@PhenomX6 @TerminalAutism @ryo Are there really that many jobs that don't let you program your own stuff in your free time? I know IBM does it, but I can't imagine any employer having a problem with me developing games as a hobby as long as it doesn't interfere with my job or the games have offensive content.
@ryo @TerminalAutism Unless it's something that your boss doesn't care about. I highly doubt they would care if you make games in your free-time for one. As @PhenomX6 pointed out, it seems to be only a problem if it involves conflict of interests like emulators.
A lot of programming jobs require that you have a few hobby programs on a GitHub account as a portfolio, so you do need at least SOME projects under your real name.
@ryo @PhenomX6 @TerminalAutism The current job I'm training for doesn't seem to care about hobby projects. They don't require a Git portfolio, but I need to train on my own on algorithms and databases before I can actually work. (I need to act like I have 5 years of experience)
Though I rather not let them know about my gamedev stuff just because of the social stigma around it more than anything. It's also the reason why I didn't choose to become a gamedev as a career.
@PhenomX6 @TerminalAutism @ryo I think the nerd coder age died because they were making a living off of shareware which is hardly ever used anymore.
@xianc78 @PhenomX6 @TerminalAutism @ryo i had a contract like that and the general consensus is that in most jurisdictions this is unenforceable