Abstract
Problem: Game development is plagued by recurring issues — crunch, poor estimates, team conflict — yet teams rarely resolve them. Why?
Approach: Tim Cain reflects on his decades of experience and the comment sections of his previous videos, identifying the cognitive "lenses" that prevent people from diagnosing problems correctly, then proposes a three-step framework for actually fixing issues.
Findings: Most failures to solve problems stem from people never agreeing on what the problem is, what caused it, or what the solution should be. Cognitive biases — heroes vs. villains thinking, age bias, lazy vs. hardworking labels, employer vs. employee tribalism — distort everyone's perception and block productive discussion.
Key insight: Before you can fix anything, you need three agreements in sequence: agree on the problem, agree on the cause, agree on the solution. Skip any step and nothing gets resolved.
References
- Tim Cain. YouTube video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cm1jgmklaro