How To Get Paid To Play Video Games - A Gamers Ideal Career

By Sean T Saunders


All gamers cherish the idea of having the ability to play video games and make cash, but only a handful of of them ever understand that it's a legitimate career. Although this job does NOT involve lounging around on a sofa, eating pizza, and slurping down soda, it DOES involve playing video games and getting paid for your effort. It won't be non-stop excitement, but it's not exactly sewage duty either. To put it in laymans terms, it's a GENUINE job -- not a hobby!

You Will Need To Actually Work...

Repetition is the main drawback of being a video game beta tester. While an everyday gamer can just press forward through area after area, a video game beta tester will need to redo levels over and over -- and then again & again. Picture playing the same part of the same game for hours on end. Imagine the dullness which comes from this. Got a mental image? Well, that is precisely what you'll be doing as a beta tester. Include numerous forms & reports that you need to fill in -- used in pinpointing bugs & glitches -- and you've got the makings of an awfully boring job.

Reports are used to identify and outline errors which you have discovered while playing. These reports are used by software engineers and coders to quickly track down bugs & glitches and fix them. If the reports are inexact or sloppily written/typed, software engineers & coders may be powerless to fix the game's problems -- meaning you're not helping the team, you are hindering it. If you wish to be a video game beta tester for more than one month, then decent grammar skills are an absolute necessity.

What You Will Be Paid

People -- those of whom wish to play games and earn cash -- generally think that the pay is really small. Even though this might be true for "arcade style games" and gimmicky websites which offer weekly "gaming" tournaments, it is not the case for professional video game testing. Game testers will make anywhere from $200 to $600 each week, based on the circumstances

While there are indeed permanent positions available with different game companies, many testing positions are on a "pay as you go" basis. What this means is you get paid for each beta testing task you complete; as a freelancer. The faster you work and complete your assignments, the more assignments you can accept and the more income you can make.

If you really wish to play video games and earn money -- and you're positive you can get past the extended periods of boredom and unexciting paperwork filing -- then expert game testing may be perfect for you. The pay is good, the hours are excellent, and the perks are phenomenal!




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