I thought it did. Thanks for letting me know.
There's a "next-gen" tag intended for both consoles? Sounds like that "ps4" tag was just a mistake then.
No problem. Certain news stories were written in a way that made that fact less than obvious.
I thought it did. Thanks for letting me know.
There's a "next-gen" tag intended for both consoles? Sounds like that "ps4" tag was just a mistake then.
Maybe I wasn't clear. "Your" referred to the person I was addressing, not readers as a whole. If our readers didn't trust us, they wouldn't read our site. Our traffic is at an all-time high because we have been breaking the type of news and running the type of stories that no other website runs, and if we hadn't earned our readers' trust, they wouldn't be reading us.
I've read and participated in a number of threads like this. I take them a lot more seriously they're talking about real issues, and specific people, instead of ridiculous "game journalism is corrupt!" articles like the one on Cinema Blend. There are reporters currently trying to hash out just what the PS4's power advantage will mean long term for these consoles - a question far more important than COD resolutions - and meanwhile, some of you read and circlejerk over articles like this, articles written like forum posts chock full of unfounded accusations and nonsensical console war BS.
Surely you must understand how frustrating it is for reporters who work 10-12 hours a day to try to bring you guys great work only to see 20-page threads about how much their field sucks. Meanwhile, threads about great articles cap at 2, 3, 4 pages on GAF. Do you really not see how you're contributing to the problem there?
Let me put the situation another way: if a website were to publish a story interviewing developers about the long-term differences between PS4 or Xbox One, do you think it'd be on Cinema Blend? It certainly would not. It'd be on Edge, Eurogamer, Kotaku... one of the websites that has proven capable of actual investigation. Yet those are the websites you're trashing.
But he specifically calls out the Playstation 4 by name in the front page paragraph, with no mention of the Bone to be seen. It's a pretty big fucking mistake, if the intention of the article is to call out an issue on both systems.
This isn't just a PS4 thing. As we reported back in February before the console was even officially announced, the Xbox One also requires that all games be stored on its hard drive and run from there.
It matters, but it's not the only thing people care about. For a lot of people there are more important things such as which games are on which system. His analogy is perfectly appropriate.It's not a misinterpretation I understand what he was saying I'm just saying he chose a bad analogy to explain his stance. 720p/1080p won't matter to most people who are buying one of these consoles in a year or two. For the people that are actualy going out and reading articles online THIS early and getting a console day 1? I'm pretty sure it does and will matter.
I write for a small site from time to time, and if you do something a publisher doesn't like, they just ignore any further communication from you.
Doesn't seem to be so important when IGN, Polygon and Kotaku still exist.
I wish more people would just stick to the basics like this. When folks say "it's about the games", they should be meaning "the games I want only exist here", instead of "the games are better over here".Still choosing Xbox One at launch for the more appealing exclusives.
for review and preview purposes, publishers should distribute games via some kind of central organisation that is independent of the publishers and the press, so they can't selectively refuse to provide content to legit sites.
Also I don't get the idea of pressure in this context. Why would Activision care if a website points out the PS4 version is way better? Wouldn't that potentially sell more PS4 versions? If you're a multiplatform publisher, isn't it better to have honest reporting, otherwise one of your platforms potentially suffers.
Check out the current front page of Kotaku:
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Here's a story on next gen consoles that points out an issue. Looks like the PS4's hard drive will fill up too fast. Damn, that doesn't sound good at all!
Now, if you bother to click on the headline and read the article, you learn after a few paragraphs that the same news applies to the XBox One. So, why is a negative story filed under PS4?
....If our readers didn't trust us, they wouldn't read our site. Our traffic is at an all-time high because we have been breaking the type of news and running the type of stories that no other website runs, and if we hadn't earned our readers' trust, they wouldn't be reading us.....
Or it could just be incompetency and they forgot the Xbox One tag.Conspiracy! Subliminal messaging! Moneyhats! Corruption!
Oh no, wait. Its the other one.
