markrichardb: They’re fibbers. Bethesda claim they want everyone to play at the same time (streamers, Youtubers, and the media), but they’ve sent out copies to Youtubers a week before release. I think they’re trying to empower their superfans who’re focused on entertainment rather than critique, and can arguably draw more eyeballs to the product than traditional games websites because video is more tangible than the written word. The message from Bethesda to the gaming press here is loud and clear – ‘we don’t need you anymore.’
I'll be brutally honest here: if that IS the case, then the gaming press itself is the culprit for making themselves irrelevant to the process in the first place. If the games press hadn't trodden all over the very same people that tend to enable their career choices, it's likely that the current state of distrust that exists between core gamers and things like IGN/Polygon/Kotaku/insertgamingsitehere might have fostered a healthier environment.
Instead, games writers chose to chase clicks for ad revenue, as opposed to genuinely interesting content, or by actually writing interesting content about releases/upcoming releases, etc.
Simply anecdotal evidence, but I don't bother with reviews sites or even Metacritic for my games buying decisions anymore, either. I just hop on Youtube and eyeball the game myself. It's certainly a much easier process than listening to some longwinded tryharding pseudointellectual who'd rather be writing about "problematic" design decisions anyway.