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How Making a Video Game About Your Life Can Get You Fired

Designer David Gallant knew creating a game about his experience working at call centers might cost him his job, and then it actually happened.

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“This game is a work of fiction. It is inspired by real events. Similarities to real and actual events are intentional.”

When Canadian game designer David Gallant created the purposely mundane I Get This Call Every Day, based on his employment experience at various call centers, he knew it could get him into trouble. But it’s easy to think in hypotheticals. On Tuesday, however, the worst case scenario actually happened.

I Get This Call Every Day was originally conceived during a mini-Ludum Dare game jam from last September with the theme “Not Game.”

Gallant's job at the Canada Revenue Agency was not the first time he'd worked in a call center.
Gallant's job at the Canada Revenue Agency was not the first time he'd worked in a call center.

“That’s where I kind of got the idea of a call center simulation where there’s no good outcomes,” he told me on Wednesday. “There’s no real way to win the game.”

Development continued for several weeks after the jam, and it was finally published on his personal website on December 21. Gallant followed the popular pay-what-you-want model with a minimum of $2. On launch day, Kotaku ran a story on it, which drove a little bit of attention his way, but nothing notable in terms of sales. Gallant was just happy to have someone pay attention to his game.

The game itself falls into a similar category as Cart Life. I Get This Call Every Day has less to do with fun and more to do with imparting empathy through interactivity. Games are in a unique position to convey an activity, even one as dull as talking to taxpayers on the phone. I Get This Call Every Day has players sitting at a desk, waiting for a green button to flash, and choosing how to respond. Both characters are voiced by Gallant, and the whole experience--interface, visuals, art--is humorously crude.

It’s also, ironically, very easy to get fired yourself in I Get This Call Every Day.

Gallant published the game on Desura and Indievania, and made a move for approval on Steam's Greenlight service. It hasn’t gone well, with users responding negatively to the MS Paintish aesthetic.

“Things were, for the past week, really quiet,” he said.

Then, a reporter for the Toronto Star contacted Gallant. The Toronto Star is a big, notable newspaper in Canada, so if the Toronto Star comes a-knockin’, you answer. The reporter wanted to discuss I Get This Call Every Day, and revealed a key bit of information about Gallant’s life: the reporter knew he worked at Canada Revenue Agency.

I contacted the reporter in question, Valerie Hauch, to learn more about how she found out about the game, but Hauch did not return my request for comment, as of this writing.

His co-workers were aware of his hobby, and he regularly passed out business cards to promote the part-time business. Either nobody went to the website prominently featuring I Get This Call Every Day, or nobody cared. He didn’t actively discuss and showcase I Get This Call Every Day, though, knowing it might solicit unwanted attention.

“I got the idea that my fellow coworkers really wouldn’t be the audience for this game because it is an experience that they already have to deal with,” he said.

Nonetheless, Gallant’s not-quite-secret secret was about to become very, very public.

“To this point, I had never disclosed who I worked for deliberately,” he said. “The game doesn’t mention what employer it is.”

Gallant was told this detail would be included in the reporter’s piece, which appeared in a story on Tuesday titled “Tax department employee creates online game to vent his frustration with taxpayers.” Furthermore, the reporter contacted the government to get an official response.

“I knew that was always a possibility,” said Gallant. “This game could, in a way, be linked back to my employer, it could be something they take offense to, and I always knew there was a risk that I could lose my job because of that.”

He knew the risk, and the reporter was just doing their job. Pretty quickly, the situation snowballed. Gallant was unable to disclose the exact nature of what happened on Tuesday. Take a guess. He could only confirm he no longer had a job, and it’s pretty clear the reason Gallant is no longer taking phone calls is due to the game he made.

“The Minister considers this type of conduct offensive and completely unacceptable,” said National Revenue Minister Gail Shea in a statement to the Toronto Star. “The Minister has asked the Commissioner (of Revenue, Andrew Treusch) to investigate and take any and all necessary corrective action. The Minister has asked the CRA to investigate urgently to ensure no confidential taxpayer information was compromised.”

It’s not difficult to suspect how a story like this might end.

The story that ended up running in the Toronto Star about I Get This Call Every Day.
The story that ended up running in the Toronto Star about I Get This Call Every Day.

