@CS2NoVa@XirtCS The job market is brutal, and I don't think it's going to get better. Gotta get creative. I'd be happy to help in any way I can, you have me on discord that's where I'm most responsive. Hang in there
@CS2NoVa@XirtCS I got every internship and my current job from my university's job board on Handshake. If you have access to something similar use it. Otherwise best bet is to build cool projects, post about them publicly, and reach out to people at small companies that might find it interesting
if you actually have the talent to go pro in cs (or any esport) you're probably talented enough to reach the top 1% of most fields. talent is not 1 dimensional. if this is you, please consider the good you could do outside of a money burning entertainment industry.
this is not meant to be judgemental towards pros or those trying to go pro. I tried. this is just one of the reasons I stopped.
the BEST case scenario is a short career in an industry that burns investor money to provide entertainment.
⚠️ LF2 ADV S52! ⚠️
Looking for two riflers to round out a deep-playoff/relegation experienced team. Lurk/anchor roles and ADV PO+ exp preferred.
Team is currently: myself / @Tyra_csgo / @milo_cs2
DM's open! ❤️ + ♻️
@pufkd yeah it's doable, although it wouldn't leave much time for friends, cooking, exercise, etc
cs as a hobby is fine I'm talking about people trying to go pro. the commitment it takes to make it isn't worth the risk
@C0J0M0 I'm mainly talking about people who are neglecting their real life trying to go pro. Real life won't start to become great accidentally, it takes effort
The opportunity cost of ~5 nights a week of practice (plus any time spent outside of that) is greatly underestimated
@SweatyMcRibCS and when I say "you can do both if you're a prodigy", I mean go pro while setting yourself up in life outside of cs. Karrigan comes to mind, pretty sure he played pro cs while getting a masters
he is the exception not the rule
@SweatyMcRibCS you can do both if you're a prodigy
pro cs selects for people delusional enough to make it their whole life with no plan b. if you are putting time into a plan b you're falling behind
if you have no plan b and don't go pro (likely), you've now wasted your prime for nothing
@SwillCS that's awesome, sounds like you'll probably do fine
the important realization in software is just that getting a degree alone isn't enough to guarantee a job. I only realized that my last semester lol
@SwillCS that was with 2 internships btw. so ig "not much effort outside of classes" isn't entirely accurate, but I was definitely coasting compared to what I could have been doing
@SwillCS yeah it depends on the field how much effort is required. I majored in software engineering and didn't put in much effort outside of classes until my last semester (too busy with cs). Took me ~5 months of full focus on the job search after graduation to land one
@SwillCS cs feels all consuming when you're in it. the contrast when you leave it is insane. none of this shit matters. if you spend all of your free time playing cs life will eventually catch up to you
you're in school so you're doing better than many - just don't graduate jobless