Squirt wrote:
My time has finally come to start looking for a college

.
I've been advised to start searching and applying to colleges early on, rather than waiting for the last minute to submit my applications.
What I need help on is what exactly am I looking for?
By that I mean that I want to go into the video game development field. Not the graphic designers but the coders and the ones that make up the AI and any other coding behind the game.
What am I suppose to study in college in order to be able to do those things? What specific computer languages/sciences should I look for in a college? What math/science fields should I also look for?
I know that Full Sail offers a program that sets it all up for us, but i've read reviews that they are a for profit school and most that graduate don't get very far as the "quality" didn't match the price they paid ironically.
Also How many majors/minors can I have? What is a major/minor? What would you recommend I major/minor in if I am going into game coding?
Also, any college recommendations?
(An alternative for me is studying Biology if I can't find any code development schools)
SM-Count covered it, but I'll add some more / repetition.
You'll want to major in computer science. Find out what language your program uses primarily and get started learning and using said language. For game development I personally would focus on C++, but the language isn't as important as learning the programming concepts and theory. I say get a head start on learning your program's language because after a class or two of introductory programming the classes will shift heavily into computer science theory, using said language to implement the theory learned. In other words, they will stop teaching you how to code and expect you to implement the concepts using the code. Getting a head start will help you out down the road and translate into a few easy a's at the start of your undergrad career. (I saw wanna-be comp scientists flunk out of CSC 102...)
Obviously choosing the most prestigious college you can get into and afford is the best option. Meaning it's comp sci program is prestigious. That said, I'm a firm believer that even if you don't go to a top tier school you can have success. The school is only part of the pie that employers look at. They'll want to see internships, research, open source work, extra curriculars (ACM / IEEE / comp sci club, published work, programming contests..etc), and can you actually apply what you've learned during an interview...
I'm a senior with 20hrs left on a B.S. in computer science and a minor in information technology. I believe sm-count is also a cs major/student. (judging by previous posts and the discrete math / logic in his avatar...)