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Giant Bomb #8 | It's a Hit!

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Nearly every game site is going through this process where they got a huge surge of hits and traffic because of the start of a new console generation, and now we've transitioned out of that there's nothing left outside of an increasingly irrelevant yearly E3 show that traditional outlets can offer mainstream audiences that YouTube and streaming can't.

See Polygon, who in the last year have shifted their content focus away from editorials and longform features and increasingly towards clickbait (and I mean actual "non-news, misleading, vague, or inflammatory headline" clickbait, not just "Polygon person said dumb thing") type articles, including non-games related stuff (notable examples in the last few months have included the Mario Kart 8 sales thing; a tag team review of Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in which Ben Kuchera misremembers characters and completely mutilates a biblical simile; and a Chris Plante "feature" in which he links and describes an old wacky Garry's Mod vid he found on YouTube, with the headline focusing on a sex joke in the first ten seconds that the article itself admits is irrelevant).
 
I've been there - stage shows, especially involving broadcast/streamed content and many guests require a lot of hands on deck. However that can often be contracted as and when is needed so long as you have a few great permanent producers.

Probably looks like a shitty way of doing things, but I think it's just the enthusiast press normalising with the other entertainment industries who have worked like this for decades.

AFAIK, most if not all of them were employed by GS.

Nearly every game site is going through this process where they got a huge surge of hits and traffic because of the start of a new console generation, and now we've transitioned out of that there's nothing left outside of an increasingly irrelevant yearly E3 show that traditional outlets can offer mainstream audiences that YouTube and streaming can't.

See Polygon, who in the last year have shifted their content focus away from editorials and longform features and increasingly towards clickbait (and I mean actual "non-news, misleading, vague, or inflammatory headline" clickbait, not just "Polygon person said dumb thing") type articles, including non-games related stuff (notable examples in the last few months have included the Mario Kart 8 sales thing; a tag team review of Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in which Ben Kuchera misremembers characters and completely mutilates a biblical simile; and a Chris Plante "feature" in which he links and describes an old wacky Garry's Mod vid he found on YouTube, with the headline focusing on a sex joke in the first ten seconds that the article itself admits is irrelevant).

They also did a piece on The Bachelorette of all things a couple of days ago. And Kuchera said that their most popular article some weeks ago was a Game of Thrones review. As a fan of GB I shouldn't be too loud about a video game site focussing on stuff that isn't video games, but Polygon trying to jump on the already way too overcrowded TV episode recap/think pieces about TV train just seems desperate.
 
Nearly every game site is going through this process where they got a huge surge of hits and traffic because of the start of a new console generation, and now we've transitioned out of that there's nothing left outside of an increasingly irrelevant yearly E3 show that traditional outlets can offer mainstream audiences that YouTube and streaming can't.

See Polygon, who in the last year have shifted their content focus away from editorials and longform features and increasingly towards clickbait (and I mean actual "non-news, misleading, vague, or inflammatory headline" clickbait, not just "Polygon person said dumb thing") type articles, including non-games related stuff (notable examples in the last few months have included the Mario Kart 8 sales thing, a tag team review of Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in which Ben Kuchera misremembers characters and completely mutilates a biblical simile, and a Chris Plante "feature" in which he links and describes an old wacky Garry's Mod vid he found on YouTube with the headline focusing on a sex joke in the first ten seconds).

But for all of that, um, unappealing content they at least give us FMV Quest, something all giant bomb fans should be able to get behind.
 
if Alex had been laid off, he'd have said as much

Yeah Alex hasn't been laid off. Alex is important to GB east and it would gut content output if it was only Vinny. CBSi wouldn't have allowed them to hire 2 new people if there was even a chance they would need to make GB staff cuts anytime soon.
 
because im fully caught up with my 10+ podcasts and the idle thumbs entire podcast run, im now going back to listen to the giant bomb podcasts from years back, all the way back to the beginning.

I forgot how much i hated their energy drink segments. It's poor radio, ghost ryan and jeff!
 