Gallant attracted a bit of attention from the story itself, but when it became clear an investigation would happen, he received a flurry of questions about his employment status on Twitter. He was, at least, able to disclose that he was no longer employed at the Canada Revenue Agency.

“Anyone hiring?” he wrote.

Since then, there’s been an unbelievable outpouring of support from the community.

LD'er @davidsgallant made a game about his job, got covered by Canada's largest(?) paper, and lost it. Help a bro out: davidsgallant.com/igtced.html

— Mr The Mike Kasprzak (@mikekasprzak) January 30, 2013

Buying this game right now - the developer, @davidsgallant , was fired for making it. Be kind and share this link. davidsgallant.com/igtced.html

— Alan Williamson (@AGBear) January 29, 2013

Yesterday @davidsgallant got fired for a game he made. I thought it was a fabulous example of games as art: business.financialpost.com/2013/01/30/dow…

— Daniel Kaszor (@dkaszor) January 30, 2013

“Oh, my god,” he said. “I don’t think I have a word for the emotional experience that this has all been. It was pretty tense yesterday [Tuesday], and then just coming home to the explosion of support--all the media coverage. And it’s still ongoing. I really thought by now it would have died down, but it’s still going!”

Besides media coverage, he's received support from Double Fine’s Chris Remo, Vlambeer’s Rami Ismail, Molleindustria’s Paolo Pedercini, and others. These are developers he admires, and they’re talking about his game.

“Both the local Toronto community and the online community has stepped up to this plate that I didn’t even know existed,” he said. “The amount of home runs being hit right now are...I can’t fathom it. I really wish I could say more. I’m just speechless.”

The outpouring of support has also translated into money for Gallant. His numbers don’t update in real-time, so it’s unclear how much he’ll actually make from all of the attention, but it’s enough to give him some breathing room over the next few months. He’s still looking for a job, though.

Dys4ia is an interactive reflection of Anthropy's experience with gender identity disorder.
Dys4ia is an interactive reflection of Anthropy's experience with gender identity disorder.

For the time being, Gallant and his wife are trying to take it day-by-day. They've taken to watching Star Trek episodes as a distraction, while watching email notifications about new sales come in, $2 at a time. He’d love to transition over to full-time game development, but eventually attention towards I Get This Call Every Day will dry up, and there’s not enough to gamble on just yet.

The enormously positive reaction he’s received has reinforced his desire to work on video games that do more to encompass the human experience. He pointed to Minority Media’s Papo & Yo and Anna Anthropy’s Dys4ia as formative moments for him, both as a player and developer.

“I had a friend who went through a gender change and, at the time, I didn’t really know how to deal with it,” he said. “Playing Dys4ia years after that happened really made me realize what I’d been missing in that whole experience,what she must have been going through that I really didn’t consider at the time. I think it’s really important that games are doing that,” he said. “I don’t think every game has to, but it’s something that deserves exploring, that I really want to see more developers explore.”

Patrick Klepek on Google+

228 Comments

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bwmcmaste

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Edited By bwmcmaste

@zeekthegeek said:

Canadian taxpayer here. This government continues to be the worst in our history. Any criticism is seen as treason.

Other Canadian taxpayer here. This government is no worse than any other one we've had in the past - people just bitch about it too much.

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Hikaratu

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Edited By Hikaratu

@Laivasse: It's not as if the game is supposed to imply that every single call a person gets in that sort of job is awful, it's one call and outlines one kind of customer you will run into as a call center employee eventually. He's not trying to make villains of anyone who calls a call center or anything just not everybody on the planet is a reasonable person. If you think there needs to be a game about telemarketers being intimidating pricks or whatever make that game yourself so other people can empathize with the experience the same way. You seem personally offended on a level that I actually can't fathom.

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crusader8463

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Edited By crusader8463

I currently work at a call center myself, tech support for smart phones, and it's gotten to the point where every day I drive to work I'm tempted to drive off the road just so I don't have to put up with another day of the job. There are some good ones, but for the most part they are truly soul crushing. Ignoring all the bad parts of dealing with stupid people on the phone for 8 hours a day, I do tech support for phones I'm not here to teach you how to use your computer or how your fucking mouse and keyboard works, a lot of the worst parts of the job are the stuff that the company does off the calls. When the companies business model is based around getting people in, burning them out for every thing they are worth, then letting them go so they can hire new people to do the same you knows it's a bad place to be. A lot of these places even have supervisors that are told to ride the agents that have been there longer the hardest and to never give them an inch to try and make the job as bad as they can in hopes of making people more likely to quit.

