Day in the Life of a Japanese Game Programmer

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To be honest this seems a lot like working at an American Tech Company. I've never worked at a game company but in my internships I've gotten to experience multiple offices just like this. A lot of emphasis is put on making your employees happy with the game stations and snacks and nap spaces and such

👍︎︎ 106 👤︎︎ u/themagicalcake 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

The level of access this guy was given to Bandai Namco is insane. I wish we could get little documentaries like this for various eastern and western game studios.

👍︎︎ 254 👤︎︎ u/Exciting_Control 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

This is pretty similar to my working day (database dev in the Netherlands). I start (and leave) earlier and have breakfast before I leave, usually make my own meals, my commute is longer (atypically long actually) and my appartement might be slightly larger. The main difference is that I interact with my colleagues a lot more.

👍︎︎ 29 👤︎︎ u/Tenocticatl 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

This series of this channel is pretty cool. I already saw all the others with Mangaka, chef, office worker and so on.

About the video, really great to see the offices of Bandai Namco Studios in JP. I'm always curious to see how it is internally in many studios and companies (without being images), so seeing so much into the day of there is pretty interesting in itself. Nice to see too how much good it's the infrastructure there, I wish the company I worked had so much things to do, so much options and had such amazing designs (and the games of course lol). 8 hours without the crunch time is also nice, but that I already knew since BNS always had a good reputation in Japan for its quality.

And damn, a programmer job must be really boring. At least to me it looks like, even more compared to other parts of a game.

👍︎︎ 143 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

"Dude they can play games for free all day :D"

Is this their first time discovering that humans make video games?

👍︎︎ 17 👤︎︎ u/SonicFlash01 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

I'm a game designer that used to work at the biggest sports video game studio in America and the only major studio in Orlando. Later I worked at a studio in northeastern America that was making DLC for the season pass of a popular sci-fi FPS/MMO hybrid (a looter shooter), and now I'm gearing up to move and work at an MMO studio in northwestern America.

Ranging from the snacks to the drinks to the games and book library are spot on to what I'm used to. I didn't see any "free" table where employee plop their unneeded things for others to take though, which is a standout that I noted wasn't in the documentary. Maybe Japanese culture frowns upon that kind of "one's trash is another's treasure" mentality?

The one major thing I didn't like about the documentary is that they made it look like all the consoles and systems the studio has near the engineer's desk is purely for recreation. From my experience, that's generally not the case. The thing about having all that hardware within arm's reach is most likely to test for compatibility and potentially any bugs before performing a submission for a code review. While QA is responsible for catching most of the bugs, it's also a best practice habit to catch as many as they can or at least make sure the game doesn't break on boot up before sending to QA for review.

As for the two guys playing Tekken and the comments about them, there's a very likely possibility they were testing out an internal build just to see if any problems came up OR they're on a break and wanted to go a few rounds (and probably have an internal rankings list to go with it).

In terms of perks, I've seen many snack areas. A sci-fi FPS/MMO looter shooter dev studio I interviewed with in particular has an INCREDIBLE snack area in the kitchen, while the MMO studio I got hired at has an incredible amount of cereals, soft-drinks, and candy. The studio I recently worked at had 4 kinds of beers on tap at any given moment and tons of candy and snack foods + sandwich making ingredients if you're feeling peckish. In the Orlando sports game studio, they had their own cafeteria with snacks and hot meals available at any time in addition to weekly food truck visits.

Game rooms and corridors are common as are the games/book libraries.

Based on my experiences with working at and touring different studios for interviews, the perks this guy enjoys are par for the course. I'm not trying to diminish Bandai/Namco or the benefits themselves, but I suppose I'm just trying to chime in and say that to me, it's not that surprising.

👍︎︎ 11 👤︎︎ u/rngunplamo 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

As far as I could tell he was doing web dev? So not exactly a game programmer but a programmer at a game studio? Although I've no idea what their pipelines are like. Of course they could also just have easily told him to "code something random so they don't see your actual project".

Also fun to see that VSCode is in fact spreading everywhere.

👍︎︎ 8 👤︎︎ u/PyroKnight 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies

Can anyone clarify on this he says "A lot of japanese are expect to work overtime that is often unpaid". Does he mean they literally don't get paid or they don't get double time for the hours.

