A pesar de estar trabajando desde las próximas semanas ¡Seguiré haciendo terapia en las tardes y sábados! Dejo mi tarjeta por si alguien necesita o conocen a alguien que necesite la ayuda, siempre contesto por el correo y aca.
Se agradecen los RT <3
『NEW CHARACTER INTRODUCTION』
"CYBERPUNK: EDGERUNNERS 2"
Character name: D
Description: A Snake Nation netrunner with sharp technical skills and a sharper hunger for revenge, D hunts the killer who wiped out his clan.
Very insightful & nuanced review.
It’s true that Japan can be very strict about rules & procedures. As I mentioned in my post two posts ago, if there were a WAFFLE HOUSE in Japan, they probably would never have sold me their actual physical menu as a souvenir due to store policy, even if I asked.
The game market is unique in some ways as well, but when it comes to PC gaming, Western games are actually quite widespread and sell very well here.
As for living in Japan, I do think it can suit some people more than others. It’s true that work tends to occupy a relatively large portion of people’s lifestyles here, and more importantly — although this exists in every country to some extent (this is an important premise, and I’ll say it again: this exists in every country) — Japan comparatively tends to reward “personal relationships and internal politics” over pure competence when it comes to promotions.
In other words, there’s definitely a “the nail that sticks out gets hammered down” culture, and I think a lot of people struggle with that.
(And by the way, situations where someone who 99 out of 100 people would consider completely incompetent — someone basically unknown in the industry except for endless stories about their incompetence — somehow gets promoted into an absurdly high executive position, leaving entire organizations shocked and dumbfounded… those situations genuinely exist around us. The kind of unbelievably bad personnel placement that feels like it belongs in a movie scene.)