For the upcoming game database and review system, I currently have it set up to accept star ratings from 0-5.
Average scores would have decimal points.
(My goal is to have it act like Amazon.com's rating system)
Does this seem sufficient to you?
Is a 5-Point Scoring System Enough For Games?
Another tactic I was thinking of is as follows:
There are two ways you can rate a game:
- You can give a quick score via 5-star system on the main game page (like on Amazon.com)
- You can also write a more in-depth review that allows a 10 or 100-point scale for not only an overall score, but also for different categories like gameplay, graphics, etc.
The full reviews can be weighted a bit heavier in the game's average score since chances are that more thought was given to the scores.
Does that sound better?
Any other ideas to tweak the concept?
There are two ways you can rate a game:
- You can give a quick score via 5-star system on the main game page (like on Amazon.com)
- You can also write a more in-depth review that allows a 10 or 100-point scale for not only an overall score, but also for different categories like gameplay, graphics, etc.
The full reviews can be weighted a bit heavier in the game's average score since chances are that more thought was given to the scores.
Does that sound better?
Any other ideas to tweak the concept?
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5 out of 5 means it's perfect and unless the game is in fact perfect (Jet Set Radio) it doesn't deserve the score.Mozgus wrote:Whats wrong with that? 5 stars means that they couldn't find any major faults with it. That's what it means to me anyway.GSZX1337 wrote:A five point system makes it too easy to get a five. Just look at GameSpy.

dudex77 wrote: 5 out of 5 means it's perfect and unless the game is in fact perfect (Jet Set Radio) it doesn't deserve the score.
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The problem is that different sources regard scoring in different ways. Personally I think it's much too difficult to define a game as perfect (especially within a topic so subjective), so I agree with the scoring system in the way Mozgus mentioned.dudex77 wrote:5 out of 5 means it's perfect and unless the game is in fact perfect (Jet Set Radio) it doesn't deserve the score.
Anyway, I really like the way Amazon does ratings so five points sounds good to me.
"If we can hit that bullseye, the rest of the dominoes will fall like a house of cards. Checkmate!" - Zapp Brannigan
No it doesn't. 10.0 means a game is perfect. 5 stars means a game has no real flaws. Mathematically, 5 stars could stand for anything above an 8.0. This isn't complicated. Anyway, scores are fucking lame. We don't need them.dudex77 wrote:5 means it's perfect and unless the game is in fact perfect (Jet Set Radio) it doesn't deserve the score.
I think scores are helpful, but not to be taken as the final authority.Mozgus wrote:No it doesn't. 10.0 means a game is perfect. 5 stars means a game has no real flaws. Mathematically, 5 stars could stand for anything above an 8.0. This isn't complicated. Anyway, scores are fucking lame. We don't need them.dudex77 wrote:5 means it's perfect and unless the game is in fact perfect (Jet Set Radio) it doesn't deserve the score.
I like to take lists of games and sort by score use as a starting point of what games to get. Since score are relative, I won't buy them in order of score, but instead look for games withing that sorted list that might be of interest to me.
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