Okay so your current salary is $150,000 a year.
You find a job doing something that you enjoy. Maybe not a total dream job but something a little better than what you currently do.
They offer you $1X0,000 but you have to roll a D10 for the X to see what you get. If you roll a 10 you go up, not 0 so it would be $200,000.
Do you do it? Why? Why not?
Who the fuck cares
I feel you fam but you called us in here to move it. Your actions don't reflect what you're sayingYou clowns get pretty autistic and nit picky about random derails and other various stupid shit. I'm a lot farther on the side of "let shit slide" than any of our mods... not my fault you lack consistency.
Apparently people are answering this thread legitimately now.
So in my case, I currently make a little over $80k a year. I re-did my projections earlier today and I'm thinking at our current rate of savings we can retire by the end of 2021. Due to taxes and phase outs, a bump up to $150k would give me about another $30k in take home pay. And it'd knock about 9 months off our projected retirement time.
The additional income at $200k would get us closer to June 2020. So all in all, best case scenario is 2 years, 4 months of work. Staying where I am in the hypothetical is another 3 years of work. And worst case scenario is not too far off from where I am with another 3 years, 10 months.
Don't forget we would have had to call you a faggot for doing geek math.I thought about making a long post detailing the odds of getting all the various outcomes of a roll of a D10 die, but then I remembered I suck at dice rolling and am neverlucky with that shit.
So is it worth it for a minor bump in job/life satisfaction for a (likely for me) hit in salary? Eh, at that level of income in my area, I'd give it a 7/10
Imagine the type of company where a hiring manager can swing a salary difference of +/- 100k on a dice roll. Must be loved by the higher ups