patronmacabre said:
Dualshockers was very positive, yes, but if you read the review you would learn that the reviewer could not read or speak Japanese, and thus wasn't capable of understand any bit of the plot. This is important, because if you look at, say, Kotaku's review, or ryuzaki57's import review, you would learn that the plot, characters, and story are a weakness of the game. This was also implied in Famitsu's review. Really, what I'm trying to say here, is that people shouldn't just think that a game will be reviewed well or poorly for no real reason. They have to look at what previewers are saying about the game, assess their strengths and weaknesses, and compare said strengths and weaknesses to previous titles made by the developer if possible. Edit: In a sense, the early scores given are less important than what reviewers are saying are the strengths and weaknesses about the game. That's what I think at least. |
Famitsu has four reviewers. Two said the story was pretty good, one said quite good, and one said ok/a weakness. And Kotaku didn't like the first game's story either. At all, in fact. And I should think that "major" and part of "the trend" does not include a user on this forum :P . And if so then I would point out Tachikoma who said the story was solid. Not saying the story is the highlight of the game, mind. I've guessed from the start it wouldn't be as big a deal as the original Xenoblade, the design of the game gave that away for me from the start. Just saying, I would say the trend for previews has been mostly positive with a fairly back-and-forth on opinion on the story. Which isn't too far off the original's mark, by the way. As some forget, the story of Xenoblade Chronicles was recieved with mixed feelings by critics with a leaning towards positive (many thought the characters were bland and the plot poor; not my feelings at all); it was the game around it and the setting that the critics gushed over the most. But I digress, this is all beside the point.
And yes, as I said earlier, people need to stop basing their desired scores and by extension purchases on hopes and instead do extensive research and ground themselves on the facts. People often give the good advice of not judging a game purely on one review or on the Meta, but people often go to the extreme and don't trust any reviews, scores, or any other kind of coverage.







