. Dragons? Nah, Thomas. Zombies? Thomas. Final boss? You guessed it—Thomas. It's like the modding community collectively agreed these are the three pillars of comedy and nobody's allowed to deviate. Skyrim? Check all three. Resident Evil? Yup. Elden Ring? Obviously. The predictability is both exhausting and somehow still hilarious every single time.

Is This True??

Is This True??
Vulkan developers looking at a rainbow triangle like it's a Michelin-star meal because they just spent 2000 lines of boilerplate setting up swap chains, render passes, and pipeline state objects. For context, Vulkan is a low-level graphics API that gives you complete control over the GPU, which means you're responsible for literally everything—memory management, synchronization, validation layers, the works. While other APIs let you draw a triangle in 50 lines, Vulkan makes you earn it by manually configuring things most people didn't know existed. The Carl Sagan quote is perfect here: rendering anything in Vulkan from scratch genuinely feels like you need to bootstrap reality itself first.

Especially Fun If You Have 100 Other Uncommitted Files On Top And Gotta Work Through The Mess

Especially Fun If You Have 100 Other Uncommitted Files On Top And Gotta Work Through The Mess
You spent SIX HOURS tweaking shaders, refactoring rendering pipelines, and micro-optimizing your game loop like a caffeinated wizard. You're expecting your FPS to skyrocket into the stratosphere, maybe unlock a new dimension of smoothness. But nope! Your frame rate goes from a respectable 60 to a tragic 30, and now you're staring at your screen like a betrayed anime character. The best part? You've got 100 uncommitted files scattered across your codebase like a digital crime scene, so good luck figuring out which specific line of code turned your game into a PowerPoint presentation. Time to git reset --hard and pretend this never happened... except you can't because you never committed anything. Chef's kiss of chaos.

Pokemon Vs Digimon, Csgo Vs Valorant, Lethal Company Vs Peak, Can't We All Just Get Along 😩

Pokemon Vs Digimon, Csgo Vs Valorant, Lethal Company Vs Peak, Can't We All Just Get Along 😩
Game devs really out here stressing about which engine is superior, which framework is more optimized, which pixel art style is more authentic... meanwhile players are just happy there's more than one game to play. The dev is having an existential crisis comparing their work to someone else's, convinced everyone's judging their "inferior cake." Plot twist: nobody cares about your imposter syndrome—they're just psyched there are TWO cakes. It's like spending 6 months optimizing your game engine to run at 144fps instead of 120fps while your players are just vibing with both games in their Steam library. The gamedev community loves to create drama where none exists. Unity vs Godot, Unreal vs custom engine, 2D vs 3D—bro, we're all just making interactive rectangles move around screens. Chill.