The accepted wisdom is that Yakuza wouldn't dare treat people as bad as Konami does.Yakuza increases their henchmen's salary.
I mean it’s not good by any means, but it’s enough to live on. It would be easier with a roommate, but I am not sure if folks in Japan do that.300k is good for a graduate depending on the work environment. With a couple bonuses that's close to 4 million a year. Definitely enough to get by if you're single in Tokyo. I wonder how it is at Konami though. What do they even make in-house these days? PES, Metal Gear, Silent Hill, Castlevania, Goemon, Contra are all either dead or outsourced basically.
Japan has been a low-income country since the bubble burst in '91.I can almost make the same amount working at Walmart.
They do. They keeps innovating on its pachinko machines, releasing improved models year after year.Now if they can just increase the quality of their games
It sounds alot until you covert it into £ and then it's not.300k is good for a graduate depending on the work environment. With a couple bonuses that's close to 4 million a year. Definitely enough to get by if you're single in Tokyo. I wonder how it is at Konami though. What do they even make in-house these days? PES, Metal Gear, Silent Hill, Castlevania, Goemon, Contra are all either dead or outsourced basically.
Dude....that will almost brake their bankSo $400 US/yr increase. Wow.
It sounds alot until you covert it into £ and then it's not.
I mean it’s not good by any means, but it’s enough to live on. It would be easier with a roommate, but I am not sure if folks in Japan do that.
Also, a lot of companies will give out transport subsidy so that can help as well.
It just shows how much people are underpaid really. Japan is cheaper vs most of Western Europe and US, but it’s still expensive, especially in Tokyo and other major cities.300k is good for a fresh graduate in Japan. Presumably they would rise through the ranks within a few years too and pick up a pay rise along the way. The issue is the working environment and whether or not you are working 10am to 10pm or some bullshit like that.
Good on Konami as the Yen is currently weak vs the USD, EURO, GBP so every little increase helps!
Also:
For newly graduates that 300k a month salary should be decent enough even if they live alone.
I suspect this is bad wording - but it makes it sound like normally noone gets an increase in Konami - it's only out of their goodness of will that you get a raise -_-It is their third consecutive year of salary increases
So $400 US/yr increase. Wow.
It's possible to get by without Japanese at least in larger corps - but it comes with its own set of challenges.You would have to be fluent in Japanese to get a job there in the first place.
Someone explained it way better in the last thread we had about these wage increases for new graduates in the Japanese game industry:32k/yr is enough? Japan is pretty expensive even for our salaries. That's not great at all.
The average tax rate is about 20%. For a new hire fresh out of college, this is a pretty competitive wage. Furthermore, there are fully furnished apartments with free fiber internet for only 47,000 yen/$315 USD a month that are 2.2 miles from Capcom's office. That's walking distance. When you zoom out and take yourself and your own country out of the equation, it's a pretty solid deal.
So.. After tax the net income for one of these employees is 240,000 yen or $1,600 USD. $315 goes to the apartment I mentioned. That leaves $1,285. No car or car insurance really necessary for a young person fresh out of college in Japan. An unlimited cellphone data plan from SoftBank is about 7,500 yen or $50. Health insurance is factored in through work. That leaves $1,235 for any remaining utilities like water, power, trash, that I might not be familiar with, and food. Many Japanese people eat their meals largely from convenience stores like 7/11, where a lunch box might be 350¥/$2.35. Now let's say this person gets 2 meals a day from 7/11. a bite on the way to work for breakfast and maybe a lunch later on. Then they spend three times that on dinner. That comes out to roughly 35,160¥/$235 for the month for meals during working days.
Let's break it down in a more digestible fashion.
300,000¥/$2,000 - Gross income.
240,000¥/$1,600 - After tax NET income.
-47,000¥/$315 - local apartment including furniture and internet.
-7,500¥/$50 - Unlimited cellphone plan.
-35,160¥/$235 - Food during the week.
150,340¥/$1,000 - remaining for incidental utilities including water, power, trash, renters insurance, clothes and food for the weekends.
Honestly $1,000 a month free and clear after the majority of your bills and food are taken care of is more than most young people in the states have to their names.
To me, then, this seems somewhat unfair to say "oh wow that's so low" when -- in actuality when you break it down and factor their culture and lifestyles in, it's pretty fuckin good.
It's possible to get by without Japanese at least in larger corps - but it comes with its own set of challenges.
But yes - local currency purchasing power is what matters, not some arbitrary centralized conversion.
It sounds alot until you covert it into £ and then it's not.
Yep. Even the locals call it a shit hole.Roppongi itself is a bit of a shit hole.
I never said its unlivable, its certainly okay. Konami is located in Tokyo, not Osaka so average rent is about $800/mo with a 1-2k deposit on initial signing. After taxes 32k turns into 18k USD. which is a take home of 1,574/mo. So you have very little in disposable income tbh.Someone explained it way better in the last thread we had about these wage increases for new graduates in the Japanese game industry:
Tbh I never looked that closely at Konami but I know different studios that specifically had foreigner friendly positions opened (along with language support and more), so it does exist. It was usually studios within major companies like Square, Sega etc. I suspect also smaller studios can't afford the effort, but you may well be right some companies are more conservative than others also.Game dev in Japan is 99% Japanese outside of localisation. Especially at a place like Konami which I would imagine is a pretty traditional company to work for.
Yea tech should definitely be easier - there's big-tech presence in Japan also and those are very multinational everywhere.It's totally different to software and finance jobs where you can definitely get all English or all Chinese or all whatever jobs.
I think rent above 30% is still completely nuts tbh, but that's why things like flat-sharing etc. are becoming so prevalent in higher cost areas too. It's just unaffordable to live normal adult life for many.i guess i'm still stuck in the past where your rent is supposed to be 30% of your take home income lol
I can almost make the same amount working at Walmart.
Japans' economy isn't doing too great either...$2,000 a month is not too shabby over there for new grads. Still not great, but their economy isn’t wholly fucked like the United States right now.
Agreed, but it’s in a hell of a lot better shape than the American economy right now.Japans' economy isn't doing too great either...