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Photo of Jason Schreier

Photo: Alecto Chardon / CC BY-SA 4.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)

Jason Schreier

ジェイソン・シュライアー / じぇいそん・しゅらいあー

Video game journalist

May 10, 1987 (age 39)

  • video game journalist
  • journalist
  • opinion journalist

My Take

Jason Schreier strikes me as the conscience of games journalism. From his Kotaku years onward, he doggedly investigated crunch culture, dragging the grueling, hidden labor behind our favorite games into the light. That work is unglamorous and essential; somebody has to do it. NYU-educated and now reporting on technology for Bloomberg, he never lets his obvious love of the medium dull his willingness to expose its rot. I respect that integrity enormously. By bringing rigorous investigative reporting to entertainment coverage, he raised the standard for an entire beat, and his books prove the approach has staying power.

Overview

Jason Schreier (born May 10, 1987) is an American journalist and author who primarily covers the video game industry. He worked as a news reporter for Kotaku from 2011 to 2020 and was recognized for several investigative stories, particularly on the crunch culture within the industry. In April 2020, Schreier joined the technology focus team at Bloomberg News.

Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.

1. Profile

Name (English)
Jason Schreier
Name (Japanese)
ジェイソン・シュライアー
Reading
じぇいそん・しゅらいあー
Born
May 10, 1987 (age 39)
Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
Taurus / Rabbit
Blood type
Private
Height
Private
Agency
Private
Occupation
video game journalist / journalist / opinion journalist / writer / editing staff

2. Background

Elementary school
Private
Junior high
Private
High school
Private
University
New York University

3. Relationships

Spouse
Private
Children
Private
Parents
Private
Siblings
Private

4. Personality

Motto

Private

Journalist — see all →

7. About this entry

Tags

  • video game journalist
  • journalist
  • opinion journalist
Last updated
2026-06-02

Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.