Who says those scores are reserved for those games?There is a difference between a total hatchet job and being critical.
Alot of these reviews are giving scores reserved for fundamentally broken games, which the Order is certainly not.
Who says those scores are reserved for those games?There is a difference between a total hatchet job and being critical.
Alot of these reviews are giving scores reserved for fundamentally broken games, which the Order is certainly not.
That tweet is disturbing, it's not farfetched to believe pubs/devs think this way
Ah, and a Gamergate nut to bootWhen you make an accusation as broad and vacuous as the mission statement of Gamergate, there may be a problem in your reasoning. If you look back, the tweet you agree with stated the opposite of what you are here.
You prefer to get all of your news and reviews from the publishers?
"Buy our game, we give it a 10/10!"
Or on an advertisement the following words flash across your screen:
"10/10
-Activision"
"Madden 2016 is a revolution in gameplay
-Electronic Arts"
"Our IT department really loves it!
-343i"
If you quote only a part of my post it kinda looks disingenuous, i have an opinion of something i played to completion, not something i read, huge difference
After playing the game, 6/10 would be scraping the bottom of the barrel. 7/10 would be fair. 8/10 for those that are not afraid of a cutscene and invests little to no time on multiplayer.
Some of the reviews though are a complete joke. It almost feels like they heard the game was on the short side and did everything in there power to prove it. All because they had a pre-determination about the game.
I can also see why some, like that tweet doing the rounds, say what they do. These review sites go touting for advertising business, then they do a complete hatchet job which makes little sense and actually tell people not to buy the game.
What makes things even worse, the companies well known to give big money for advertising can get an 8/10 even for the most broken piece of crap going.
Nah the gunplay is really fantastic.Or maybe outside of being a pretty game it's boring with mediocre gunplay, boring weapons, an abrupt ending out of nowhere, no replayability, with somewhere around 6 hours of game play all for the asking price of $60. Truly, the reviewers are just on a collective mission to discredit this game because reasons and we can't dare consider that it's actually a bad game.
The guns feel amazing. The encounter design suuuucks tho.Nah the gunplay is really fantastic.
It really is some of the best.
Or maybe outside of being a pretty game it's boring with mediocre gunplay, boring weapons, an abrupt ending out of nowhere, no replayability, with somewhere around 6 hours of game play all for the asking price of $60. Truly, the reviewers are just on a collective mission to discredit this game because reasons and we can't dare consider that it's actually a bad game.
They're only a complete joke when they don't fall in line with your personal opinion.
Outside of some extreme examples where you have people dogpiling on a game without even playing because of shady business practices or something, I find the Metacritic user review score to generally be reflective of the sentiments I see expressed here on GAF, for example. There are many instances where the user base rating a game will give it more high praise than the professional critics. They certainly don't always fall in line.
Why? You're pretty much saying that no one's opinion matters, and if that's your argument, then why even comment in a review thread?
Nah the gunplay is really fantastic.
It really is some of the best.
Reviewers should be as bias free as possible. Having to rely on game publishers (be it ads or whatever) introduces Bias. Have review were buy their own games and then review It. Problem solved
Anyone can put up a review for games on metacritic, they don't have to have any proof they played the game, don't have to write any details about the game, they can just give it a score. Therefore I think the user reviews are a joke on that site and can't take em seriously, I'd rather look at peoples opinions on here.
After having purchased The Order I must say I cant agree with the reviews of this game at all. Im currently at the docks, and this game is a solid 8.5 for me so far.
Lol.
Um, what?
I don't even know how to respond to that. Reviewers should be as bias free as possible. Having to rely on game publishers (be it ads or whatever) introduces Bias. Have review were buy their own games and then review It. Problem solved
Well, that's the same story here on GAF, isn't it? You going to start demanding people post photographic proof that they own the game if they have an opinion about it?
How can someone's opinion be "not really true"? Especially on something so subjective as the "gameplay is good".It's just like a parrot repeting what it is told. People who didn't play are doing that and that's why some complaints are not really true.
Reviewing games you bought introduces bias too. Because you start thinking about value for money, which varies based on how much you earn and how you grew up. It even tempts you to justify your purchase and color your experience. Everything has it's own pros and cons. You aren't solving any problems. You are just creating new ones. There's no such thing as "bias free". The only thing we can hope is that there is no blatant corruption. And if that's what you are accusing reviewers of, then you need proof. Not to mention the fact that most gaming websites and independent reviewers run on average to low income and can't possibly afford all the games to review. This is a necessary evil and we simply have to look past it. Or we send all reviewers to their extinction and rely on strangers on internet forums, whose tastes and bias we don't fully understand.
