Jonnyboy117
Member
DjangoReinhardt said:Not to pick on you, Jonnyboy117, but that's exactly why no one will ever accuse videogame reviewers of actual journalism. It isn't ethical for a real journalist to accept payment like that; in such a case it is just as important to avoid the appearance of impropriety as the act itself. It is the responsibility of a legitimate journalist to refuse those freebies and have their publisher pay for flights/hotels at junkets, not to accept accommodations from the companies you're supposed to cover. Instead, we see reviewers always bragging about the "swag" they got at E3 or how much free booze they drank at Microsoft's latest game launch.
Well I don't claim to be a real journalist, and if I ever accidentally say something to that effect, you can call me out on it. I write about video games and try to do it in an intelligent, critical way that is useful to other gamers. If I had investors and a real office, I would gladly pay for travel expenses to any press event. Unfortunately, my site doesn't have nearly that kind of money. I would rather we accept the trip from a publisher and write about the games honestly (even at the risk of offending the publisher), which is what we do, than not go on the trip at all and have a big hole in our coverage of those games. Yes, we've been to press events, come back and written previews or impressions, and had PR reps from the event complain that the coverage was too negative. And you know what we did about it? Nothing. And we're still being invited to press events by that company. We have a similar protocol when PR reps complain about negative reviews. I tell them to send me another copy of the game (since my staff is scattered all over), and I'll have someone else do a second review which will be published in addition to the first one. If the second review is as bad or worse than the first one, then the PR rep learns his lesson and doesn't complain the next time. (Yes, this has happened as well.) But the second review will be based on the quality of the game, not any agenda to prove a point.
These are the kinds of things I can do to make a difference. Is it much? No, but it's probably more effective than bitching in an editorial.