There are video games and there are video games.
Work at an independent studio is likely to be far more entertaining than work at say, EA.
My advice at this point in time is, keep your head down, put in a few years, pay off debts, build a bank account, build on-the-job experience. Once your debts are gone, your bank account is solid and you have enough experience doing actual programming work that your resume is decent, go job/city/whatever hunting for a better workplace.
That doesn't mean you shouldn't look now, after all you might find something perfect that doesn't require a few years experience, but it's time to change from the short term college "omg test coming! OMG summer vacation is almost over! OMG only a year left!" mindset to the "I'm building a mini-empire so I can retire at 50 with a fully functional mind/body so I can actually enjoy my retirement for a few decades" mindset.
In short, the simple life is over, welcome to being an adult.
Sounds depressing doesn't it?
There's a bright side, if your job pays decently (seems likely) and you don't blow it all on weekends, you should have plenty of money to put away for later and still have time/money for a hobby or three.
Maybe that hobby is something like helping develop Kerbal Space Program (they may actually pay, not sure on that) that adds to your resume. Maybe it's something like programming Arduinos and building robots that adds to your resume in an entirely new way. Maybe it's mountain biking, to work off the chair time. Maybe it's collecting earthworms or astronomy. Who knows?
In any case, it's evenings and weekends that the majority your fulfillment will likely come from, the job pays for it.
Now if you can get your hands on a job that is occasionally fulfilling, that's fantastic. If you can get your hands on one that is genuinely interesting and fun you've got it made, those are staggeringly rare.
Remember the first (or maybe second, or both) year of college when you were studying a bunch of GE crap you didn't care about at all? That's work.
Find something interesting and fun to do on the weekends, ideally something other than drinking as fun is of limited usefulness if you don't remember it, and work from there.
Hopefully this post wasn't too depressing! There is hope though, I put in a bit over a decade as an auto mechanic, next up (I hope) is the far more interesting field of robotics.
If you plan well (I haven't, but whatever) you can always change careers. Getting your 20 years in for a solid retirement is awesome, but if you're hating the last ten years you'd probably be better off changing jobs and stashing 20% of every paycheck in an IRA.