I honestly agree. the game press as is a a complete joke, filled with man children. It'd be great to see them cut off.
I started this by calling The Order: 1886 an interactive movie. I then went on to debate the notion that declaring it not a game based on the amount of narrative vs gameplay was a mistake. What I guess I’m fighting against is the belief that just because something isn’t like everything else, just because something isn’t what we expect of it, doesn’t mean the experience it offers isn’t of value. The notion that The Order: 1886 is shit because it sets out to do something different than what we expect is problematic because it narrows the parameters of what interactive storytelling can be. Companies like Annapurna Pictures are starting departments for VR films and flirting with interactive storytelling. We also had experiences in 2014 like Gone Home that challenged the definition of games as well. Do we need to have a discussion about the value of these kinds of experiences? Yes. Do we perhaps need a different category for experiences like this? Maybe. But the glee with which we tear developers down needs to stop. Artists must be allowed to experiment. It is only from that experimentation that we find new experiences to enjoy and move the medium forward.
Would you guys say that this is a tech demo? Worth putting 60 bucks on?
Reviewing games you bought introduces bias too. Because you start thinking about value for money, which varies based on how much you earn and how you grew up. It even tempts you to justify your purchase and color your experience. Everything has it's own pros and cons. You aren't solving any problems. You are just creating new ones. There's no such thing as "bias free". The only thing we can hope is that there is no blatant corruption. And if that's what you are accusing reviewers of, then you need proof. Not to mention the fact that most gaming websites and independent reviewers run on average to low income and can't possibly afford all the games to review. This is a necessary evil and we simply have to look past it. Or we send all reviewers to their extinction and rely on strangers on internet forums, whose tastes and bias we don't fully understand.
Yeah, and people who review cars should have to buy each one before reviewing them. Same for thousand dollar electronics, right? Review copies don't introduce bias. And having to buy your own copy of the game doesn't remove bias.
Um, what?
I don't even know how to respond to that. Reviewers should be as bias free as possible. Having to rely on game publishers (be it ads or whatever) introduces Bias. Have review were buy their own games and then review It. Problem solved
This right here is why I take as much issue with the other side if the gamergate fiasco. And here I thought I could avoid it entirely by ignoring the threads.
I'm pretty sure these sites make more than an enough to afford one copy of the game.
Please, can you stop taking what I say and twisting it around? They don't even have to write a detailed write up, they can just post whatever and give it a score. Especially when it comes to first party games, fanboys go in there and give a game a 0 for the heck of it. Evolve has a 4.4 user score on there more than likely due to its DLC controversies.
Would you guys say that this is a tech demo? Worth putting 60 bucks on?
And they'd be free to do that. I've no issue with reviewers taking value into account if they're using their own money.
They're businesses, that is what they do. If they can't afford it then they go out of business.
I'd say there's a difference between a $60 video game and an electronic that costs thousands of dollars but hey, what do I know.
I'm pretty sure these sites make more than an enough to afford one copy of the game.
I imagine this is what was going through Eidos when they pulled the Kane and Lynch ads from Gamespot after Gerstmann's review, causing the new Gamespot management to fire him because he was "unreliable"Oh deary me, one of the Sony Santa Monica devs certainly got a bit upset
Nah the gunplay is really fantastic.
It really is some of the best.
We don't fully understand "professional" reviewers either - that's fairly certain. But that's not the point - the point is the distinction being made. The difference between "reviewers" and your internet forumner is the platform in which their words written - nothing more.
You have a guy like PewdiePie and other youtube celebrities garner millions of views to each of their videos - marketing should be paying A LOT of attention to them - not so much babying up some random site with a user base getting warped by a single guy on Youtube.
The User Score is separate from the Critics score, and the Critics Score is used as the official Metacritic rating, not the User Score.Please, can you stop taking what I say and twisting it around? They don't even have to write a detailed write up, they can just post whatever and give it a score. Especially when it comes to first party games, fanboys go in there and give a game a 0 for the heck of it. Evolve has a 4.4 user score on there more than likely due to its DLC controversies.
I imagine this is what was going through Eidos when they pulled the Kane and Lynch ads from Gamespot after Gerstmann's review, causing the new Gamespot management to fire him because he was "unreliable"
I'm not twisting your words, I'm trying get a hold on your logic.
You said it's a joke. Why? Because anyone can post to it. Same story anywhere on the Internet. But first party games and fanboyism... how is that different than anywhere else?
About Evolve, did you consider that how they locked away content behind grinding and monetary transactions maybe pissed a lot of people off? For a lot of people, a review isn't just about the individual gameplay mechanics, it's about the whole package. I know I certainly wrote off Evolve because of how they are handling the content. I'm not going to go review it, but I certainly won't be giving it the time of day.