Lay out the facts on the table, The Xbone is quantifiably weaker than the PS4 and is also $100 more
The consoles are not even out yet. Can we all just take that in?
Nobody is is Microsoft puppet, this isn't a conspiracy. Journalists are reserving judgement until they get their hands on it. I know you all want a consensus so you know what console to get, you'd love for all sites to declare PS4 the winner. Unfortunately nobody knows yet, and luckily not everyone has the knee jerk reaction of the internet. (By internet I mean the vocal children that make up most of the comments on the internet).
Lets just wait and see eh?
It's going to be interesting when those game reviews start to come out. Will the BF4 on PS4 rate much higher than the X1 version?
If not, well...
I'm not super-worried. Your trust might be at an all-time low, but our traffic is at an all-time high
Kotaku's traffic is probably at an all-time high because they're doing a good job. I don't know why anyone should view that as an indictment of Kotaku.
If sites like Polygon were also pulling in more readers than normal I'd just assume it was due to population growth or maybe they were giving away free clicks via BING or something.
Yesterday a thread about Marcus Beer was locked because of a rumor he was spreading on gametrailers. It caused such a hang up no one cared that Sony still hasn't given 3rd parties consoles to review even though we are 2 weeks away from launch.
IGN is trying to do something else like food ads etc.I always wondered if a website could survive without game-related ads, but I suppose the audience makeup has some blame for that.
What can you advertise to gamers that isn't games?
Can I just add, I don't browse go to Kotaku like I do Eurogamer or here or the BBC site, it's not a site I go to in the morning when I get to work. But they have been excellent in the last 8 months or so on the next gen rumor mill, when plenty of people were saying it was all bullshit because it was all ass backwards from what we'd heard before. Some great pieces and before anywhere else too.
And by all accounts they didn't last time or the time before that.
Conspiracy! Subliminal messaging! Moneyhats! Corruption!
Oh no, wait. Its the other one.![]()
.
Why do people piss on Kotaku so much?
Well the situation is getting pretty dire on Neogaf when it comes to trust and 3rd party websites.
Yesterday a thread about Marcus Beer was locked because of a rumor he was spreading on gametrailers. It caused such a hang up no one cared that Sony still hasn't given 3rd parties consoles to review even though we are 2 weeks away from launch.
They lack of trust is so deep here noone cares that 3rd parties aren't getting hardware they should've had by now to test like in previous launches. Heck the Ouya console was reviewed a month before it launched and plenty of issues were touched on because of it.
There is still a need for someone to talk about even more expensive pieces of hardware before they are released on consumers.
Because they had history of posting their own click bait articles when there's slow news days.
There was one story in particular from Patricia Hernandez that questioned if Far Cry: Blood Dragon was homophobic because of a throwaway gay joke.
Is the joke harmless? It's a pebble in a shoe.
that thread was locked because the rumours were unsourced bullshit.
as I said in it, when ONE PS4 at an event crashed, it created a fairly long discussion here. if the PS4 had a 30% failure rate, we'd be hearing of regular problems at trade shows and store demos, etc.
Good morning.
After sleeping on this, I realized that you guys have made a lot of great points that I didn't take to heart because I was letting my emotions get in the way of the real issue. I also think that you're right to feel that your interests are not being served as well as they could be.
After taking emotion out of it and approaching the resolution issue critically, I started doing some research and testing of my own. I'm... a bit surprised about some of the ways this has been reported. I've clearly been shortsighted in the way I approached this, and it seems others have too.
All of that is to say that I've got something in the works that you all may be interested in. I'll post it here later today.
I think it's dangerous to just dismiss criticism as fans being passionate fans. I'm a PC guy and I'm not even buying a next-gen console, but I think it's been ridiculous how the general press has ignored the power gap between the two consoles, when they were so willing to admonish Nintendo about it for the Wii (two GameCubes duct-taped together?), Sony for the PS3, and even Sony for the PS2 (PS2 has no anti-aliasing, can't do 480p!), and especially for the WiiU (don't even need to cite examples for that one, holy shit, it speaks for itself).
