Their latest story is a GTA V gif, followed by a bunch links to Youtube videos of GTA V. I've seen Buzzfeed articles with more original content and commentary.Luke wrote:Kotaku is clickbait garbage.Ack wrote:Of course we are. We all play our video games with our pinkies out.noiseredux wrote:y'all are higher brow than me, I guess.
I myself only play Tetris and Columns while wearing a suit and sipping on my London Fog.
But seriously, kotaku exists to gather your internet viewing history and sell it to advertisers. It's buzzfeed with game articles.
They publish random GTA V clips as articles about once per week for the last two years. And they were one of the websites claiming that GTA V was sexist back when it launched, so their love affair is a bit strange. Unless, of course, their outrage was manufactured for clicks... nah, they've got too much journalistic integrity for that.
Some other hypocritical gems: despite the name, which is an obvious play on Otaku, they published this article ripping on Japan for not being like America: Japan: It's not Funny Anymore. Waaa, I can't find my vegan ingredients at a cheap price!
And then they reviewed one of the best anime in recent years (Watamote) and somehow missed the entire point that it's a comedy: The Most Mean-Spirited Anime I Have Ever Watched.When foreign cultures talk about Japan, they usually talk about anime and / or manga. Usually, it's anime. Anime is terrible. It used to be okay. Now, it's not. It's inbred trailer-trash in entertainment form: Every season's new Japanese animation places one-upmanship of every single aspect of the last season higher on their list of priorities than even "make something entertaining." The same can perhaps be said of all Japanese entertainment, though it's not relevant anywhere else as much as it is in anime. Anime used to answer the questions of kids' dreams: "How awesome would it be to be a world-class assassin / kung-fu master / robot pilot / baseball hero?" Now it's just a bunch of shit pandering to perverts and pedophiles.
Dumbass readers, you voted for the wrong anime!This past week, I told you about the five anime you should be watching this summer. To prepare, I asked Kotaku readers to vote on their picks. The winner by a landslide was Watamote. I am dumbfounded by this. Watamote is, quite simply, the most mean-spirited anime I have ever watched.
The problem is, this show isn't really a comedy. It's a tragedy. Any laughs you get are due to her emotional pain and suffering. And while this is fine if the character is evil and thus getting some kind of karmic comeuppance, Tomoko, as a character, has done nothing worthy of being saddled with the hell that is her life.
Let's be clear here. Tomoko is not simply a nerdy girl who is a little socially awkward. Given the state of her socialization skills, it seems safe to assume she is a girl with a severe social anxiety disorder. And as all the jokes in the series are at her expense, the show really comes off as “let's make fun of the girl with a crippling psychological disorder.”
What do you bet this guy got childhood PTSD from watching Charlie Brown? How dare we be amused by the plight of a poor innocent child. We're such shitlords.I hear people like this show because they identify with Tomoko—that they had similar experiences in school and now look back on those experiences with nostalgic humor. But for me, despite being more than a little bit of a social outcast in high school myself, none of this is funny. It's just reveling in the pain of a mentally ill person—laughing at a girl who is even more awkward than they were in order to feel better about their own lives.
And that is just plain fucked up.
Anyway, suffice to say I hate Kotaku and the fact that they are somehow miraculously counted in the ranks of legitimate gaming press. Ubisoft is taking the right action (or rather, inaction).