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ghost_cat

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Edited By ghost_cat

I find that getting fired from a shitty job is pretty liberating, but Gallant got huge amounts of support and a bit of money too. That must be an incredible and rare feeling to experience.

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deactivated-5d48c59b057e6

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@Laivasse: I'm glad you brought up your aunt. I used to get a lot of calls from elderly people, disabled people, desperate people. Sometimes there would be devastating situations for which I could offer no help - what do you say to the senior citizen who has a tax bill larger than what she received in a year from her pension? What do you say to the mother who is about to be evicted, who won't be getting her child benefits because of an address error?

I am a helpful person by nature. I want to help people. When I got these calls, I did the best that I could. Oftentimes, the laws surrounding confidentiality, or the ways in which internal processes worked, prevented me from being able to help:

"I'm afraid I can't help you fix your brother's tax credit issue (even though I know it is simple) because we have nothing on file to show you, his sister, is his legal representative - and I understand that your brother is vegetative, and he cannot grant you power of attorney, but we don't have any process to handle that kind of situation."

That's an example of a call I received last week. They didn't always happen often, but they did happen. I would explore every available option, consult with my manager and resource officers, do anything I could to find solutions. Sometimes, I could help. Many times, I could not, and every time that happened, I felt like the biggest pile of shit. When you see me referring to my job in interviews as "making me less human", these calls are what I am talking about. These calls are not represented in I Get This Call Every Day. I don't think I could make a game about them without being very specific, without retelling some of the very true stories I have encountered.

I'm sorry that I Get This Call Every Day doesn't reflect what your aunt had to go through. I never meant for it to demean or belittle the callers. I do think your aunt's situation is significant, and I urge you to make a game about it. For me, her experience isn't personal - but for you it is, which makes you perfectly equipped to tell it. I don't care if you've never made a game before; there are tools like Construct 2, Twine, Gamemaker, etc that are easy to use for your first time. Make something personal, whether it is about your aunt, yourself, your job, anything. Express it with a game. Please.

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digitaldemigod

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Edited By digitaldemigod

@crusader8463: I worked in a call center for 7 years. Worked for many accounts, Dell, Charter Cable, Mediacomm cable, and others. The tech support side was bad, but the cable tv support side was the worst. It was a traumatic experience. I know what you mean about wanting to drive off the road. The customers are horrible and the management are like slave drivers. We weren't even allowed 10 seconds in between calls to sip some water. And sometimes my wife will suggest I get a job at another cable company call center and I tell her she's out of her fucking mind. She seems to think she could handle the endless circular arguments, belittling, and threats call after call. I told her she should take the job then. Fuck call centers.

I think it's total bullshit that this news reporter basically helped get the guy fired. Just doing her job, yeah, but still.

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Sinusoidal

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Edited By Sinusoidal

@Thompson820: It's not exactly clear why he lost his job. He made it very clear that he didn't want to be doing it. Is it wrongful dismissal to fire someone who gets an article in a major national newspaper about how much they hate their job? Perhaps a better question: is it right for an organization to hold onto an employee they are fully aware despises what they do?

Trust me: in the current dump that is the Canadian economic climate and our over-educated populace bloated by student loans handed out like candy, it's not exactly hard to find someone as qualified as he who'll appreciate the job more than he did, soul-crushing non-fulfillment or no. Perhaps he should have considered how he was going to feed his family more before he very publicly mocked his employers: who in essence are the Canadian taxpayers whose hard work at jobs - some much better, and mostly much crappier than his - that supported his livelihood.

In all honesty, they did him a favor. He's got more motivation to succeed at what he really wants to do now than he ever did before. I wish nothing but the best for him and his family.

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Icaria

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Edited By Icaria

"He knew the risk, and the reporter was just doing their job."

Loaded headlines designed to illicit reactionary outrage are just part of a reporter's job? My, how standards have changed.