I've been following gaming and gaming news for a long time, since I subscribed to Nintendo Power as a wee-tyke. I've noticed a general trend, and that trend has been incredibly disingenuous and hypocritical.
But now it's "gamers won't notice the difference". Maybe I'm not off into crazy conspiracy territory where I think Microsoft is paying games press to be hush-hush about the differences in hardware, but I think there has definitely been a trending shift away from hardcore games journalism, where people care about the smaller details that could influence the purchase of their next ~8 year video game system, towards a more casual games press that says "it just doesn't matter, nobody can tell the difference".
It's disappointing. I like to be told like it is. I don't need them shouting from the rooftops how great the fucking PS4 is because it can render games at twice the amount of pixels as the Xbox One, but I at least expect them to acknowledge the fact that the gap exists, without silly opinionated qualifiers like "It won't matter to X person on Y display at Z distance".
Because Microsoft sent us a check to use PS4 as a tag for that story.
Or maybe because only one tag can be the first one, and this story is based on the case of a PS4 game? And "Xbox One" is a tag too? Pick your friggin' battles.
If that's the case, then why didn't they downplay the power differences between the Wii U and the PS4/XOne too? It is a major difference, yes, but it is not the HD/non-HD difference like last generation. I haven't seen a great explanation for it, and I'm trying to find one that isn't conspiracy-theory-y, especially since it will likely continue once the PS4/XOne release.
Good morning.
After sleeping on this, I realized that you guys have made a lot of great points that I didn't take to heart because I was letting my emotions get in the way of the real issue. I also think that you're right to feel that your interests are not being served as well as they could be.
After taking emotion out of it and approaching the resolution issue critically, I started doing some research and testing of my own. I'm... a bit surprised about some of the ways this has been reported. I've clearly been shortsighted in the way I approached this, and it seems others have too.
All of that is to say that I've got something in the works that you all may be interested in. I'll post it here later today.
So... Because you are incapable of writing a piece that is critically accepted and talked about, instead getting shit on, that's our fault. Not yours, no no. That would be accepting responsibility. Can't have that.
Look, you seem like a somewhat smart guy that's just missing a little guidance. In your field you will get more shit than you will praise. That's just the way it is. If you cannot handle it, you can't blame anyone but yourself. Suck it up and don't pass the buck, slick. That's pitiful, sad and just wrong.
Can't handle it? Get a new job in a new field.
If that's the case, then why didn't they downplay the power differences between the Wii U and the PS4/XOne too? It is a major difference, yes, but it is not the HD/non-HD obvious Wii difference like last generation that was much reported on. I haven't seen a great explanation for it, and I'm trying to find one that isn't conspiracy-theory-y, especially since it will likely continue once the PS4/XOne release.
Has he replied to this yet? Has he even addressed the "but the difference is no big deal" mantra he's also adopted?
if the gaming media is scared of being blacklisted by the publishers(an excuse that is being thrown around here) they are giving in to a false power. If just one major outlet like ign or kotaku or whoever else decided that they were not going to go along with the status quo, and called out publishers for not being cooperative with them they would gain all kinds of traffic for being a stand out media source. This would cause either publishers to cave or other outlets to follow suit and the power would go into the media's hands were it belonged in the first place. the industry should bow to the media and the media should bow to the consumer. right now it seems to be completely reversed
Thanks for saying that, I didn't want to backseat mod.This is not how we talk to people.
That's the way it works in other forms of press as well. The well researched and deep investigative work detailing police corruption gets overlooked for the 300 word blurb about an old man flying his Confederate flag on MLK day.
Journalists are supposed to do "good" work -- it's their job. Bad stuff gets called out and good, or just decent, stuff rarely ever draws immense discussion unless it's something Earth-shattering.
Film, music and sports journalism are all pretty important to their fields. Stuff like ESPN, Rolling Stone and TMZ all feed into peoples' desires to know about what goes into making their favorite stars, analyzing performances or speculation. They can also break news that people want to know before teams or studios comment or voice the concerns of fans to people of importance.
