DonkeyPunchJr
World’s Biggest Weeb
Is that really it? Seems the trend started way before TikTok and short form video.Agreed, but not in the way you think it is. I also don't think this is the start at all, this is just the continuation of trends we've seen over the past decade.
This is just a result of consumers preferring video (and short-form, tiktok-esque at that with younger demographics) content over written content. Kotaku and sites like it are dying for the exact same reason we're seeing printed media like newspapers and magazines dying across the country. I can't speak for other countries, but Americans just don't like to read (and certainly not as much as they used to). The elections over the past week showed that the cultural landscape is still very much shifting to the left.
Kotaku and sites like it are just outdated because Reddit, discords, and bigger relevant sites and groups are going to break major news long before they do, and seem to be giant content farms for sites owned by Gawker. I'm sure with Brian Crescente, Stephen Totilo, and Jason Schrier (I know I probably butchered their names) gone, they probably don't have nearly the reach they once had in the industry either. Few would consider blogs their primary news sources anymore.
Seems it’s been a race to the bottom for a long time:
- nobody wants to pay to read articles on the internet
- websites make their profits from ad impressions instead
- sites switch their focus from content that is valuable to their readers, to content that generates the most clicks
- consolidation among media companies, larger companies want a return on their investment
- downward trend accelerates even further, now it becomes all about getting the most # clicks for the least amount of effort
- pretty soon they realize that rage bait and hot-button social issues are even better than titties when it comes to generating clicks
- gaming media now becomes infested with Marxist slacktivist retards using gaming as a platform to screech about race/gender/sexuality/politics