PC Building Simulator

PC Building Simulator

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Ares Sep 21, 2021 @ 8:28am
Can I get A Job?
With just experience and playtime with PC Bulding Simulator, will I have enough knowledge to join the workforce and be an IT guy not needing a diploma or degree?
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Showing 1-6 of 6 comments
CeeJayM Sep 21, 2021 @ 8:54am 
Im personally applying for internship, you dont need diplomas or degrees to achieve anything, hell, you can be a highschool drop out (not encouraging btw) but what they mainly focus on is primarily 3 things:

-Social Skills
-Skill in general
-Accessability

All those things determine whether you get the job or not. Someone can apply for a position that you are, and lets say they have the highest degree you can get in college, with honors, they apply, but they dont have Social skills or they are lazy, they wont get the job, all you need is the three things listed and you should get the job.

Now regarding PCBS, It isn't a valid source of training in my opinion. I am someone who builds computers, and fixes them In real life. With 3 years of experience I can tell you PCBS is a lot easier than doing it In real life, not saying PCBS is a good starting platform, but I would recommend trying some in real life stuff.

I hope I helped :)

Ares Sep 21, 2021 @ 9:35am 
Originally posted by CeeJayM:
Im personally applying for internship, you dont need diplomas or degrees to achieve anything, hell, you can be a highschool drop out (not encouraging btw) but what they mainly focus on is primarily 3 things:

-Social Skills
-Skill in general
-Accessability

All those things determine whether you get the job or not. Someone can apply for a position that you are, and lets say they have the highest degree you can get in college, with honors, they apply, but they dont have Social skills or they are lazy, they wont get the job, all you need is the three things listed and you should get the job.

Now regarding PCBS, It isn't a valid source of training in my opinion. I am someone who builds computers, and fixes them In real life. With 3 years of experience I can tell you PCBS is a lot easier than doing it In real life, not saying PCBS is a good starting platform, but I would recommend trying some in real life stuff.

I hope I helped :)
whats the best toolkit for irl pc building?
Originally posted by ares:
With just experience and playtime with PC Bulding Simulator, will I have enough knowledge to join the workforce and be an IT guy not needing a diploma or degree?
No you will not be able to get a job in IT in real life after playing this game. This game will not teach you how to work on or build any real life computer after playing this game. This is a game to be played for fun, not a teaching tool.
Nebgama Sep 22, 2021 @ 6:43am 
I would not state playing Build Simulator as a sole reason for any IT experience lol. They most likely would laugh at your Resume and throw it straight in the trash. In fact i would not put it on your resume at all.

This is kids lego compared to the real stuff.

You need to prove either first hand experience with a cover letter or show that you have some qualifications or both.

Without any qualifications unless its a trainieship then you are going to have to prove significantly in a cover letter that you basically know stuff that any qualified person or someone in the industry is going to know.

If you are going for sysadmin role then you need to know some sort of coding plus strong database management and in many cases strong computer science background and even sometimes hacking and prevention, endpoints and remote computing.

If you are going for proper QC repairs then you need to have a strong electronics background and sometime computer science.

If you are going for a simple building/basic repair shop any chump can do that one.

Computer science is not easy either you gotta go to collage for that one. Its advanced level stuff that most plebs do not know about. Wizard level computing. The inner working nuts and bolts of computing and machine code this is not easy to learn and different from an interpreted level language. It is also the area in computing where the innovation comes from also strong in reverse engineering also strong in low level hardware interfacing and also strong in abstract hacking methods. Strong in all areas of computers and electronics and are the ones that bring the new tech if they are at that level.

Anybody who has studied computer science extensively and has the creds to back it up can apply for any role they want in any area of computing.
Last edited by Nebgama; Sep 22, 2021 @ 7:19am
Nebgama Sep 22, 2021 @ 6:44am 
Originally posted by CeeJayM:
Im personally applying for internship, you dont need diplomas or degrees to achieve anything, hell, you can be a highschool drop out (not encouraging btw) but what they mainly focus on is primarily 3 things:

-Social Skills
-Skill in general
-Accessability

All those things determine whether you get the job or not. Someone can apply for a position that you are, and lets say they have the highest degree you can get in college, with honors, they apply, but they dont have Social skills or they are lazy, they wont get the job, all you need is the three things listed and you should get the job.

Now regarding PCBS, It isn't a valid source of training in my opinion. I am someone who builds computers, and fixes them In real life. With 3 years of experience I can tell you PCBS is a lot easier than doing it In real life, not saying PCBS is a good starting platform, but I would recommend trying some in real life stuff.

I hope I helped :)

lol so you are just going to say that qualifications are redundant then?
Nebgama Sep 22, 2021 @ 6:44am 
good luck with that.
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Date Posted: Sep 21, 2021 @ 8:28am
Posts: 6