• @[email protected]
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    -101 year ago

    Always found that argument kinda weird, do you think the people working in video game development in Vietnam would prefer to be unemployed? I know them, they like their jobs. They want to work. And they will switch jobs to a better one when it’s available. But until then they want the money

    • Cyrus Draegur
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      1 year ago

      let us presume that Video Game N has 100 currency in it budget.

      The studio producing Video Game N spends 90 currency on essentially nothing, by purchasing contracts with shell companies owned by their own board of investors, then they take the remaining 10 currency and offshore basically ALL of the actual productive work to 50 developers. Those 50 developers must split the 10 currency between each other while collectively doing 100 currency’s worth of work.

      I want them to get paid 100 currency.

      I do not think “they should be grateful to get 1/100th of what they deserve” is a productive or helpful position to hold.

      If the available budgets of these games were not squandered on laundering and graft, and less spread thin across a vast army of people who barely get to take home pennies on the hour, it would be a good thing, you see.

    • Throwaway
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      121 year ago

      Theres a difference between a good employer and abusive employer. And countries without strong labor laws tend to have abusive employers.