There's also important work that can be done in the field such as "League of Denial" about the NFL's cover-up of concussion damage or Jimmy Savile's rampant and damaging pedophilia.
Surely you must understand how frustrating it is for reporters who work 10-12 hours a day to try to bring you guys great work only to see 20-page threads about how much their field sucks. Meanwhile, threads about great articles cap at 2, 3, 4 pages on GAF. Do you really not see how you're contributing to the problem there?
Apologies if anyone else has already made this point, but surely a major reason great articles get short threads is because there's often not much more to do but go and read the article? After the first six or seven instances of 'good article', 'thanks for posting this', 'another great piece by Jason' there's not much left to do but throw your own compliment on the pile, and after a while you start feeling like a berk if you do that.
I've seen some amazing threads on here, entirely Gaf-made, that die about page 3. Not because no one cares, or because they're not reading it, but because the OP and a few significant responses say all that needs to be said, and so well, that there's nothing left to add.
So hey, don't get frustrated, as long as the article gets the readers in it's all good.
Maybe I wasn't clear. "Your" referred to the person I was addressing, not readers as a whole. If our readers didn't trust us, they wouldn't read our site. Our traffic is at an all-time high because we have been breaking the type of news and running the type of stories that no other website runs, and if we hadn't earned our readers' trust, they wouldn't be reading us.
I've read and participated in a number of threads like this. I take them a lot more seriously they're talking about real issues, and specific people, instead of ridiculous "game journalism is corrupt!" articles like the one on Cinema Blend. There are reporters currently trying to hash out just what the PS4's power advantage will mean long term for these consoles - a question far more important than COD resolutions - and meanwhile, some of you read and circlejerk over articles like this, articles written like forum posts chock full of unfounded accusations and nonsensical console war BS.
Surely you must understand how frustrating it is for reporters who work 10-12 hours a day to try to bring you guys great work only to see 20-page threads about how much their field sucks. Meanwhile, threads about great articles cap at 2, 3, 4 pages on GAF. Do you really not see how you're contributing to the problem there?
You're saying a lot of nothing in your post and are showing you really don't get the issue, all last gen, the pixel counting between consoles, even before they dropped, was all the rage, sites went out of their way to point out the most trivial of inconsitencies, in a few cases those inconsistencies were manufactured by the sites..this gen, the gap is clear and the comparisons even more important..except they're not, the mantras of "the difference is no big deal" is safe, where as last gen they weren't afraid to point an accusitory finger at the weaker, reminding us of price points and value, its suddenly no big deal, even the sole defender of journo's in this thread has taken up the "no big deal" mantra in his kotaku article ( and don't get me started on "pick your battles"..its the same battle.) which pretty much lumps him in with the very journalists we've grown tired of.Well, you hit the nail on the head. Most of the big gaming sites are being exactly what Rolling Stone, ESPN and TMZ are rolled into one.
They are entertainment sites, they provide entertainment and write about entertainment.
What people are so holding against the gaming media is pretty much par for the course for all industries. ESPN these days is pretty much all opinion pieces, even Sportscenter. It's pretty much opinion, gossip and human interest pieces. The actual scores are secondary for the most part. I guess they figure you can look those up online or check the bar at the bottom for updates.
What it boils down to in this thread is people pretty much mad that major game media has came out and said Xbox One sucks balls, don't buy it, it's shit and the PS4 is vastly superior.
It's pretty much people wanting to promote the console wars forum mentality to journalism.
Yet, there's tons of articles related to how the PS4 is the stronger system, and it's not like that's not out there.
So much anger up in here, and that dude's post to Schier.. that's outright contempt for no reason for a guy who at least comes to GAF and joins the conversation and provides insight.
Yeah, I'd be wary of using 'number of pages of GAF thread' as reliably measuring anything. Least of all, 'merit of thread'...
If console tech is so unimportant to you and him then just stick with the current gen for another three years.