irishstormtrooper said:
People are hating IGN now? It seems just last week that Gamespot was the "biased, sellout" game website. Probably someone got pissed for them giving a good score to game they didn't like or a bad one to one that they did, and their hatred caught on. I haven't seen IGN do anything evil.
IGN's been targeted for hate for MUCH longer than Gamespot. Their journalism's been criticized by gamers for over ten years now. Believe me, I was having this debate in 1999--and back then I was defending them. I haven't paid attention to them in a long time, but let's see what I can dig up.
Okay, here. Go and read their [a href="http://ps3.ign.com/articles/954/954208p1.html"] X-Blades review[/a]. Never mind the score; if anything it's being ridiculously generous to this game. Just read this review and try to tell me that this sounds
remotely like a professional game reviewer wrote it.
Granted not every article on IGN is quite
this poorly done, but they still hire writers this lazy and unprofessional to write reviews and articles, and there's enough of these guys around to really make you lose respect for the whole site. Sometimes it's not a matter of them being unprofessional about writing and form, but rather a matter of a certain lack of thought they'll put into an article.
For instance, I once dug up a piece they published on the uneven portreyal of women as lead characters in games. I wish I could find the source again, but I'll try and sum it up. The writer basically lambasted the game industry, saying we should stop using female characters as leads in games and expecting it to be "edgy."
This was in 2009, mind you. Lara Croft has been irrelevant for
years at this point and we're all so aware that [a href="http://www.videogamegirlsdb.com/gamegirl/Images/Metroid/Samus/Zero_Suit_Samus_SSBB_02.jpg"]Samus is a woman[/a] that it's almost painful.
He seemed to be implying that the only two reasons game developers
ever used women was for A) edginess and B) sex appeal, giving absolutely no benefit of the doubt that maybe female characters just fit some roles best, and went off to list the worst offenders. I don't even need to give you the whole list, I just need to tell you that he listed Faith from
Mirror's Edge as one of these so-called "worst offenders" right alongside a half-dozen flagrant bimbos, including [a href="http://www.zombiewatchnetwork.com/wp-content/uploads/adawong.jpg"]Ada Wong[/a].
Meanwhile, he completely ignored gratuitous tit-fests like the ongoing
Dead or Alive series and totally failed to bring up
Tomb Raider, which seemed to be what he was going after in the first place. If anyone can dig up the article, trust me, it's a real hoot and a half, and a perfect example of just how badly thought-out some of IGN's writing can get. Never mind
Faith being one of the "worst offenders," it was just a really absurd article, and I couldn't tell if he was suggesting that women absolutely don't belong in games under any circumstances or if he was trying to appeal to feminism and just missing the point.
Those are just a
couple of examples, but you can see where someone could get the impression that they're unprofessional. Not necessarily evil, but unprofessional--enough so that
maybe their reviews are influenced by sponsorship,
maybe they're biased, and
maybe they don't really play some of the games they review all the way through.