Gamedev Memes

Posts tagged with Gamedev

Did You Ever Had A Game Like This?

Did You Ever Had A Game Like This?
You know that feeling when you see a game trailer with stunning graphics and smooth gameplay, and you're like "I NEED this"? Then you install it, hit play, and your PC immediately transforms into a space heater while struggling to render the main menu at 12 FPS. The gap between "recommended specs" and "actually playable specs" is basically the Grand Canyon at this point. Your GPU is screaming, your CPU is throttling, and Windows is politely suggesting you close some applications (as if closing Chrome tabs will save you now). Meanwhile, your friend with a 4090 is asking why you're complaining about performance. Brother, some of us are still running hardware from when Harambe was alive. The train collision perfectly captures that moment when your system requirements meet actual game requirements. Spoiler alert: your PC is the one getting demolished.

I Have Seen The Light

I Have Seen The Light
That beautiful moment when you discover scriptable objects and suddenly every piece of data in your project becomes one. Health values? Scriptable object. Enemy stats? Scriptable object. That random string you hardcoded? Believe it or not, also a scriptable object. It's like discovering design patterns for the first time - you become the person who sees nails everywhere because you just got a shiny new hammer. Next thing you know, you're refactoring your entire codebase at 2 AM because "everything should be data-driven." The butterfly representing "any data I need to create, ever" is perfect because it captures that innocent, pure beauty of a solution that seems to solve all your problems... until six months later when you have 47 scriptable objects and can't remember which one controls the jump height.

Multi Platform Mobile Development

Multi Platform Mobile Development
Flutter developers and React Native developers screaming at each other about which framework is superior while Unity developers sit there with galaxy brain energy, casually shipping their mobile apps with a game engine designed for 3D rendering. Because nothing says "efficient mobile development" quite like bringing an entire physics engine to display a login form. To be fair, if your app needs to run on iOS, Android, a smart fridge, and probably a toaster, Unity's got you covered. Overkill? Maybe. Does it work? Unfortunately, yes.

My Wallet Choosing Patience

My Wallet Choosing Patience
Your wallet really said "nah, I'll wait for the GOTY edition" and honestly? Smart move. Why drop $70 on a buggy mess with half the content locked behind season passes when you can grab the complete experience for less than a lunch combo two years later? By then, the devs have finally patched out the game-breaking bugs, the community has figured out all the exploits, and you get to enjoy the full story without waiting for DLC drops every three months. Plus, you avoid the day-one server crashes and the disappointment of realizing the "AAA" stands for "Actually Awful at launch." Patient gamers eat good while everyone else beta tests for full price.

Supply And Demand

Supply And Demand
The entrepreneurial spirit is alive and well in gamedev. Step 1: Design a puzzle game so complex it requires physical note-taking. Step 2: Conveniently sell branded notebooks at your booth. It's not predatory capitalism, it's just... vertical integration. Honestly though, this is galaxy brain marketing. You're not just selling a game—you're selling the *entire experience*, including the tools needed to actually beat it. Next up: selling reading glasses for games with tiny fonts, or ergonomic chairs for roguelikes that take 80 hours to complete. The real kicker? Those notebooks probably have better margins than the game itself. Welcome to indie game development, where the real money is in the merch.

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.

The AAA Industry Seems Broken Beyond Repair

The AAA Industry Seems Broken Beyond Repair
Triple-A game studios have perfected the art of failing upward. Ship a buggy mess? Fired. Ship something merely forgettable? Also fired. But somehow deliver a record-breaking bestseller that prints money? Believe it or not, straight to the unemployment line. The logic here is absolutely bulletproof: why keep the talented devs who just made you billions when you could pocket that money and hire cheaper replacements for the next inevitable disaster? It's like deleting your production database after a successful deployment because "we don't need it anymore." Welcome to modern game dev, where success is punished harder than failure because shareholders need their quarterly sacrifice. The beatings will continue until morale improves—oh wait, we laid off morale last quarter.

Every Indie Developer Eventually Gets This Card

Every Indie Developer Eventually Gets This Card
The indie dev grind captured in one brutal UNO card. You're building your passion project, pouring your soul into it, juggling 47 different roles (developer, designer, marketer, customer support, janitor), and then life deals you this: either quit indie development entirely or draw 25 more problems to deal with. The guy's hand is absolutely stuffed with cards because quitting? That's not in the vocabulary. Instead, he's drawn every single card in the deck: scope creep, feature requests, bug fixes, marketing struggles, imposter syndrome, financial stress, and the classic "why isn't anyone downloading my app?" existential crisis. The deck becomes your entire life. Fun fact: studies show indie devs work an average of 60+ hours per week while making less than minimum wage in the first few years. But hey, at least you're your own boss, right? Right?? *nervously clutches 73 cards*

*Googles "How Do I Finish A Game"*

*Googles "How Do I Finish A Game"*
The beautiful bond between indie devs drowning in feature creep and gamers with 847 games in their Steam library but "nothing to play." You start with a simple platformer, add procedural generation, then multiplayer, then crafting, then a romance system... and suddenly it's been 4 years and you're still "polishing the main menu." Meanwhile gamers buy your early access title, play 2 hours, say "I'll come back when it's done," and never do. It's the circle of life, except nobody actually completes the circle. Fun fact: Studies show only about 20-30% of gamers finish the games they start. Indie devs have similar completion rates for their projects. It's almost like they're made for each other.

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.

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.

The Betrayal Is Real

The Betrayal Is Real
You spent three hours tweaking your display settings, making sure your primary monitor is perfectly calibrated, positioned just right in your OS settings, and then some game decides it knows better. Launches straight onto your secondary monitor like it's challenging your authority. Now you're sitting there looking at your main screen like a disappointed parent while your game is over there living its best life on the wrong display. The disrespect is palpable. Bonus points when it's a fullscreen game and you have to Alt+Tab through seventeen windows to find the settings, change the display, restart the game, and then it still launches on the secondary monitor. Some games just want to watch the world burn.