dsheinem wrote: But I think it is as disingenuous to attack IGN reviewers for not playing Adventure, Zork, or Outrun as it is to attack TV Guide or Entertainment Weekly reviewers for not having watched Hill Street Blues or The Honeymooners. That is, they can still offer fair and useful reviews of the latest episode of CSI Miami or How I Met Your Mother without knowing that history.
The question is, how much do you value the review. There is a difference in reviewing a Madden title and reviewing something like...oh...say Shadow of the Colossus, but I think that understanding the overall history and culture of gaming is important to a critic.
Do you think that a movie critic has never seen or heard of Alfred Hitchcock film?
I think the goal is to say that there needs to be a larger passion and love for the history of video games as a whole to better review. A lot of times reviewers give their personal opinion as fact. They do not take into account taste.
To be a critic of videogames is to be mindful of the various aspects of what makes a game, a game. A critic must be able to recognize genre and style and put taste to the wayside in the overall decision. They can state their taste and that is fine, but that does not mean that their opinion is the truth.
I just feel that a lot of reviewers have lost site of what it means to be a critic. I feel that way, not only for videogames but for movies as well.
It is a shame.