👍︎︎ 33 👤︎︎ u/Noreseto 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies
👍︎︎ 16 👤︎︎ u/hipster_dog 📅︎︎ Nov 30 2019 🗫︎ replies
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This is a Day in a Life of a Japanese Game Programmer. This is Masa. 23 year old programmer living in Tokyo and working for one of the largest video game companies in Japan. And this is how he starts his workday. He lives alone in a typical Japanese apartment. Which are known for their efficient use of space like this enclosed unit bath with built-in sink facilities. Masa, how long does it take for you to get ready for work? Like most salaryman in Tokyo, he commutes to work by train, door-to-door about 40 minutes, so it's not bad. But, more than half of his trip is walking to and from the train station. Not pleasant on rainy days like this. Alright, so Masa should be coming soon, but the typhoons these months have been really, really crazy. Dang! Look! The trains are super packed! Crazy typhoon, right? So, Masa works for Bandai Namco Studios, which is the network entertainment unit of Bandai Namco group. They're known for developing popular game paddles like Tekken, Mario Kart, and even Pac-Man. And, there's about a thousand employees in the Tokyo office spread across five floors. That's his digital timecard. He's officially clocked in now. Also, common in many Japanese companies is for employees to change into slippers for the work day. So, this is Masa's office. Very common Japanese tile-desk with low dividers. So, Masa keeps his desk area simple like many of his coworkers. It's very different when compared to Western desks which are often littered with decorations and family pictures. First thing in the morning, he checks his email as well as the internal company's social network for updates, while also having a quick breakfast. Masa, where did you buy a juice? What is that? So, Masa is doing his morning task right now. It's gonna be some time before he has kind of like a break, because he's pretty focused. So, let's go walk around the office and see what kind of facilities they have! So, right behind Masa's desk, they have a game corner kind of placed right here. And they have the Switch, they have the PlayStation, they have Xbox, and they even have some virtual reality gear! I guess you get to play games anytime you want which is pretty cool! Wow! And just below here, there's a big, big computer! I think it's an alienware computer. Looks like one powerful machine. All right, so this is the break room area on the second floor. Let's see what they have! Separate all of the trash. They have burnables, you have the cans, and the bottles and you also have the non-burnables like plastic. They have a hot water pot and microwave. So, this behind me is their snack corner but it runs on the honor system. So, basically at the top, you have a place where you deposit money. All the different chocolates or candies, they have a price for it. And even the refrigerator has the frozen treats like ice cream and whatnot. And you just need to pay on the honor system. And then you take what you actually paid for. I don't know how would this do in your country's office? All right, and so, let's check what's down here. So, this place says library, but in fact, it's not a library of books! It's a library of games! Check this out! So, they have all these different consoles all the way from like Nintendo to PC Engine. I don't even know what it is. An original NES here. Gamecube. An original Sega. Sega Saturn. Even a Family Computer. They have like every single game ever! And it's not just in this aisle! They have this aisle and they have this aisle. And then they have this aisle but... But this aisle actually looks like books. They even have all kinds of game cartridges from back-in-the-day. Nintendo DS. They even have like a baseball game. Sim City. I wonder how many years it would take to play all of these games. What's your favorite old-school console? Because I'm sure they probably have it here. So, this area here is their administration section of the office. It's kind of like the business side of the company. And this behind me is where all of the executives stay. So, this area is a lot nicer than the common area. But as you can see, the office are fairly reasonable. The president's room is fairly the same size as the other executives. Finally! Lunch Time! So, he's Masa's Douki, which means the co-worker who started working at the company at the same time. In fact, it's common for many Japanese companies to do mass hiring once-a-year for college graduates. Just outside this dope cafeteria, food trucks come during lunch time. Apparently, the trucks vary each day. But damn, it doesn't look like a pleasant experience waiting in line during this typhoon. Masa, do you always eat here? So, is this the only office in Japan? That's a decent option for lunch! Itadakimasu is a customary term used by Japanese before each meal. Meaning: "Let's Eat." or "Thank you for the Meal!" Looks like they have a little time before their lunch break finishes. I wonder where they're going. What is that? Oh wow! They take their Pac-Man serious here! And like all the games here, it's also free-to-play anytime. Masa, so what are you doing now? So, kinda got some free time while Masa is working. So, why don't we spend this time and maybe go meet some people. So, apparently, they have all their different teams working in different parts of the office. We're actually on a different floor right now. Excuse me. So, what kind of work