See Polygon, who in the last year have shifted their content focus away from editorials and longform features and increasingly towards clickbait (and I mean actual "non-news, misleading, vague, or inflammatory headline" clickbait, not just "Polygon person said dumb thing") type articles, including non-games related stuff (notable examples in the last few months have included the Mario Kart 8 sales thing; a tag team review of Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in which Ben Kuchera misremembers characters and completely mutilates a biblical simile; and a Chris Plante "feature" in which he links and describes an old wacky Garry's Mod vid he found on YouTube, with the headline focusing on a sex joke in the first ten seconds that the article itself admits is irrelevant).

This shift seems even more pronounced due to Vox as a whole being incredibly bloated and overfunded. Someone probably did the numbers realised they probably wouldn't recoup the initial investment until 2032. The Verge have gone down a similar rabbit hole with many of their video features scrapped (excuse me, re-focused), awful headlines and inflammatory articles which encourage fanboy wars or faux outrage like that recent "I Pirated Expendables 3) one.

AFAIK, most if not all of them were employed by GS.

Yeah totally, my post was just implying that they could (and probably will) in future staff up for events using contractors instead of a massive full-time crew which is incredibly expensive to sustain.


Alex had that twitter name for a while now
Yeah, I didn't realise because my mobile twitter app just shows handles. I only see custom names on my desktop so I thought it was new. He's almost definitely unaffected.
 
Following GS a bit since Danny's introduction on GB, I think it's safe to assume that GB puts out at least as much daily original video content as GS. And GS brought literally over 40 people to E3, so you can assume that they have been overstaffed for their needs for some time now.
The difference is that GB's stuff is all easy live stream setups while a lot of GS's stuff is still produced and edited. They probably need all those people to pump out material on a consistent basis. Heck, I think they still do video reviews - which GB already concluded weren't worth doing based on the number of clicks that they get.
 
I think that if CBSi would fire any of the giantbomb duders, the others would not accept it, and maybe even leave to start a new site. So the chance that giantbomb will be impacted by this is very slim.

Still, it sucks for gamespot and every one affected.
 
This shift seems even more pronounced due to Vox as a whole being incredibly bloated and overfunded. Someone probably did the numbers realised they probably wouldn't recoup the initial investment until 2032. The Verge have gone down a similar rabbit hole with many of their video features scrapped (excuse me, re-focused), awful headlines and inflammatory articles which encourage fanboy wars or faux outrage like that recent "I Pirated Expendables 3) one.

Not to (once again) make this thread about Vox media (but I'm gonna do that anyways), but it seems like SBNation is the only part that is running smoothly for them. Low cost and incredible traffic. The Verge had incredible growth for a while, but it seems like they've, as you said, done the math and found out that the longform stuff etc. doesn't make financial sense. It's a shame because I really liked The Verge, but now it has turned more and more into clickbait crap, and you have to almost search for the stories about actual technology.

Vox.com is just another example of "we explain the news for you because you're dumb" news site on the media. When Ezra Klein announced the site as almost a revolution in how you do news on the internet I had some hope that they would do some actual reporting. But no, it's just another internet news site that sometimes has some cool graphs, but not much actual substance. I can't see that site being a big money maker for them, especially if the rumours about Klein and other editor's pay are correct.

The difference is that GB's stuff is all easy live stream setups while a lot of GS's stuff is still produced and edited. They probably need all those people to pump out material on a consistent basis. Heck, I think they still do video reviews - which GB already concluded weren't worth doing based on the number of clicks that they get.

Oh don't get me wrong, I get why that's the case and agree with you. I just don't think it's the best use of money and resources in today's market.

Really hope Danny wasn't part of they layoffs today

No chance. They wouldn't have brought him over to the US just to lay him off now. He's also, as Jeff put it, "the face of that damn site" now.
 
Probably not a good time on Giant Bomb right now, I bet Jeff had to sign some of those papers.

He has nothing to do with GS though. I bet they have absolutely nothing to do with this except that they know some of the people affected.

Giant Bomb #9 | Fuck all video games forever
 
I kinda want to watch GI Joe cartoons now...

It seems hard to do so in Europe though (DVD's are all over the place), so that is helping me not do that.

