DeadlyRecluse wrote: »It it relevant experience? Absolutely. Would I ever put it on a resume? Absolutely not. Never. Nope.
Rohamad_Ali wrote: »I'd just be careful in mentioning which guild you lead . I saw one in Cyrodiil called I like BBW's that claimed one of the castles . That one could land you in HR room first day .
Okay when I on my death bed going to say lived through first black president, computer revolution, womans rights, and now gamer rights.brimstone74 wrote: »It's not worth the risk. I would say this is getting better as Baby Boomers (no offense guys) and some of their biases are organically kinda retiring themselves out of the workforce. Gen X forward you'll see a lot less bias, but it's still there.
I once had a boomer see an mmo referenced in a private email on my personal cell to me from a friend...he called me out...he was in the process of pulling me to his team and promoting me....that email killed the whole thing.
To a lot of folks...gamer = lazy loser.
We know better as far as Guild Leaders and Competitive gaming...but the masses at large do not really buy into this.
The sad thing is if that email was regarding a baseball meet up after work...I likely would have gotten a high five.
Isn't that technically discrimination? Sure 'gamer' isn't a typical issue for discrimination but I know one woman who was formally warned about referring to applicants under 30 as "kids", "young lads", "wee boys" and other things that implied they were children because it could be considered discrimination and if someone found out and then didn't get the job they could complain on the basis that she was making assumptions about their experience based on their age.
(Although it might also depend on what country you're in. I know UK employment law is very different to the US - for example the whole 'at will' employment thing is totally illegal here.)
But I think you're right about older co-workers. Funny enough one of my co-workers made some snarky comment about applicants with tattoos earlier today and how it makes them look like "god awful punk rockers". She seemed to forget that she was speaking to me and my manager and we both have tattoos which are visible depending on how long our sleeves are (today we both had them on show), but I gently reminded her that I'd just been chatting to the head of department about which Guns N' Roses shows we were each going to this summer. She quickly back-tracked and claimed that it's different if you can "pass for normal".
clocksstoppe wrote: »No, don't embarrass yourself OP.