Everything's Fine - Anonymous employee GameChanger Employee Review

3.0
14 Dec 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has a lot of resources, i.e. money, that they can draw upon. That generally means good instant-gratification benefits for employees. They finally embraced remote work life because of the pandemic, allowing employees to explore living outside of the city without losing their job. Overall, it's f i n e. And so if you're okay getting up, getting your job done, and going about your life, then great. So long as you get along with your manager. Many people have worked here much longer than is normally seen in tech companies, and I think that's why. It's stable and fairly easy to coast along.

Cons

Equity structure is certainly not the greatest. Leadership seems very ego-driven, at the end of the day it's about making them look good to DSG. DSG becoming very heavily involved in overseeing things means you lose a lot of what makes a startup great. Very top-down approach to decisions.

Explore other reviews about GameChanger

5.0
17 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

greatest place to work and intern! they treat interns like royalty and you learn so much and have so much responsibility over the code you write.

Cons

absolutely no cons at GC

1.0
26 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Talented colleagues — There are genuinely smart, hardworking people across the company who care deeply about the mission and the customers. Strong compensation — Pay is competitive, benefits are excellent, and many roles still offer solid work‑life balance. Real product value in the marketplace.

Cons

The most persistent issue is the CEO’s leadership. While new executives cycle in and out, the CEO remains constant, and the same patterns repeat every time. Each “new era” of leadership is just another rinse‑and‑repeat exercise: fresh faces, new strategy, another reorg, and the same underlying problems resurfacing because the root cause never changes. There’s a noticeable disconnect between the CEO’s messaging and the actual operational reality. Instead of building stability, the organization keeps reshuffling itself around the same leadership behaviors that created the instability in the first place. Employees feel the churn, but nothing fundamentally improves.

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