Good jobs for a career in Computer Science?

Hey Logan, Wendell, Qain, etc, I am planning on getting a major in Computer Science and have a job in the Computer Science field in the future. However, I really have no idea what I want to do in that field

I thought of becoming a video game developer, but I realized how messed up the industry is, and it's scaring me off from actually getting a job in that venture.

I also really like messing with computers, building them, repairing them, and I also have an interest in networking and server work.

Now that I said what my interests are, what do you think will be a job that is suited for me that I will probably enjoy doing?

The question really is are you interested in software development, besides in the gaming space?  It seems that most of your interest is more hardware related, so you might consider majoring in Computer Engineering instead of Computer Science.  

Computer Engineering is pretty much a hybrid degree between Computer Science and Electrical Engineering.  It is more focused on things like networking, VLSI design, and signal processing.  The prerequisite math classes are mostly the same as Computer Science, but like most other engineering majors, you have to take 2-3 semesters of physics and a couple semesters of chemistry.  Physics and chemistry are usually not required for Computer Science majors.

If you are also interested in software, dread taking physics and chemistry, or your school does not offer Computer Engineering as a major, you could always major in Computer Science and focus more on the hardware.  When I was getting my under grad degree in Computer Science, three of my upper level classes were code shared with Electrical Engineering--Computer Organization, Computer Systems Architecture, and Computer Networks.

Just remember Computer Science is really just a specialized math degree.  Nearly all of my 400 level Computer Science classes were code shared with the Math Department.  A lot of schools' Computer Science curricula, start with a couple of classes focused more on coding than math, but that changes very quickly.