EA attracts a lot of talent.
There are some smart people to learn from.
Nice work culture - people generally happy to help and easy to talk to.
Main campus has a number of perks, including a good gym, workout programs, etc.
Growth can be challenging because the big products have large teams. Large teams mean that each individual tends to stay in their lane more so than on a smaller team, in which people need to learn more.
EA has a lot of internal tech, so there is less transferable knowledge if one ends up moving on for different opportunities.
Had an interview with 4 different rounds. First round was HR. Then a tech round with the managers, and then 2 panel rounds. It was a bitter ending; I did not get an offer.
Starting with a phone screening with HR, followed by an interview with the technical director. Then a technical interview with team members and a behavioral interview with a producer and a project manager.
A first screening with the recruiter to talk about the position. An interview with the software engineering lead, and then three more rounds of interviews. One of them was "culture add" and then two technical interviews, which were pretty similar.
Had an interview with 4 different rounds. First round was HR. Then a tech round with the managers, and then 2 panel rounds. It was a bitter ending; I did not get an offer.
Starting with a phone screening with HR, followed by an interview with the technical director. Then a technical interview with team members and a behavioral interview with a producer and a project manager.
A first screening with the recruiter to talk about the position. An interview with the software engineering lead, and then three more rounds of interviews. One of them was "culture add" and then two technical interviews, which were pretty similar.