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Game Modeling Skills That Get You Hired in Games

Game modeling is one of the most in-demand skills in a $200 billion industry — and it's also one of the most self-teachable creative careers you can pursue. Here's what most beginners don't realize before they start. A solo developer named Marcus spent three years building his dream RPG in Unity. He had the code working. He had the systems designed. What he didn't have was a single 3D asset that looked like it belonged in a professional game. Every model he tried to use — from free packs, from asset stores — felt wrong, slightly off, like furniture from someone else's house. So he spent six weeks learning Blender and game modeling fundamentals. He rebuilt every asset himself. His game looks completely different now. More importantly, it looks like his . That's what game modeling gives you: ownership over the visual world you're creating. Whether you want to make your own game, work at a studio, or freelance as a 3D artist, it starts with the same foundat...

What Workplace Etiquette Actually Does for Your Career

Workplace etiquette is one of the most underrated career skills you can develop — and the gap between people who get it and people who don't is bigger than most people realize. A colleague of mine once told me about a talented developer she managed. Brilliant coder. Missed every standup. Never replied to Slack messages. Interrupted people in meetings. Within eight months, he was passed over for a promotion in favor of someone with half his technical skill. Nobody ever sat him down and explained why. They just stopped including him. That's how etiquette works. It's invisible when you do it right. It's devastating when you don't. This isn't about which fork to use at a business dinner. It's about something much more fundamental: how you make people feel when they work with you. And that feeling, over time, becomes your professional reputation. Key Takeaways Workplace etiquette shapes how colleagues and managers perceive you — and that percepti...

Emotional Intelligence Makes Better Leaders. Here's Why

Emotional intelligence is the one career skill that predicts success better than IQ, education, or technical expertise — and most people have never deliberately worked on it. Here's the story that changed how I think about this. A manager I know ran a 40-person team at a software company. Smart guy. Great at his job technically. His team shipped on time, hit their numbers. But there was a problem — every few months, someone quit. And it was always the best people. The ones who had options. It took him two years to figure out why. He wasn't a bad manager. He just had no idea how his behavior in stressful moments landed on other people. When he was anxious, he became curt. When he was overwhelmed, he stopped listening. His team didn't know he was stressed — they just experienced a boss who seemed dismissive and unpredictable. One exit interview finally made it click: "I never felt like you cared what I thought." He did care. He just had no emotional awareness of...

Why Most People Never Find Personal Direction

Personal direction is the skill most people spend a lifetime looking for — and the one nobody teaches you in school. Here's what actually helps you find it. A few years ago, a colleague of mine — smart, hardworking, two degrees — sat across from me at lunch and said something I'll never forget: "I have no idea what I'm doing with my life." She was 34. She had a steady job, a packed schedule, and a to-do list that never got shorter. But she felt like she was running on a treadmill. Fast, but going nowhere. That feeling has a name. It's the absence of personal direction. And it's a lot more common than you'd think. Key Takeaways Personal direction is not about finding one perfect answer — it's about building clarity one small decision at a time. Most people skip values work and jump straight to goals, which is why the goals don't stick. Frameworks like Ikigai and design thinking give you a repeatable process, not just a...