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Laiv162560asse

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Edited By Laiv162560asse

@Hikaratu: If I was personally offended by the idea of IGTCED existing as a game I would probably have raised a stink when I saw it covered in Worth Reading or wherever it first cropped up. I'm not. But I'm certainly not offended by the idea that a man has had difficulty reconciling the reality of his job, as a CS rep, with a game he authored about CS being a lose-lose scenario. The anecdotes I recounted weren't made in response to the article. They were in response to being told by someone that I didn't know what I was talking about and that call centre work was, quote, "the absolute worst thing ever", as if being on the other end of the line to a call centre could never approach being as bad.

@Zvarri: Hello, David, thanks for taking the time to make that sensitive response. I'm sorry you lost your job and I hope your situation resolves for the better soon. I'm not seeking to publicise my past experiences with call centres. I have no creative knack, but furthermore they're not unique. I think it really just goes without saying that dealing with customer service/call centres as a caller can be thoroughly dehumanising. Situations of dealing with faceless bureaucracy have been lampooned to hell and back in mainstream comedy, not least of all, so it doesn't really require a complete novice like me to get involved in order to illustrate further.

In cases of poor treatment, I suspect the cause is usually that the rep hates their job, resents being there and is just better off pursuing something else. From the sounds of it you were diligent and didn't fall into this category, which would make you a big loss to the CRA. Still, by all accounts IGTCED ran contrary to what your employers must have seen to be the spirit of your job. I'm sure you've rehashed everything countless times in your head, so you don't need people suggesting what you might have done differently... Good luck in future, anyhow.

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Dys4ia is really, really good. Anna Anthropy's work is really hit or miss for me, but that was just an amazing little piece of insight into who she is, as well as a great example of using game mechanics to tell a story.

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Christoffer

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Edited By Christoffer

@jtrink said:

Freedom of speech. Fuck that company!

Feels like I've written this a hundred times.

Freedom of speech doesn't protect you from companies, it's about the government.

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joetom

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Edited By joetom

I don't think the reporter was "just doing his job" when he made that headline. He clearly wanted to stir shit up by creating controversy where there wasn't one. If I didn't know better, I'd think Patrick made a mistake and confused the Toronto Star with the Toronto Sun, because that's exactly the kind of sensationalist bullshit I expect from The Sun.

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FierceDeity

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Edited By FierceDeity

@thabigred said:

@MildMolasses said:

@thabigred said:

@MildMolasses said:

@thabigred said:

I've always had nothing about respect for our northern neighbors. I can't respect this.

Except for the part where he is an employee of the federal government and he's bitching about his decent paying, tax-funded job with great benefits which involves interacting with tax-payers concerning taxation. He was "club-fed" employee. It takes remarkable skill to get fired from government agencies. Maybe if his frustrations could take a more artful turn into metaphor and allegory he wouldn't lose his job, but they didn't.

You assume too many things in your posta. Like how artful allegory or metaphor could have saved his job, or like in another post where you said that "No one outside of Toronto reads to Toronto Star".

Actually I read the Toronto Star and I'm from Florida, about as far South in the US as you can get. I also don't think you understand how game development works if your response was he should be more metaphoric.

If you're going to continue being an insipid asshole to a guy who clearly put a lot of hard work and dedication into something, I have no business with you. Don't bother responding if you're going to continue being rude about this, and stop assuming things that you don't know.

I appreciate being called an insipid asshole and then told that I'm the one being rude.

BTW, I already corrected and admitted my mistake regarding the Star earlier.

When you make a game then I won't call you an insipid asshole for being an insipid asshole to someone who put the enough heart and dedication into something to actually ship a finished game.

Oh, he "shipped" a game? Really now?

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morden2261

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Edited By morden2261

@joetom said:

I don't think the reporter was "just doing his job" when he made that headline. He clearly wanted to stir shit up by creating controversy where there wasn't one. If I didn't know better, I'd think Patrick made a mistake and confused the Toronto Star with the Toronto Sun, because that's exactly the kind of sensationalist bullshit I expect from The Sun.

Indeed. That headline set the tone for how he'd ultimately be judged. I hope the reporter feels some guilt over how this played out... but she probably doesn't.

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RE_Player1

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Edited By RE_Player1

@bwmcmaste said:

@zeekthegeek said:

Canadian taxpayer here. This government continues to be the worst in our history. Any criticism is seen as treason.

Other Canadian taxpayer here. This government is no worse than any other one we've had in the past - people just bitch about it too much.

