Getting Accepted for Video Game Beta Tests 9
netfunk writes "Now that we've finished taking submissions for the Linux beta of America's Army, I've written up some thoughts on the process of choosing participants. There are some interesting statistics on what comprises a 'Linux gamer' and some rough guidelines on what kind of applicant made the cut vs. what kind went directly to the trashcan." A good read. Now let's hope not everyone starts saying they power their graphics with an old Voodoo2 card. That's been my edge for getting into beta tests for years, even after upgrading.
Beta Games (Score:5, Informative)
As far as other games, just change the above line to something slightly more relevant, like "I can give advice on bump mapping" or "lighting effect problems" or something. Just make it sound like you're very experienced with reporting bugs (you use Windows, right?), and they'll sign you up.
I love this guy (Score:5, Informative)
1. Good correspondence skills. Notice how many negative points were given for poor spelling, "l33t" talk, not using real name, profanities, etc. I admit I'm far from perfect in spelling myself, but I cannot tolerate deliberate misspelling. I'm often getting resumes from hopefull applicants (people who would like to write investment reports, of all things), which are full of "U" instead of "you" and "pls" instead of "please". Those resumes go straight into the trash; I don't even bother replying.
2. Hardware requirements. Way too many companies accept only the best hardware for their beta tests. Then we get games that have a Pentium II 400 with 32MB RAM stated as their minimum requirements, but which will not run on anything under P3-800 and 128MB RAM. I'm glad to see someone who wants to test the game on low-end machines.
The one point I haven't seen is a track record in recomputer games. Considering that everybody and their mother has a Web site these days, considering that there are plenty of outlets for reviewing games (from Amazon through Epinions to GameFAQs), if I was a game developer, I'd give bonus points for people who are known for absolutely trashing all games, within reason (good argumentation in favor of their conclusion). Instead of getting "man, I loved the game", I would get responses about how much a certain feature sucks, and work on it.
Re:I love this guy (Score:1)
I'm often getting resumes from hopefull applicants
Hopeful, not hopefull. Hope that's helpfull.
Re:I love this guy (Score:2)
Beta testing....... (Score:4, Informative)
Some people just can't read.... (Score:3, Funny)
The game has been available on Windows for over a year and there were some people that thought this was a Windows test? Yet...why doesn't this suprise me?
He'd downmod me for sure (Score:3, Insightful)
Naaah, couldn't *possibly* be that the applicant put a hotmail address in there because they were afraid that your company was planning on selling their e-mail address to spammers?