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Valve Corporation

Is this your company?

Toxic teams, traumatized workers, opaque management hierarchy - Anonymous employee Valve Corporation Employee Review

1.0
16 May 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Valve used to make good games, is well known, and it provides a somewhat competitive benefits package.

Cons

I'm writing this as an act of kindness to other developers. I worked here for many years and I still speak with insiders after leaving, and nothing fundamentally has changed yet. I waited a while before posting this review, so I could think about my overall experience here and what I would like to tell others about it. Overall, I highly recommend you avoid this company right now, because your long term health and sanity are more important than anything they can offer you. There's nothing negative I can write that hasn't already been said here publicly on the web already. If you do decide to go, then please remember this advice: First, if you are a new hot developer who's done something amazing for some other company, Valve will desire you basically like a trophy. If you do decide to go here, demand options, demand a startup bonus, and negotiate your initial salary upward. *Always* do each, without exception. The power is in your hands here, and Valve definitely has the ability to handle the upward pressure on its wages and benefits you and others will be applying. If you are someone Valve *really* wants, someone that they can proudly show off around town, they will have one or two workers discretely coach you before the actual interview. I witnessed this occur on two occasions. It won't matter if you flub the interview, you will be hired. If you aren't couched, they don't really want you. If you do get coached, then you better negotiate your butt off. If you can do so, talk to several teams before going to Valve. Try to find the least toxic team to join up with first. Find a team that is truly excited about you coming on board and helping them out. Ask them about their goals, when they are going to ship, who their customers are, and about the milestones they've already completed. Try to determine if results actually matter to this team. Identify the leaders of the team, ask them how long they've worked there, and see if you gel with them. Avoid teams like the plague that haven't shipped anything in years or are filled with old timers, as they will tend to be incredibly toxic. Avoid teams that don't have strong support from Gabe or a board member. Avoid teams without crystal clear product goals and a ship dates. The way to shut down these toxic, zombie-like teams inside of Valve is to starve them of new hires, and if Valve won't do it internally then ex-Valvers will do it externally by informing the world's developers about what to look for. Before you go to Valve, speak with at least a couple ex-Valvers about what it's actually like to work there. Do not go there unprepared, and do not believe the developer marketing.

Explore other reviews about Valve Corporation

5.0
17 Nov 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Friendly, Free Food, Good Culture, Excellent Attitudes, Clean Office.

Cons

I don't have any thing negative to say honestly

5.0
30 May 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Valve can be an amazing place to work, but it requires the right fit. The people who will do well at Valve need to be high performers in their specific area, but beyond that they also need to excel at thinking about users and products and contributing to product level decision making. Additionally people need to be able to take in a lot of sometimes conflicting opinions and advice from co-workers who are all peers and then go make good decisions on what they should work on and what direction they should take their work independently. People who can demonstrate an ability to do those things well will be afforded a huge amount of freedom, independence, and responsibility at Valve. Most of the people who do those things well are extremely happy at Valve and have trouble imagining leaving. For those people Valve is a place of huge opportunities, freedom to take big risks, freedom to work on many different projects, and a place filled with smart people who will help you accomplish things you couldn't on your own. In terms of more tangible pros compensation is competitive at the base level, and for high performers bonuses (cash and sometimes equity) can be extremely generous. The company takes you and your immediate family on a free vacation to a fancy resort every year, you get extremely good medical coverage, life insurance, a very generous 401k matching plan, free food, free personal trainers, etc. Overall benefits are generally as good or better than the best companies out there.

Cons

The biggest con is that fit can be difficult to measure up front. The company has a difficult hiring process and works hard to measure not just your competence at your role but also your ability to work without a manager and to make high level user/product decisions. This process is tuned towards allowing false negatives and trying to avoid false positives but mistakes in hiring can still be made. For those who end up inside the company and struggle with the environment it can be very painful. Since you don't have a manager it can be difficult to get clear guidance on how to improve and you may get conflicting advice from peers. The company has a yearly ranking/review process that has proven very effective at correctly compensating those who are doing well but I agree with a prior reviewer who stated that it's never been 100% effective at providing useful feedback to those who need help. If you end up being in a situation where you are struggling at Valve you will get some advice and guidance from peers and from HR but you will ultimately need to figure out your path to success on your own. For those used to having a more hands on manager as their advocate this can be hard. Many of the negative reviews here seem to come clearly from employees who struggled at Valve to varying degrees. My experience is that these employees are a small minority due to the difficult hiring process but their negative experiences are still real. The best thing you could do for yourself before working at Valve is to try to really understand the work environment and the high expectations. Once you understand those make sure you are really honest with yourself about whether Valve is likely to be a good fit.

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