Pretty much every day I log in here I see at least one post of yours that I agree with wholeheartedly, this one included. But this one comes with nuance. I agree its sad that most people fall into the mindset you mentioned. But on this topic, I firmly believe that a handful of outlets have literally caused this sad mindset and have given people good reason to believe there is a complete detachment, all out of pure and unadulterated greed. Either by giving glowing previews for months until shitting on crap games after pre-orders are picked up (and at least once by changing a review score after publisher backlash). Or by politicizing their content to such a point that it seemed they have started sharing a bed with Jack Thompson to a lot of people, all while feeding off clicks from the twitter crowd like poo in a honey pot. All done for greed, and in many cases from the same people who argue that greed is bad on topics like crunch time. And like something out of an onion article, here we have a well known face from the GAWKER family of websites crying about people being mean because of assumed pay to win mechanics. Seriously, how is anyone supposed to see a gawker employee decrying being a dick to someone over something they consider petty, and not shake their head like they entered the twilight zone? Gawker's entire business model seems, to me at least, focused on causing twitter outrages these last few years over much more petty issues.
Anyway, at this point the market seems to have almost completely detached itself from games journalism. And I think it's time for me to try staying away from these topics as much as possible. It's getting old and boring and a waste of time in life. If people want to support games journalists I hope they enjoy whatever content they are supporting. I'll just abstain from said content until games journalists reset themselves, acknowledge their role in causing the infighting among gamers, apologize for it, and return to informing over preaching. There's always going to be a place for editorials, as there should be, but I need an extended break from the identity politics editorials in my news before I can ignore just ignore the article instead of the entire site.