I emailed the company asking if there were any open quality assurance or entry-level art positions. A few days later, I received an email telling me to stop by their office (extremely informal email with little information). I thought this was very strange and even a little creepy, but decided to go anyway.
The interview itself was very informal. It was with the owner, a programmer, and an artist. Note, at this point, I still had not been told what position I was being interviewed for. The owner asked if I wanted anything to drink. I refused and he left to go get something for himself. While he was gone, I spoke with the other interviewers a bit and discovered the interview was for a quality assurance position. When the owner returned, he asked what I knew about Babaroga. Having done research on the company beforehand, I was able to give him different details I remembered about the company. He seemed amused by the effort I had put into preparing, but I'm not sure if he was impressed or being mocking with his follow up questions asking what else I knew about the company.
Most of the questions were pretty easy and straight-forward, wanting to know what kind of experience I had or what types of projects I had worked on in school. I left feeling fairly confident I had the position.
I received an email in the next couple of days giving me their offer and asking for my availability (I had a few weeks of school remaining before graduation). There was no pay negotiation and I accepted the offer. The emails were still quite bare of information and very informal, so there was some back-and-forth in order to get all the basic information I needed (such as what day to start, when I should plan to arrive, etc.).
Overall, it was a very strange interview/hiring experience and should have given me a clue about what working for the company would hold.