do you do? What's Code Vein? So, Code Vein is a dramatic, exploration, action RPG. With animated-out characters in a challenging and dangerous dungeon environment. So, can you show me? I think he was ready to show it. He want the game right now. But, he's just asking some of those guys to prepare the game for me and they're gonna put it on the screen. So yeah, I'm kind of excited to see what kind of game it is. Wow, this is an attractive looking game. How long did it take to develop this game? He also said that at one time, there was about 200 people involved in developing the game. And even when it's released, development is still not complete as they update the game based on user feedback and create new downloadable content. Alright, this is kind of fun. Let's go ask more people what they're doing. It looks like just over there, the people are having a meeting. Let's see what they're doing. Excuse me. Can I ask you guys some questions? So, what do you do? What were you guys doing just now? Can I get a peek at what you're working on? Oh wow! They have a real-deal Tekken 7 machine! Found that game-centers are right next to their work-desk! I guess testing character functionality is part of a days work for these developers, or maybe this is how they settle arguments in the office. So, it looks like Masa is not in his seat right now. He's supposed to be here, but I guess not. Maybe he went somewhere. Let's go find out where he is. Oh, there's Masa! He's having a scrum meeting! I believe he has this meeting everyday for 30 minutes. They review what they programmed the previous day. What needs to be done today and share and discuss problems for the future. And they use software to manage all the tasks and display it on the screen during their meeting. Oh, are you going to code again? So, where are we now? Okay. So, Masa has a full-on employee nap space at his office. And he even brought his own heated-steamed eye mask. He sure doesn't mess around when it comes to his naps. What is that? Now he's back to his coding again, so basically this is what Masa does all day. I mean from morning till the afternoon till the evening before he goes home. He is programming like this in front of a black screen. Oh! He's going to the finance department to ask about expenses. So, this is the second scrum meeting. The Sprint Review: Held once every two weeks. Usually, they combine it with their first scrum meeting but due to scheduling issues with one of the other members: they have to break up the meeting today. It is interesting though that they use post-it notes to do their final review. I guess sometimes...analog is just better. By the way, the meeting rooms can be booked from this digital panel here. That's pretty convenient. Now, he's finishing up his tasks: checking emails that he missed during the meeting and writing a log of today's activities. Yay! Finally, work is done! Just a little over 8 hours! But Masa says he does have to do overtime once-in-a-while during large projects. Overall though, that's pretty good for a Japanese company as many other places require their staff to work a lot of overtime hours, which is often unpaid. Now, Masa is meeting up with his work friends for dinner. Otsukaresama-desu is another customary office-term. Often used to greet your co-workers. A difficult translation, loosely translated to mean: "Thank You For Your Work." And today is payday and it's Friday as well so time to let loose a bit. Usually in Japanese drinking culture, everyone orders drinks at their own pace, while everyone shares the food. Group splits an entire tab equally at the end, no matter how much each person drank or ate. Also, smoking indoors in Japan is fine as long as the restaurants are okay with it. Which is usually the case with Izakaya drinking restaurants. So Masa, what else do you do in your free time? Even after-work, his PC desk is his go-to-spot. Masa, do you watch YouTube? Well, I don't know much about Gundam, but I can tell from looking around he sure loves it. So, what are you gonna do for the rest of the night? So, Masa's gonna be doing this for another couple hours. It looks like he'll be doing this until midnight. So yeah. This is what he does at the end of the night. All right. So, that's a Day in the Life of a Japanese Game Programmer. What did you guys think? I actually have quite a few Day in the Life videos. So, if this is your first time: I'll leave a link to the playlist. And you guys can check that out. And as always, if you want to help support the channel then definitely check out the Tokyo merch. And if you want to see more Day in the Life videos, then I have so much more coming. So hit that subscribe button and the bell button and I'll catch you guys in the next one.
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Channel: Paolo fromTOKYO
Views: 10,399,519
Rating: 4.9205236 out of 5
Keywords: Paolo, tokyo, japan, japan day in the life, day in the life japan, game developer, game developer in japan, software engineer, software engineer in japan, programmer, programmer life, programmer life in japan, game programmer, game engineer, game dev, day in the life of a game developer, day in the life of game programmer, day in the life of software engineer, developer, bandai namco, japanese game developer, japanese programmer, programming in japan, video games, gaming in japan
Id: e_TxH59MclA
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 13min 46sec (826 seconds)
Published: Fri Nov 29 2019
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