A strange place, and one only for those fluent in Korean
Pros
The employees were genuinely nice, though clearly overworked. Their games are actually fun.
Cons
I was not at Com2Us for very long - and this is because I'm a longtime year gaming industry veteran and I know a bad workplace situation when I see one, but this one stands out as easily the most bizarre and inane. During my interviews, I was excited in thinking that Com2Us understood the need and role of Localization, but if you play any of their games, you'll quickly realize everything is translated 1:1 from very poor Engrish. The games, though fun, are mired in terrible, often unclear, and highly inconsistent wording as well as typos. A key culprit of the quality of the text in their games is their work practices - a very small team is tasked with a herculean amount of (I dare not call it localization) translation work, for a large amount of games, on very tight deadlines (as the deadlines are set on Korean time, so you have a day less than what is posted on the work). You can expect to have to work nonstop for the entire time that you're there just to do everything that was due that day (and wait for approval from the head guy to do it the next day if you don't finish). I thought they were being very generous when they told me they did hour and a half lunches... you need it just to decompress from the insane, unreasonable workload. Emails came in from their Korean HQ, entirely in Korean, so if you don't read/write Korean you're better off not working there even if the position doesn't state Korean fluency as a requisite. It is. I worked on a very small laptop and left work with a splitting headache each day of my short time there. Work is tracked by solely through email which, as mentioned, is ENTIRELY in Korean, and delivered through and entered directly into GOOGLE SHEETS (I bet you never thought you'd actually miss Jira). It is an absolutely insane way of doing work, and the sheets take a long time to load as the text for 14+ games is all tracked on the sheets, so good luck getting to the 7,175th line of any given google sheet to do your work directly into it (no, I'm not exaggerating). On top of this, it was frustrating dealing with HR who was completely unfit, did not offer any kind of guide or resource for trying to figure out company healthcare plans, and instructed me not to mention the salary amount I had settled on as they'd recently had people leave after finding out what some of their peers made. It was a surreal nightmare.