A chill, easy-going work environment! - Quality Assurance Technician LAI Games Employee Review

5.0
18 Mar 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Chill environment, friendly colleagues, beer-o'clock on fridays from 1630H, good communication between team members

Cons

VR games are sometimes tested, leaving you a little disoriented after a day's work

Explore other reviews about LAI Games

4.0
18 Aug 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The upper management shows interest in it's employees and their personal development. Each department is comprised of a fairly small team, which can make it easier to build relationships and be set flexible goals. Standard 8-5 schedule for most entry level positions.

Cons

Though most managers are experienced in the industry and their field, many lack basic managerial ability or leadership skills. Personally, my current manager has a very traditional mindset to what a work day should look like which eliminates the flexibility I had been given under my previous manager in this company. Turnover rates are low, though that is more of a result of the size of the company and not the general level of employee morale.

2.0
27 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Day-to-day work environment is generally positive and easy to be in. Team members are approachable and collaborative. -Creative roles have room to execute and bring ideas to life, especially in marketing and product-facing work. -Exposure to multiple parts of the business (product, marketing, sales) can help build a well-rounded skill set. -Leadership is accessible on a surface level, and communication is not overly bureaucratic. -The industry itself (arcade/amusement) is unique and can be genuinely interesting to work in.

Cons

-Long-term vision and strategic direction feel inconsistent or unclear. There is a lack of cohesive, forward-looking planning. -Compensation is well below market standards for comparable roles, even when factoring in the niche/legacy nature of the industry. Pay does not consistently reflect the level of skill, output, or cross-functional responsibility expected from employees. -Repeated investment into oversaturated or poorly validated markets, often with underdeveloped execution plans. -Projects are frequently pursued without full commitment or proper resourcing, leading to reactive decision-making. -Resources (time, budget, inventory) are misallocated, with capital tied up in products that do not move effectively. -Employee growth, advancement, and long-term development are not prioritized in a meaningful way. -Layoffs or role cuts appear to be a downstream effect of earlier strategic missteps rather than external necessity. -There is a pattern of “winging it” after significant investment has already been made, instead of disciplined planning upfront. -High-level decisions do not always reflect feedback or insights from teams closer to the customer or execution layer.

3
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All