This is what happens when people board the hype train and ride it hard into the gates of joyous, unrelenting, unquestioning fandom, and you know what, that happened months before a single review hit the internet. There's no question that this game, the game that they've dedicated <insert PR/marketing time cycle>, is a great game. Only a crazy person would spend so much time to end up with something that's either disappointing or just flat out mediocre. I can't imagine the seething content and vicarious anger the Rooster Crew felt when reading Jeff's review, fake Pipboys, no doubt, already attached to their arms. This wasn't just a review, it was a personal attack on their decision to ride the Fallout 4 hype train. Was Jeff right or was he a dishonest journalist attempting to gain a few more hits to his site by being an outlier? Clearly, the answer is the latter.
It's pathetic but a by-product of a marketing process that has stunted our ability to see flaws in the things we love. Anyone who does, well, they must have an agenda or played the game wrong. In other words Jeff, it's not us, it's you. There's something wrong with you and your soft, sad, cynical brain. Now stop doing it wrong and give Fallout 4 the 4/5 star review it deserves. Oh wait, you already did that with the far superior PC version.
Celebrate the reviews that are different, that contrast with your own opinions, because quite often, these are the reviews that are the most interesting. You're likely to learn a thing or two from a reviewer who had a different experience from your own. However, all that gets lost in the metacritic quest for the highest score. It's a competition now. We're seemingly being overwhelmed by a breed of gamer that doesn't like to be challenged any more. In other words, marketing and PR have won the battle for the hearts and minds of gamers. Successfully exploiting an uneasy alliance and an audience all too willing to lap up the slow drip feed of hype that builds to the release of <insert AAA game here>.