By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
Kantor said:
Kasz216 said:
Kantor said:
Kasz216 said:
Carl2291 said:
Even so, reviews are there to speak for whatever quality the game has.

If it can get an 83 despite having some large bugs... It definately has quality.

That would be true if videogame critics had any sort of critical standard.

They don't however... reviews don't count for anything.

Videogame reviews have no credibility unlike reviewers of movies, cars, literature etc.

 

Additionally, videogame reviewers get their income from one source more or less.  Videogame advertising.  Which makes it even less credibile.

If you look at other critics, they are usually paid via advertising from things that are NOT movie advertisements primarly.

Videogame reveiwing is a sham.


  EA bribed reviewers to give it an 83? Wow, they must have had a BAD quarter...

So, you didn't actually read my post then?  It's a pretty simple thing to understand.  Videogame companies aren't going to invest ad revenue in websites that give their games bad reviews.

Videogame advertising is what lets videogame websites run.

Ergo, reviewers aren't going to step on toes on big advertisers.  There is no need for those advertisers to actually "bribe" anyone.

If EA were to pull advertising from a website... that could decrease their revenue by 50%.

It's called "Being nice to your boss/big client."

The Videogame comapnies are both their biggest and really... ONLY clients and the target of reviews.

I mean, have you forgotten the whole Kane & Lynch fiasco already?

The Kane and Lynch moneyhatting was a failure. It still got sucky reviews, and all it achieved was getting a perfectly good reviewer fired. Surely, if you're going to "put pressure on a reviewer by threatening to remove advertising", you might as well go all the way, like GTA4, right?

And why would EA suddenly choose to put pressure on reviewers for this game and not, say, Need for Speed Undercover? They probably never even thought Extraction would sell.

Once again, your not reading.

They aren't putting pressure on anybody.  The pressure is ALWAYS there.  Reviewers KNOW if they badmouth too many EA games they're going to be losing the majority of their advertising money and will likely be out of a job. 

It's one of the big fears of internet journalism and "free" magazine journalism, and it's ramped up to the Nth degree when it comes to specialty publications like this.