If you wanted to develop games, I'd tell you to get a degree in something else. Computer science is all about stuff you can safely ignore if all you want to do is make games. I mean you can learn as much of it as you want.
And you can learn to program while getting any degree; most STEM probably requires it these days.
So I would say get a degree in something that you like. If you like cars, get a degree in mechanical engineering and then maybe make a racing game.
If you do computer science without any actual inclination toward a particular task, you can end up qualified to write software for nothing.
If you wanted to develop games, I'd tell you to get a degree in something else. Computer science is all about stuff you can safely ignore if all you want to do is make games. I mean you can learn as much of it as you want.
And you can learn to program while getting any degree; most STEM probably requires it these days.
So I would say get a degree in something that you like. If you like cars, get a degree in mechanical engineering and then maybe make a racing game.
If you do computer science without any actual inclination toward a particular task, you can end up qualified to write software for nothing.