BitLife has a massive list of career options, with corporate jobs among the highest-paying you’ll find. At least, that’s the case for presidents and company directors. For most positions, you’ll start low and work your way up. Here’s a complete step-by-step guide to landing a corporate job in BitLife.
How to get a corporate job in BitLife
You can quickly and easily find corporate jobs in BitLife using the following steps:
- Age up your character until they graduate high school.
- Sign up for university and pick any business-related degree as your major.
- Search for any position with “Corporate” as its label in your full-time job list.
Unless you own the Golden Diploma or the Golden Resume, your BitLife character will likely be around 22 years old—or older, depending on when they started university—before they officially land a corporate job. If you take things a step further and go to Business School to become an executive, you’ll need two extra years of schooling alongside 15 years of work experience to work your way up the ladder.
Your first step is to age up your character before applying to university. Regardless of whether you attend Business School later on, you’ll need to pick a business-related major to help filter your job options. Your best bet is to choose an option like Accounting, Economics, or Marketing. If you get unlucky and don’t land a scholarship, you’ll need to rely on your character’s parents or a student loan to pay for your tuition later on.
After four years, your character will graduate from university, making you eligible for Business School. You’re not required to pursue Business School for entry-level corporate jobs, but if you want to become an executive and make more money, you’ll eventually need to go. To do this, head back into your education menu, choose Business School, and age up twice until they graduate again.
Now that you have a business degree, you’ll be eligible for a corporate position. Head into your full-time job list and search for positions such as Junior Internal Auditor, Business Analyst, or Accountant. They’ll appear with “Corporate” beside their names to differentiate them from other career branches.
Another option is to use the Golden Diploma or Golden Resume to fast-track your way up the corporate ladder. The Golden Diploma lets you graduate with any degree you want instantly, while the resume lets you pick from a list of career types your character is eligible for. However, they cost real money, so only go for them if you don’t mind spending some cash or already own one (or both).
If you’re interested in checking out our other content, make sure to read up on how to complete the Belko Challenge in BitLife, or tap the game’s tag below to explore our article list.
The post How to get a corporate job in BitLife appeared first on Destructoid.
Dead as Disco is now available worldwide in early access, and you can tweak the in-game settings to get the best performance on your PC. The first few hours have been pretty positive, and I didn’t encounter many stutters or lags.
That said, this guide will solve the problem of any lag if you’re encountering it on your adventure.
Best Dead as Disco graphics settings
Before I deep dive into the settings, here’s how my current setup looks.
- AMD Ryzen 5600G
- NVIDIA RTX 3060 12 GB
- 16 GB of DDR5 RAM
If you visit the Steam page of Dead as Disco, you won’t find the recommended settings. The minimum requirements are present, and this guide is meant for those who have a relatively weaker setup. If you’re having a powerful set of specifications, chances are that the game is running pretty smoothly.
- Window Mode: Windowed Fullscreen/Fullscreen
- Vertical Sync: Off
- Global Illumination Mode: Off/SSGI. Don’t go for Lumen as it will consume more hardware.
- Global Illumination Quality: Medium
- Shadows: On
- Shadows Quality: Medium/Low
- View Distance: Far
- Textures: Medium
- Effects: Medium
- Reflections: Low
- Post Processing: Medium
- Anti-Aliasing: Medium
- Upscaling Method: Use what’s applicable for your device.
- Frame Generation: Off
- Anti-Lag: Yes, if you have an NVIDIA card.
- Chromatic Aberration: On
- Speed Lines: Off
- Frame Rate Limit: 60 FPS
- Frame Rate Limit (Background): 30 FPS
- Frame Rate Limit (Menu): 60 FPS
Since our aim is to get a steady performance, I have kept a cap on the frame rate. While there are higher options above 60 FPS, the limit smoothens the overall performance. I faced no lag at 60 FPS, and it’s sufficient to enjoy the game. This limit can be slightly increased once Dead as Disco receives a few post-launch updates.
Vertical Sync is another option that you should keep turned off. You gain very little from it, while keeping it turned off allows your PC to consume fewer resources. Finally, use an Upscaler as applicable since it will keep the lags at bay.
All said, Dead as Disco‘s day one performance is pretty satisfactory, and I expect it to get better once the early access version moves closer to full launch.
The post Best Dead as Disco graphics settings for no lag and max FPS appeared first on Destructoid.
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