My most recent relocation (and the first one I did without my family) was from Australia to Sweden. I planned the move over a bit more than a year before actually going through with it. My experience basically went as follows:<p>* I decided to move to Europe as there is more of a games industry here than Australia<p>* Started process of getting Australian citizenship to be eligible for Working Holiday Visa to EU<p>* Was running my own business so saved about 6 months worth of funds to live here without a job while going through citizenship process (a bit more)<p>* Wasn't sure which country I'd be going to yet, but met my partner online at the same time and he happens to live in Sweden (which also has a great games industry), so it made sense to make it Sweden<p>* Got Working Holiday Visa to Sweden, moved (luckily this part was made easier since I was splitting rent with partner and not having to look for a place to live by myself).<p>* Started applying for work immediately through web applications.<p>* Started work about 1-1.5 months after moving. This was a bit over 5 years ago.<p>It was much easier to get a job while on location. I had experience in game dev in Australia but not much, and there weren't many companies to get more experience around here. While I got some remote interviews for jobs from Australia, none of them panned out - nobody was willing to relocate someone without that much experience in games to the other side of the world. This is why it was especially important to save a nice chunk of cash, to be able to afford the move and some uncertainty while trying to find a job on location.<p>For many job language barrier would be an issue - most people speak very good English here, but many jobs still require Swedish, which I did not know. The games industry was an exception.<p>If going this route (ie starting off with a working holiday visa), it helps a lot to land a job with a fairly large company that has contractors or third party companies helping with visas etc. It helped a lot to have someone help me apply for my normal employment based residence permit once already in the country (sometimes you risk being told to go back while your application is being processed, and processing times can get very long).<p>Overall it has been great. I love the country, have a good job (been with the same company for these 5 years), and two amazing cats. Taxes are high, but I feel I/we get good public benefits. Pay is not as high as it would be in the US, but with the general quality of life, public benefits, work-life balance, job security, etc I do not feel lacking in any way.