See all the jobs at G Games here:
| code. | Full-time | Partially remote
, ,So why have I heard of G Games ?
As well as its great games and beautiful products, G is famous for its unusual culture (more about that later).
- We have a flat no bosses structure where we value freedom and dissent
- We work where and when we want. We work remotely, but we have a presence in London, Newcastle, Berlin and Bilbao and are looking to expand into Eastern Europe.
- We practise radical transparency in how we work – especially in decision-making
Who are we looking for?
You need to be the kind of person who finds the idea of responsibility and radical means of working exciting rather than terrifying. You are interested in picking up and mastering new technologies and are keen to learn as much as possible. You need to be prepared to ask challenging questions of yourself and others (why are we doing it this way? Why are we doing it at all? If I can prove this is easier, will you folks try it this way?). You should have a highly developed sense of collaboration – doesn’t mean you need to be a touchy-feely extrovert, but that you know sharing information, ideas and support is essential to commercial success.
You care about software, you have a passion for what you do which you can clearly convey by your actions rather than just waffly personal statements on your CV. For you, it’s more than a job.
Experience otherwise is relative – 2 years working in an agile/XP manner is worth much more to us than 5 in a traditional environment. If you’ve passionate about things like clean code, TDD and refactoring (maybe you’ve always wanted to but your current job doesn’t allow for it) show us you’re at least familiar with the concepts and that you really want to work in this kind of environment and you’re still in with a good chance.
What’s the role?
You’ll be joining an extremely enthusiastic team who enjoy what they do. Things like Pair Programming, TDD/BDD, Refactoring, and Continuous Delivery are deeply embedded and we’re constantly striving to improve the way we work.
However, we’re not perfect and not afraid to say so. We recognise we have many problems which need solving and a long way to go on our journey of continuous improvement.
Required technical skills:
Our backend stack is based on Node.js for the most part, with some bits and pieces in different languages (Ruby, Go). The frontend stack is currently based on Pixi.js for Canvas and WebGL rendering. All our projects have a healthy automated test coverage and go through our CI servers. The provisioning/deployment process is fully automated with Ansible.
We are looking for candidates with good JavaScript experience and you're someone who cares about how software is written.
How we interview and hire
Our interview process begins with a call to help you learn more about the role, learn more about your interests, and help decide if G helps you achieve what you want in life and if you help us achieve what we want in life.
If we move forward, we'll schedule one more phone/video call with someone who has the same skills as you. Finally, we do a pair programming interview that lasts about a couple of hours. This interview involves working with some of our team members in a coding task (similar to the one you might encounter on your daily work) to test your abilities and at the same time, show you how we usually work. We don't invite people along for this unless we are fairly sure that we are going to make an offer. Alternative approaches do exist to fit around you.
We mentioned we have an unusual culture? What’s that mean?
Ideals are cheap to talk about! We try to turn what we believe into practical actions we can all follow and see happening around us.
- Fully supported remote working
- All information including financial and decision-making is shared to all employees
- We use shared messaging tools, not email
- We don't track holiday or working hours
- We value dissent – people choose what to work on and how to accomplish a task
- We rely on peer pressure and persuasion, not authority
What's great about it?
- Exceptional freedom
- Work on the things you care about
- Have incredibly hard-working and committed colleagues
- When something doesn’t happen then you have the right and the responsibility to change that – which is exciting.
What’s bad about it?
- You can't blame stuff on managers or budgets or the company.
- Freedom isn’t always fun – sometimes it's scary.
- Having hard-working, committed colleagues means you feel the need to live up to them.
So if you believe you have what it takes to be part of our team, apply now we'd love to hear from you.