noiseredux wrote:BoneSnapDeez wrote:
Well I have to respectfully disagree.
I don't really consider HG101 to write reviews. I consider them to write histories.
I do get what you're saying though. But it's also not practical. Any publication hires a staff and has to pass out those games among them. What do you do if you're like "oh we need to review this new Tales game... now I know Joe likes RPG's a lot, but he's never played the Tales series so he can either play 3000 hours of games in the series before reviewing this one, or he can just divulge that it's his first time playing a Tales game"? Sure it's not ideal, but it's just logistics.
But like I said, I do find it interesting too to read some reviews by a reviewer stepping out of their comfort zone. If "Joe the RPG guy" from the above example plays nothing but RPG's and loves RPG's, then maybe he's gonna gush about an RPG because it's an RPG. Might be interesting to hear "Pete the Shmup Dude" who hasn't touched RPG's since he got Dragon Warrior for free with his Nintendo Power subscription might think of an RPG today.
Now of course this could go either way -- could be super interesting and insightful, maybe even touch upon things that RPG fanatics would gloss right over because they take for granted. Or it could be a shit review that's like "oh man, RPG's are totally slow cuz they're turn based." But of course part of that shit review will be because it's a shit reviewer who didn't know how to tackle the assignment.
Yeah, I consider HG101 a retrospective and historical site. Some of the articles certainly read like reviews though, it depends on the author.
I do like neophyte reviews myself but I believe there's a time/place/venue for that kind of stuff, and I think they belong on independent websites, blogs, etc... Reading something like that on IGN (supposedly an authoritative "industry" website) just seems inappropriate. In the case of Arc Rise Fantasia I have a hard time believing they couldn't find at least
one other person on their staff who has more knowledge of RPGs and would have been a better choice for writing that particular review.
This may all be a moot point anyway. I'm in agreement with BoringSupreez here, most "professional" reviews are almost entirely worthless. I used to have a Game Informer subscription and nearly every review just read like a press release for Activision, Bungie, EA, etc. They served no purpose except to hype up new games and convince people to go out and buy them (hopefully at GameStop of course!). Today I mostly read HG101, RPGamer, GameFAQs user reviews, and the many blogs of RacketBoy members.