#gamedesign System Game Designer / AppQuantum Remote or Cyprus, Armenia.
AppQuantum is an international mobile free-to-play game publisher.
Requirements: 🔹Proven experience of work with games, such as Idle Tycoons, Idle RPGs, RPG Battlers, 4x Strategies or Farms. 🔹Demonstrated expertise as an economy-focused systems designer, particularly in the simulation games industry. 🔹Proficiency with Excel or similar tools for balancing game features and economy, managing data, and tracking gameplay impacts. 🔹Great knowledge of industry design trends and best practices. 🔹Excellent teamwork skills. 🔹English.
#gamedesign System Game Designer / AppQuantum Remote or Cyprus, Armenia.
AppQuantum is an international mobile free-to-play game publisher.
Requirements: 🔹Proven experience of work with games, such as Idle Tycoons, Idle RPGs, RPG Battlers, 4x Strategies or Farms. 🔹Demonstrated expertise as an economy-focused systems designer, particularly in the simulation games industry. 🔹Proficiency with Excel or similar tools for balancing game features and economy, managing data, and tracking gameplay impacts. 🔹Great knowledge of industry design trends and best practices. 🔹Excellent teamwork skills. 🔹English.
That growth environment will include rising inflation and interest rates. Those upward shifts naturally accompany healthy growth periods as the demand for resources, products and services rise. Importantly, the Federal Reserve has laid out the rationale for not interfering with that natural growth transition.It's not exactly a fad, but there is a widespread willingness to pay up for a growth story. Classic fundamental analysis takes a back seat. Even negative earnings are ignored. In fact, positive earnings seem to be a limiting measure, producing the question, "Is that all you've got?" The preference is a vision of untold riches when the exciting story plays out as expected.
The S&P 500 slumped 1.8% on Monday and Tuesday, thanks to China Evergrande, the Chinese property company that looks like it is ready to default on its more-than $300 billion in debt. Cries of the next Lehman Brothers—or maybe the next Silverado?—echoed through the canyons of Wall Street as investors prepared for the worst.