twesterm said:
I don't know much about artists resumes but in general keep everything on your resume relevant, concise, and perfect. There's no reason what-so-ever for your resume or cover to have any grammar, spelling, or formatting errors. I've seen resumes instantly get throw away because they had a minor error. If you can fill two pages, use two pages but make sure everything is relevant. If you can't, don't worry about it. The people reading your resume will be much happier reading a single page or relevant information rather than two pages of things I don't care about like you worked at Best Buy. Also make sure to keep it easy to read, use bullet points, indentations, and smart grouping. Finally, don't lie or make yourself seem more awesome than you are. The people that are interviewing you can smell the bullshit from a mile away and they don't like it. I saw one resume where a guy had been working in the game industry for two years and he listed every job he could think of, it was horrible. I don't remember when GDC is but you should absolutely go to that, it's like a giant job fair. Otherwise, if your school has job services use that. |
Thanks!
I've got a personal website that shows off a lot of the games assets on their own and this video.
Here are some of the examples:



I've kept my resume to 1 page and have just recently started sending out applications. I've got my fingers crossed, and thanks for the advice.
Platinums: Red Dead Redemption, Killzone 2, LittleBigPlanet, Terminator Salvation, Uncharted 1, inFamous Second Son, Rocket League







