Freelance Game Writers: Is It Really Possible?

One question I get all the time on my freelance writing blog is whether or not it is possible to start a video game blog or become a freelance video game writer. I can definitely see why there’s so much interest in this question. Let’s face it: video games are fun. And what better job can many people imagine getting paid to play video games for the 10 hours a day and write about them? It can be very hard for me to answer this question because there are ways you can indeed make money online as a freelance game writer, but often times this involves a higher amount of work and going a different direction than what many of the people asking the question mean. Finding a job as a writer for Nintendo or for IGN might be great but those job openings generally don’t come open on the open market and good luck beating out the competition for them.

This doesn’t mean that the dream of being a freelance game writer is out of reach. The biggest question you’ll have to ask yourself is are you willing to do the work in order to set up your own websites, your own blog, and eventually your own income? Finding a freelance writing job writing video game reviews are writing for a major video game site is not impossible, but it’s not very likely either. I’d love to go out on a date with Denise Richards, but it is probably never to happen. However there are many grades long tail keywords online which you can make money from. The question is or you will blog about games and systems you might not be interested in? Are you willing to write dozens if not hundreds of free articles to get back links? Are you willing to spend hundreds and hundreds of hours working for peanuts to get to the point where your freelance blog becomes your full-time job? If you answered yes to all these questions from the good news is that you can make a living as a freelance game writer.

You will have to think of your website as a passion site and one in which not only be dealing with topics you enjoy or love, but you also have to look for keywords, be willing to do a lot of research, or even write about types of games and systems that don’t interest you but your research indicates are extremely profitable. I caught a lot of slack from gamers claiming no true gamer would play on a Nintendo Wii. The problem was two years ago all the really big moneymaking keywords revolved around the Nintendo Wii. And that brings us to perhaps the most important point: you must think of yourself as an Internet Marketer first and foremost and not a video game blogger. If you don’t know about Search Engine Optimization, back links, monetizing websites, then you need to learn before you will be a will to succeed as a video game writer. If you have no idea where to start then take this one piece of advice, which is read this the Keyword Academy review to see why you should sign up to learn this stuff from professionals who genuinely want to help you out. The sooner you learn it, the sooner you’ll make a living as a video game writer.

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