Kantor said:
0) Khuutra! <3 1) It is the responsibility of a publication to have some sort of normality when it is reviewing one single series. The reviewers have to act as a team and not like individual bloggers. If your website said something about a game, you don't really want to be going back and contradicting that in a later review. A fantastic way of overcoming this problem would be to make it clear that your staff disagree and as such have multiple reviews for every game, but that's not really feasible - it's hard enough getting ONE review copy let alone four. 2) You are certainly not writing for the 200 million people who have never played and will never play Uncharted. You are writing for the people who either like Uncharted or have the potential to like Uncharted, and to a very small extent the rest of the gaming audience. Somebody who hates racing games will never buy a racing game no matter how many 10/10s you throw at it. Moreover, the reason you can't compare, say, Gran Turismo and Uncharted reviews is that they exist on separate scales, and they exist on separate scales because they are aimed at different people. You're not writing a review to suit someone else's opinion; that's the whole point of choosing a reviewer who likes the basis of the game to write a review. As an opinion alone, a review is worthless. It's the same as any number of user reviews you can find on the internet. It's the opinion of one single person who may or may not share your tastes and may or may not agree with you on whether a game is good. The only way to fix that problem is to keep the review largely impartial, set out the good and bad points of a game, and comment only in small amounts. Your opinion as a reviewer is as important as any opinion, but what sets a (good) reviewer apart from a rant on Amazon is the ability to step back and look analytically at the game. I can't deny that the EuroGamer reviewer looked analytically at the game, but he looked too analytically. He's going to the opposite extreme. Rather than including anything resembling his own opinion on the matter or how the game actually played, he went on a highbrow rant about the excessive cinematisation of games. This is hardly the time to complain about that when a great deal of games that have come before have exactly the same "problem" and your publication - the publication that accepts responsibility for what you write - has never so much as mentioned it. To summarise that long and meandering rant, you're on the list. |
Reviewers and the publications for which they write are not single entities, and every review publication - including this one, to the best of my knowledge - has warnings to that effect. No two reviewers are obligated to sync up for reviews, and no publication is obligated to make sure that they do so. If that's the aim of a publication, that's a horse of a different color, but not aiming for that can hardly be considered a fault.
You do not write reviews for fans of the game you're reviewing. You write it for all gamers, but you primarily write it for yourself. If you cannot communicate what you see as problems with the game, you have no place as a reviewer in the publication for which you write.
More, quantifying pros and cons is problematic on its own. How does one qualify the railroading of Uncharted as inherently positive or negative? How does one say that it's inherently a good thing that the game's most bombastic scenarios will play out in basically the same way every time, and that the danger is largely illusory and scripted? How does one say that it's inherently negative that you know when a building is going to fall over with you in it? You can't. The aim to quantify design as good or bad is a fool's errand. All one can do is offer one's own take.
Here is what separates a good review on a website from a good review on, say, Amazon: nothing. Both will be erudite, well-written, and communicate what the writer sees as good or bad in the game. Over the course of the review, the value set of the reviewer will be revealed in what they see as good or bad. If that's not the case then they are not writing an honest review.