Yup.

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Scotto

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Edited By Scotto

@Christoffer said:

@jtrink said:

Freedom of speech. Fuck that company!

Feels like I've written this a hundred times.

Freedom of speech doesn't protect you from companies, it's about the government.

Amazes me how many people don't understand this. Freedom of speech doesn't mean freedom from any consequences for your words - it means the government can't prosecute you for your words.

And even then, Canada's recognition of free speech is narrower than the United States - we have controversial laws that treat things like "hate speech" differently, for example.

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Humanity

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Edited By Humanity

@Zvarri: I know it wasn't and I read as much. Losing your job definitely isn't a pleasant experience, trust me I know, I was under HR investigation for 3 months before I was finally given an unacceptable option or termination after being 5 years with the company - and I didn't even do anything wrong which is the funny thing. I don't want to sound like a total asshole saying "oh you didn't deserve all this support!" I just mean it's kinda surprising how people are so shocked at your employer for taking, what I consider, quite standard action in this sort of situation.

Hope you find a new job soon, hopefully a better one.

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Lyriell

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Edited By Lyriell

What kind of society do we live in where a reporter thinks it is better to ruin one mans livelihood for a few web-clicks or paper-sales.

Hey, it's capitalism... whatever brings in the money right?

Sick...

I think people lose focus on what's important in life.

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DJNeckspasm

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Edited By DJNeckspasm

I worked at one call center for 5 years before getting fired. I was hired at another call center and stayed there for 6 months before quitting.

I consider those years of my life a complete waste.

Call centers breed shit. Nobody wants to work at a call center and nobody wants to call a call center. It's this godawful nexus where irritated people converge and explode.

The problems come from so many angles. Angry people is an obvious issue. Stupid people can be just as bad and often turn into angry people. People with problems you can't fix or can't fix well. Supervisors that push too hard. Supervisors that let too much go. Agents who don't do their job.

Even if you are incredibly good at call center work you'll still get stupid angry people who won't listen to reason. With the way the queue works in a call center it's possible for you to get nothing but angry stupid people the entire day. 8 hours or for some people 10 hours of talking to people who actively hate you and blame you for problems you didn't create.

"We had a lightning storm and now my internet doesn't work you piece of shit!"

"I'm sorry to hear that sir but I am not Thor so I have no control over the elements"

I had one customer tell me the company I worked for encouraged "niggerly" behavior because we cut off his internet until he paid his bill.

I had an old lady ask me to schedule a technician to come out and adjust the volume on her computer.

One old man wanted me to call him a taxi so he could go down the street to get some soup.

The worst part was people who had legitimate reasons to be very upset. There were people calling in who already had 10 different technicians come out to try and fix their problem. The only solution I had was to send another one. How do you sell that? How do you get out of that situation without a torrent of profanity? Some people I talked to had been hung up on 5 or 6 times. Some people received bills that were fully 10 times what it should have been. I didn't create any of these problem but I had to answer for them. You can be great at your job and do everything right and you'll still get shit on.

I was never great at that job. I got pretty good at talking to customers and I have a social anxiety disorder so that's significant. I never did get good at the rushing without rushing part. You had to keep your call time as low as possible without hurrying people off the phone. You also needed to document each call in 3 different systems in under a minute. It was the documentation that got me fired. I frequently forgot to or didn't bother documenting calls. Eventually they got tired of telling me to improve. I know that not long after I was fired they instituted a new system for documentation that was a lot faster. I know there were people working there that deserved to be fired a lot more than I did but it doesn't matter. I wish they had fired me sooner so I didn't waste so much of my life doing something I hated.

I'm back in college now and doing classes on web development. I will never work at a call center again.

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SpicyRichter

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Edited By SpicyRichter

As much as I don't like it, I'm pretty sure the tax department was well in their right to fire him, so I doubt there will be legal action. Besides, I doubt he's all that broken up about it.

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SpaceInsomniac

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Edited By SpaceInsomniac
@DJNeckspasm said:

I had one customer tell me the company I worked for encouraged "niggerly" behavior because we cut off his internet until he paid his bill.


Are you sure he didn't say niggardly instead? http://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/muddle#word=niggardly  Not that I'd go and make that word a part of my vocabulary anytime soon. 
 
