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Forums - Gaming - Polygon Editor bought the Lego Dimensions URL a day before the game was announced

Polygon's news editor bought the Lego Dimensions URL a day before the game was announced, and it redirects to Polygon

 

Earlier today, LEGO and Warner Bros. Interactive revealed a new video game called LEGO Dimensions. It's a Skylanders type game that uses LEGO figures and vehicles from properties like DC Comics, Lord of the Rings, The Wizard of Oz, Back to the Future and more. Obviously, every video games site is covering it. That includes Polygon, from which you can see a picture of their coverage to the right.

But do you want to know how I got to that article? From LegoDimensions.com. Polygon's deputy news editor tweeted that he registered legodimensions.com yesterday -- as in, the day before the game was announced. And it redirects to Polygon's coverage of it. (Archive link for proof)

That's really shady. 

When I asked him how he knew to register the URL, he replied with "Rumors on the internet!" And he later clarified that he learned his "super secret info" from videogamer.com's article from March 20th, which is vague on facts and doesn't have the date the game would be announced.

Of course with a big announcement like this people are searching for more information on Lego Dimensions. The actual site for the game is Lego.com/dimensions. But in an effort to get more clicks on Polygon's coverage of the game, some really shady things took place. Legodimensions.com no longer redirects to Polygon, after much backlash, and now goes to the lego.com/dimensions site. Still, this sort of move is deceptive. I'm also not sure I buy that he bought the URL on a hunch from "rumors on the internet" dating back a month ago, and conveniently got it yesterday, the day before the game was announced. 

I'm not saying some action should be taken, but damn this situation sucks. That's like me buying BlackOps3.com and have it redirect to GameZone on the off-chance that a rumor is true. Except then it gets announced the day after I buy it. See how bad that looks? It's not a look that a big website that takes pride in its journalistic integrity needs. And it's not good for other video game sites when there's already a lack of trust and faith in games journalism. Maybe it really was convenience and a joke, but that's not how it looks. It looks like they already knew the game was being announced and bought a URL up that people would try so they could get more views.

That's how it looks. But damn I'm hoping it was all really a joke. 

For reference:

WikipediaCybersquatting. Cybersquatting (also known as domain squatting), according to the United States federal law known as the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, is registering, trafficking in, or using an Internet domain name with bad faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else.
 
IcannCybersquatting is generally bad faith registration of another's trademark in a domain name.


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That does sound shady as fuck.

There's no way anyone can actually believe what he's saying.



"It's not a look that a big website that takes pride in its journalistic integrity needs."

Wait, since when did Polygon take pride in its journalistic integrity?



How low can you go?



                  

PC Specs: CPU: 7800X3D || GPU: Strix 4090 || RAM: 32GB DDR5 6000 || Main SSD: WD 2TB SN850

Read his twitter and the GAF thread. It was only some kind of bad joke and he gave them the domain for free.
It's not linking to Polygon anymore: http://www.legodimensions.com

But they'll probably get trouble because they redirected traffic to their own site.



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It doesn't work anymore



We keep getting these games :(. Hate them. Not Lego ones, but ones where you have to buy things seperately like Disney infinity and Skylanders



Ltd predictions by the time 9th Gen comes out

Ps4:110million

Xbox one :75 million( was 65) 

Wii u: 20 milliion

episteme said:
Read his twitter and the GAF thread. It was only some kind of bad joke and he gave them the domain for free.
It's not linking to Polygon anymore: http://www.legodimensions.com

Not sure his explanations are credible, frankly.

Plus, what he did is actually illegal, so odds are pretty good Polygon's parent company has a legal dept. who stepped in and said...yeah, why don't you just go ahead and transfer it over, or start looking for a new job.



sundin13 said:
"It's not a look that a big website that takes pride in its journalistic integrity needs."

Wait, since when did Polygon take pride in its journalistic integrity?

Exactly, furthermore, since when is it considered a "big website"???

That ex-Kotaku (another "big website that takes pride in its journalistic integrity needs") Crecente dude is really a spineless clown who will do anything for attention & $$



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n29CicBxZuw

01001011 01101001 01110011 01110011 00100000 01101101 01111001 00100000 01110011 01101000 01101001 01101110 01111001 00100000 01101101 01100101 01110100 01100001 01101100 00100000 01100001 01110011 01110011 00100001

Everyone knows Polygon is the most questionable major gaming website out there. Their reviews and preferences are obviously 'motivated'.