![]() (Sometimes the teacher really takes care of a kid, but that's something for a different story.) While we want him to have a lot of friends and not only be given As in school, but also win competitions and awards. Sometimes the teacher takes care of teaching the child how to walk as well as the parents, but later, in kindergarten, he doesn't pay much attention at all, and our kid is left on his own, not integrating with the others, and no one is interested in him.Īnd sometimes the teacher is flat broke or mean as a Scrooge, and he doesn't even get the kid a bus ticket to the kindergarten (well, that's what parents should do, but this is the hypothetical model, right?) Then no one will befriend with the kid, he'll fade into obscurity and end up as abandonware. Sometimes it works fine, but sometimes the kid falls over on its own feet, much to frustration of the parents. If this comparison is applied to the game industry model, then our kid has a teacher or a supervisor (the publisher), who has his own ideas for teaching the kid to walk. Of course, parents (usually) don't celebrate this moment with barrels of beer, as often happens in the game development industry. This pride is some unique mixture of the joy of finishing the work and something that parents feel when their kid has learned to walk or has been given their first A in school. ![]() Anyone who has ever worked on a project in the entertainment industry - whether it's a movie, a music album, or a game - knows well the feeling of being proud when the moment of finalizing the project arrives.
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