pokoko said:
Journalistic integrity is about the audience. It means you're not going to lie to them even if lying would make the writer or the publication look better. This is a perfect example. If the editor told the writer to put together a review that made Zombi fall two points below ZombiU, no one would be yelling at IGN right now but it would mean the writer lying to the reader and would make the article itself completely worthless. They absolutely should never have anything like a table. The very moment an editor tells an employee that their own opinion is wrong and invalid and that they want them to write a review BASED ON THE ASSUMPTION THAT SOMEONE ELSE'S OPINION IS THE ONLY CORRECT OPINION then they've just negated the very basis of what an opinion is, they've told their new writer that their old writer was better, and they've straight-up delivered a lie to the reader. That should never happen, especially over something as subjective as a review score. Opinions vary, sometimes greatly. That's natural and anyone who is reading opinion based articles should understand that. |
That is ludricous. If you don't have a rating table, on what is the score based? Intuition? Sorry, but this is not a good jounalistic practice or integrity.
You are saying i want the reviewer to lie, but that is not true. There should a rating table that characterises what each score corresponds to (a game with faults but exjoyable X rating, a game that is a technical masterpiece Y rating, a game that is enjoyable but has performnce issues Z. A logical table HAS to exist, or the ratings are arbitrary). If that doesnt exist, then they are just making it up and their scores mean nothing.
Actually, by not adhering to a pre-determined review scale table one of the two reviewers has in fact lied or at least been disonest to his readers. There cant be 2 cups and 2 measures. Thats just not serious.