And it wouldn't be the first time that word has caused problems for someone: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/local/longterm/williams/williams020499.htm
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DJNeckspasm

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Edited By DJNeckspasm

@SpaceInsomniac: whoops, accidently put this as a private message. He did not sound intelligent enough to know of the word niggardly. The thick southern accent didn't help.

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DarkbeatDK

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Edited By DarkbeatDK

I work in the technical support of an power company where I try to help out people over the phone if they have to electricity to see if they need our help or the help of an electrician.

It's not so bad where I'm at, but I do get the feeling that frontline, who takes cares of bills, has it worse, since they often have to uphold the rules until a customer complains high enough in the system and gets their way.

I hate it when people who complain enough get their way... It's not fair that people get special treatment for being jerks.

If someone got hysterical in the supermarket over there was just one register open, would you let them cut in line? Would it be fair to you?

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xymox

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Edited By xymox

It'd be a pretty obvious choice to be honest. Would you keep someone who's essentially saying your customers are shit? I mean, sure, that's not the exact wording used here, but still. I don't think that's good marketing. So I understand why he was let go. If you work as a kindergarten caretaker you don't make a game about decapitating small children. Maybe that's exaggerated as hell on my part, but whatevz, but I've got $2 to spare and it sounds like an interesting experience. No need for pity purchase.

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Paindamnation

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Edited By Paindamnation

I get those calls everyday I work in a technical support company for over 60 schools, so I deal with a range from Student's to Faculty/staff, presidents, dean, and etc. Their are alot of dumb people out there. And he's right "I get this call everyday" some things we just have no information on, or we literally are flying blind because the school decided to not give us access to log in as them, or their systems, so I can understand the frustration. However it was in terrible taste that the guy got fired because of it. The company knows it's customer basis, and it only found out, not by research but most likely the press release. While their are dumb people, at the end of the day, you take off your head set and go home, some people just can't do that.

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splodge

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Edited By splodge

David S Gallant Keep your chin up dude. Think of it this way: Now that you do not work there any more, you can really make a game about the job. No need to hold back any more.

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Edited By Woowookins

Typo: "what she must have been gowing through"

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NipCrip66

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Edited By NipCrip66

@HellknightLeon: yeah I couldn't believe that either. The journalist outed them in a very public article and essentially ratted him out to his employers. Cannot believe Klepek gave her a pass.

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KingX

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Edited By KingX

Everyone should make games about their jobs, and especially by those that are tired of their jobs :)

With the unemployment rate going on in the western world it could be the start of someting beautiful hehe.

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crcruz3

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Edited By crcruz3

I just bought the game for $10.

Thank you Patrick for the article, I´d have missed the opportunity to give a little help to this guy otherwise.

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monkeyking1969

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Edited By monkeyking1969

I bought and played the game.  It was interestesting for sure.  If nothing else, it feels good supporting the guy, if buying that game helps him I'm all for it.    Hope hope enough people buy his game (maybe toss in a few extra bucks) so that he can get enough money to make it another step up the ladder of game development.  What he may lack in technical knowledge he makes up for in creativity and heart.   
 
I do not work in a call center, but I get calls like that every day too.

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oueddy

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Edited By oueddy
@joetom said:

I don't think the reporter was "just doing his job" when he made that headline. He clearly wanted to stir shit up by creating controversy where there wasn't one. If I didn't know better, I'd think Patrick made a mistake and confused the Toronto Star with the Toronto Sun, because that's exactly the kind of sensationalist bullshit I expect from The Sun.

I'm with you on that one, being from the UK I may have a bias to hate newspapers and gutter press reporters (of which we have many), but the whole phrasing of that article and the headline was designed to cause controversy
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yellownumber5

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Edited By yellownumber5

They still have newspapers in Canada?

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Manatassi

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Edited By Manatassi

Hmm seems like he could have a serious case for Wrongful Dismissal against the CRA.

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ChrisTaran

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Edited By ChrisTaran

I must remember to buy this game this weekend! The insane overreaction by the government is sad, but unfortunately expected.

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JesterPC238

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Edited By JesterPC238

Thanks for this Patrick!

I don't really enjoy Gallant's games much but the premise of I Get This Call Every Day is very interesting. It's a shame it caused him to lose his job, it seems pretty harmless to me.

