Solo-dev Memes

Posts tagged with Solo-dev

Me Making My RPG Game

Me Making My RPG Game
You know you've entered true game dev hell when you spend 6 hours architecting a combat system with seventeen nested state machines, custom event buses, and a dependency injection framework that would make enterprise Java developers weep with pride—all because you refused to watch a single tutorial. The code is so convoluted that only you can understand it, and even that's questionable after a coffee break. But hey, at least it's YOUR spaghetti code, crafted with the stubborn determination of someone who thinks "best practices" are just suggestions for people who lack vision. The real kicker? It probably does the exact same thing a simple switch statement would've done, but with 400% more architectural "elegance."

Where You All Solo Devs At Show Yourselfs

Where You All Solo Devs At Show Yourselfs
Solo devs out here built different. While AAA studios have hundreds of employees arguing about sprint velocity and small teams are stressed about who's handling the UI, solo devs are literally one-person armies doing everything from coding to art to sound design to marketing to customer support. They're the programmer, the designer, the QA tester, the DevOps engineer, AND the coffee machine repairman. You're not just wearing multiple hats—you ARE the entire wardrobe. Every bug is your fault, every feature is your triumph, and every 2 AM debugging session is your personal hell. But hey, at least you don't have to sit through standup meetings or explain your code to anyone. The ultimate freedom comes with ultimate responsibility, and apparently, ultimate muscle mass.

Solo Indie Gamedev

Solo Indie Gamedev
The vicious cycle that keeps indie devs trapped in their basements for years. You start with this beautiful vision of your dream game, then reality hits and you're building some janky prototype that looks like it was made in MS Paint. But instead of shipping it, perfectionism kicks in and you spend 6 months tweaking the lighting on a tree nobody will notice. Meanwhile, your bank account is sending you increasingly aggressive notifications, but you can't release it yet because "it's not ready." So you loop back to the dream, convincing yourself this time will be different. The phone screen showing "death in poverty - incoming call" with two answer buttons is chef's kiss. Like you have a choice but you're answering either way. That's the indie gamedev life—you know what's coming but you do it anyway because you're in too deep now.