Wait, so the chance for bias changes based on the price of the item? What's the price cutoff exactly?
The Gamergate allusion was because your underlying point, that "there's too much inbreeding going on in the games media" is almost exactly the description used in that movement, and without substantiation, comes across just as spurious.
The exchange started because you quoted and cheered the comment from the Sony Santa Monica staffer who suggested developers/publishers should react to negative reviews by pulling advertising and not sending review copies anymore. You're now saying you think review copies and ads should be completely separate from the review process, which we all agree on. Remember when I wrote this? It's because I think review copies shouldn't be determined by the content of a review. Which is why people were so thrown by your original quote and cheer of support toward someone who specifically wanted to manipulate others by abusing that process.
The User Score is separate from the Critics score, and the Critics Score is used as the official Metacritic rating, not the User Score.
And they can rightfully do so, but I also have the right to criticize them for their decision to pull ad revenue and Gamespot's management for firing someone over it.More like Gamespot being a sellout. Eidos can do whatever it wants with its money.
WordsintheWater said:Please, can you stop taking what I say and twisting it around? They don't even have to write a detailed write up, they can just post whatever and give it a score. Especially when it comes to first party games, fanboys go in there and give a game a 0 for the heck of it. Evolve has a 4.4 user score on there more than likely due to its DLC controversies.
Anyone can post on it, fanboys go in there and mess up the overall score all the time, people don't even write a review most of the time, they just say something like "this game sucks"
My point with Evolve is if you don't like the DLC situation and without having played the game I can go drop a 0 on it on metacritic, there are some sad individuals that waste their time with that shit. I think it's a joke, you don't, move on and enjoy using user reviews on metacritic as a good indication on the quality of a game.
Just as fanboys from the opposite side go in there and give the same game a 10/10. It works both ways.
They're businesses, that is what they do. If they can't afford it then they go out of business.
I just disagree with calling the whole thing a joke when there are often hundreds if not thousands of individuals posting there. Obviously, the weaknesses in the system mean it shouldn't be used as proof of anything, but that doesn't mean it's completely useless in gauging the overall reception of a game.
Honestly, your appraisal of Metacritic user reviews is just about as nuanced as the "this game sucks" opinions that you seem to be so displeased about.
And they'd be free to do that. I've no issue with reviewers taking value into account if they're using their own money.
They're businesses, that is what they do. If they can't afford it then they go out of business.
Listen man there are some decent people who write real reviews in there, not gonna dispute that, but I won't use user reviews in metacritic as any type of indication on the quality of the game. I'd rather read user impressions on here with people that have been posting for a while and can give details that give me a better indication if they played the game or not. If you don't understand that, cool.
some good news. I sold my copy for £35 making a £10 profit.
Um, no. How about have the reviewers buy their own stuff?
Anyone can post on it, fanboys go in there and mess up the overall score all the time, people don't even write a review most of the time, they just say something like "this game sucks"
My point with Evolve is if you don't like the DLC situation and without having played the game I can go drop a 0 on it on metacritic, there are some sad individuals that waste their time with that shit. I think it's a joke, you don't, move on and enjoy using user reviews on metacritic as a good indication on the quality of a game.
People should always look at user reviews Rotten Tomatoes style, with a 5.0 being neutral and a 7.5 meaning the majority of people liked it.Did I say it didn't? That's why I said it's a joke, people go on there give it a 0, then someone else goes in there gives it a 10.
Oh deary me, one of the Sony Santa Monica devs certainly got a bit upset
In what world is a 6/10 an above average score? When you got a D on a test, did you recline back in your seat and smile, content you did "above average"?Oh no! An above average score! Why do we send review copies? They might hurt our sales!
Wait, what?
You're saying two different things there.
At most outlets, the person on staff that was tasked with reviewing the game is not "the business." Are you actually proposing that he or she be forced to spend money on the game out of his or her own pocket and not be reimbursed by his or her employer?
Talk about twisting words. Read my post again. I said it's not useless as a means to get a gauge on the overall reception of a game. I didn't say anything about a game's objective quality (which can't be reliably appraised by any single person except in very limited terms).
Maybe this is the divider between people like me who don't really care about reviews and those who take great offense at them. On our side, we see the reviews for what they are--opinions about one's time with a game, complete with subjectivity and any number of possible biases or preconceptions. Those who take offense, on the other hand, must be seeing reviews as definitive statements about a game's quality and thus feel the need to lash out when their views don't align.
Because what the world needs is reviews coming out days after the game launches.Um, no. How about have the reviewers buy their own stuff?