Also, I hate to be "that guy" but "what she must have been gowing through" in the last paragraph.

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TTFD

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Edited By TTFD

@graf1k said:

I'm kind of surprised at the dude who made the game as well as Patrick's reaction to the reporter calling the article “Tax department employee creates online game to vent his frustration with taxpayers.”

At best it's a leading title for an article. That said, I can't really believe the government would let someone go over something so small and insignificant especially when the game itself doesn't mention where he works or is unfairly critical of his employer of the people who call in. That's pretty much bullshit. I expect better from Canada.

Remember who runs the federal government right now...this type of reaction doesnt surprise me.

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Rothbart

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Edited By Rothbart

I'm still not sure why he got fired. Were his employers working under the assumption that call centres don't suck? Making an artistic statement about how terrible it is to work in a call centre isn't exactly pushing the envelope when it comes to the message. There are plenty of jobs that just suck, there's no need to pretend that every company has happy employees.

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feargalr

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Edited By feargalr

@Triumvir said:

Man, I hate my government sometimes.

EDIT: Oh, I finally got the quest. Cool. Anyway, I hope Minister of National Revenue likes lawsuits.

Yeah that was the first thing that occurred to me reading this, if he didn't actually disclose any confidential information, or breach his contract, how the frak can they justify firing him?

Also maybe it's just me, but I really dislike that reporter from the toronto star, go and find a real story you jerk. They got this guy fired for something that isn't even real news.

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deactivated-5d48c59b057e6

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@FierceDeity: Yup.

Consider that the term "shipped", which originates from the retail sense of releasing a game by shipping physical copies out to retailers, continues to be used for digital-only games with no physical presence.

Therefore, I shipped I Get This Call Every Day on December 21st, 2012.

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Rowr

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Edited By Rowr

@JesterPC238 said:

Thanks for this Patrick!

I don't really enjoy Gallant's games much but the premise of I Get This Call Every Day is very interesting. It's a shame it caused him to lose his job, it seems pretty harmless to me.

Also, I hate to be "that guy" but "what she must have been gowing through" in the last paragraph.

Note the quotation marks to indicate that this is something quoted from gallant about his friend who had a sex change.

It's the rules, if a canadian guy says gowing, you have to quote it as such.

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Overnumerousness

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Edited By Overnumerousness

Great story, Scoops!

A tough situation, but it sounds like this is the start of something better for him anyway. Good luck!

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MeatSim

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Edited By MeatSim

Well at least he doesn't have to work in a call center for the time being.

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JesterPC238

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Edited By JesterPC238

@Rowr: THEN I DON'T WANT TO LIVE IN THIS WORLD ANYMORE!

I was mostly commenting because I know Patrick now has a service for editing and such so that he can push out articles more frequently. Figured it would be a good thing to know.

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MattyT

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Edited By MattyT

I'm just not getting why this is such a big deal. He knowingly took a risk. Risk backfired. He doesn't have a job. There wasn't any sort of injustice.

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Y2JBone

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Edited By Y2JBone

Great article Patrick. Keep up the good work.

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DrDarkStryfe

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Edited By DrDarkStryfe

@feargalr said:

@Triumvir said:

Man, I hate my government sometimes.

EDIT: Oh, I finally got the quest. Cool. Anyway, I hope Minister of National Revenue likes lawsuits.

Yeah that was the first thing that occurred to me reading this, if he didn't actually disclose any confidential information, or breach his contract, how the frak can they justify firing him?

Also maybe it's just me, but I really dislike that reporter from the toronto star, go and find a real story you jerk. They got this guy fired for something that isn't even real news.

Most businesses have in their policies that you are not allowed to be a representative of said business unless approved by the company to be such. This game is a representation of his work experience, and it was public where he worked. It was only a matter of time before he would be fired.

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Jerr

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Edited By Jerr

This stuff is so exciting to me. I think this is the future of gaming, where games aren't just simulations created for fun, but actual emotional experiences that reflect deep aspects of the real world. This guy deserves all the support he can get.

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Edited By manicmyna

probably a good thing - if he's got other talents its time to get out of the unintelligent cretin zone that is every call centre that I've had the misfortune to phone.

that said a call centre worker might have been the pinnacle of his career path seeing as he was openly stupid enough to jeopardize his employment