Good
 
Oh don't get me wrong, I get why that's the case and agree with you. I just don't think it's the best use of money and resources in today's market.
I'm not even sure what video game coverage is any more. If you look at GB, they basically have like two or three Patrick articles a week, a random Alex review once in a blue moon, tons of trailers to fill out space on their feed, and the QLs/live stuff which is probably fairly easy to produce compared to other video content.
If that is what is successful now, then pretty much all game sites are dead and all we'll get at some point is cameras pointed at people streaming on Twitch. lol
 
I'm not even sure what video game coverage is any more. If you look at GB, they basically have like two or three Patrick articles a week, a random Alex review once in a blue moon, tons of trailers to fill out space on their feed, and the QLs/live stuff which is probably fairly easy to produce compared to other video content.
If that is what is successful now, then pretty much all game sites are dead and all we'll get at some point is cameras pointed at people streaming on Twitch. lol

I wouldn't be surprised if at least one of the big sites survived (GS or IGN). There seems to be a market for niche sites like RPS, so sites like that will continue to be around too. Kotaku will survive forever. But yeah, we're moving more and more in the direction direction you're mentioning there.

What I'm saying is that PewDiePie and Smosh are the future of journalism. And Yogscast with their shady as fuck business dealings (which probably goes for a lot of Youtubers who aren't as open about it - I seem to remember Nerdcubed mentioning that he got offered something like 8 grand to do a positive video of a game, and that it happens all the time).
 
Speaking of gamespot people, does anyone know if Jess worked in TV before going to gamespot or something? The way she speaks in all of the produced/scripted content I've seen her in is of a certain style that is kind of reminiscent of people on tech shows and stuff on tv. You kinda can't avoid putting on a certain "voice" when doing stuff like that I suppose. Danny's scripted stuff is a little similar, though not as noticeable.
 
I wouldn't be surprised if at least one of the big sites survived (GS or IGN). There seems to be a market for niche sites like RPS, so sites like that will continue to be around too. Kotaku will survive forever. But yeah, we're moving more and more in the direction direction you're mentioning there.

What I'm saying is that PewDiePie and Smosh are the future of journalism. And Yogscast with their shady as fuck business dealings.
When one or two people can get as many views as a site with 5, 10, 20 people... yeah.
 
He has nothing to do with GS though. I bet they have absolutely nothing to do with this except that they know some of the people affected.

Giant Bomb #9 | Fuck all video games forever

He's only a direct report for GB staff, so, no.
I remember him saying that he has a pretty important sounding title at CBSi itself, overseeing the gaming sites. I think he got it after Davison left, but I could be wrong of course.
 
I remember him saying that he has a pretty important sounding title at CBSi itself, overseeing the gaming sites. I think he got it after Davison left, but I could be wrong of course.

I think he's only at GB. I could be mistaken though, but IIRC that was only speculation in this thread.
 
Oh yeah, I totally forgot that this came up on the podcast as well.

Dan has never heard of composting.

I think this is going to become a new obsession of mine. I wonder if he has velcro shoes because he's too lazy to tie shoe laces.
 
Oh yeah, I totally forgot that this came up on the podcast as well.

Dan has never heard of composting.

I think this is going to become a new obsession of mine. I wonder if he has velcro shoes because he's too lazy to tie shoe laces.


You skipped way past the actual hilarious information, that he didn't know aluminum cans were recyclable until he moved to San Francisco. He slipped that one in there and nobody addressed it.
 
Did the TLoU:R quick look have spoilers in it? Want to watch it but it being 1 hour spooks me into thinking they might give something away.
 
I was going to start watching GI Joe last night until I fell asleep during the podcast.

Let's all do it together GB GAF. It's on Netflix!
 
Oh yeah, I totally forgot that this came up on the podcast as well.

Dan has never heard of composting.

I think this is going to become a new obsession of mine. I wonder if he has velcro shoes because he's too lazy to tie shoe laces.

He had heard of it, but didn't know the difference with just recycling .)

Did the TLoU:R quick look have spoilers in it? Want to watch it but it being 1 hour spooks me into thinking they might give something away.

No. They refer to a few later encounters, but nothing story-related.
 
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