Posted March 30, 2014
It's tricky, because you can't trust user reviews either.
Yes, gaming magazines/sites and game publishers are in bed together. The magazines/sites depend on them for advertising revenue and inside information for upcoming titles and such. So you have to take that into account.
You can't trust user reviews any more than the "critics", though. A lot of them are playing some game to try and nudge the average score one direction or the other instead of providing an informative review, and not much else.
Some are insecure and childish that feel that everyone should like their beloved game because they do, and they don't have any confidence in their own tastes.
Then you have others that give a low rating because they're upset about the DRM being used, or day one DLC, or the price, etc., because they didn't bother to do their homework and check these things out before they bought it.
The list goes on.
You have to approach it kind of like you do with hardware reviews at online retailers. You have to look for patterns. You see a lot of negative reviews stating the same thing about a faulty component, then you should probably avoid it.
Yes, gaming magazines/sites and game publishers are in bed together. The magazines/sites depend on them for advertising revenue and inside information for upcoming titles and such. So you have to take that into account.
You can't trust user reviews any more than the "critics", though. A lot of them are playing some game to try and nudge the average score one direction or the other instead of providing an informative review, and not much else.
Some are insecure and childish that feel that everyone should like their beloved game because they do, and they don't have any confidence in their own tastes.
Then you have others that give a low rating because they're upset about the DRM being used, or day one DLC, or the price, etc., because they didn't bother to do their homework and check these things out before they bought it.
The list goes on.
You have to approach it kind of like you do with hardware reviews at online retailers. You have to look for patterns. You see a lot of negative reviews stating the same thing about a faulty component, then you should probably avoid it.
Post edited March 30, 2014 by JohnnyDollar