Company Culture
Coworking / Gaming

Nathan Solomon on why coworking and video games (probably) don’t mix

Following the closure of the Philly Game Forge, the founder of the nonprofit Philadelphia Game Lab took to his blog.

Gamers at the now-extinct Philly Game Forge. (Photo by Roberto Torres)

After the Philly Game Forge announced it was calling it quits, Philadelphia Game Lab’s Nathan Solomon took to his personal blog to reflect on his decision to not to open a shared work space for game developers.
“I would go so far as to say that it is impossible at this point to create a shared space in games in Philadelphia that would reliably benefit developers enough as to allow them to both pay $300 [in membership] and earn a living,” Solomon writes.
The relatively small size of the community, the tough process of finding an appropriate site and the lack of financial support from the city, argues Solomon, conspired against the creation of a physical space for game devs.
Read the full post
Solomon also opens up about another factor of the equation: his struggle with a slow-moving form of lung cancer diagnosed in 2013.
“For a bunch of that time, I didn’t think I was likely to live to see much of the next year,” Solomon wrote. “I did, and am fine now, but it added to the stress of what had to be a January 2014 opening for Philadelphia Game Labs.”

Companies: Philadelphia Game Lab
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Philly daily roundup: Student-made college cost app; Central High is robotics world champ; Internet subsidy expiration looms

Philly daily roundup: Earth Day glossary; Gen AI's energy cost; Biotech incubator in Horsham

Gain knowledge and skills at the Technical.ly Developers Conference during Philly Tech Week 2024

Philly-area startup for investing in real estate debt rebrands with wider offerings

Technically Media