Ok so here's the deal :
I've been doing some 3d work for the last few years but it's nothing special. Usually it's just simple models for Google earth, nothing really that would push me to improve my skills or anything, I would work on that on my own time modding etc.
Anyways some bad financial stuff happened and I'm living with the family rent free. For the last few months I've been working on modding and my portfolio and thanks to a few friends I got my foot in the door a couple places but it didn't pan out. My guess is 2 reasons, I live in Vancouver and know a few people who have been doing game development for up to 20 years who are having trouble landing jobs because of the 2000+ worth of layoffs between the smaller devs, EA, and Radical. Considering I have next to no commercial game development experience and there are quite a few more skilled and experienced people than me out there looking for work it seems pretty unlikely I'll find work until things really begin to pick up again.
So anyways at this point I figured I can do a few things:
1) keep working on modding and the portfolio and try to get a job eventaully
2) go to art school and get some classical training
3) go to college for programming
anyways I've decided to go to school for programming with a specialization in digital processing and then rendering programming for the following reasons
1) in a recession where the entertainment industry is the first to feel it, I can apply for non-entertainmetn jobs
2) In my previous job, even though i was an artist I was constantly doing scripting and some light programming. I tend to join projects as an artist but always end up gravitating towards more technical tasks. Mainly because no one else is willing to or can do them.
3) I have to go live in Japan in a couple years. I've heard while they have no lack of artists they do hire a lot of programmers from the west because they tend to lack the right type of programmer locally.
4) Level design these days tends to benefit from someone who knows how to script. Learning programming kind of helps in that area.
5) Considering I've already done computer game art for the last 6 years I understand a lot of the programming and math concepts. A decent head start ![]()
Anyways I'm just about to finish my application. Seems a bit odd to switch to the other side in my mid 20's but ultimately it feels like the right decision.