NuclearKangaroo said:
when you substract points froma game because its "sexist" yes, you are giving giving those character models more credit than the gameplay itself
What "points" are we talking about.
There are many ways to write a review. Not all of them have to include "scores", and those that do don't have to aggregate their scores in the same way. There is no fixed understanding of what "points" have to mean.
NuclearKangaroo said:
you understand why people read reviews right? they want to know if a game is worth their cash, they arent meant to replace someone's opinion but to help them not waste their money on worthless games
Well.. no. That's the purpose of one specific type of review. There are reviews primarily intended for entertainment purposes (like Zero Punctuation, or most of the stuff produced by Channel Awesome). There are reviews which simply exist to give a visual or audio slice of a particular experience so that the audience can see the game for themselves. There are reviews meant to specifically assess the suitability of a game for a particular audience.
Also, I have a feeling you're confusing critique with review. Critique, or media criticism, is not really related to consumer advice at all. What it's meant to do is to provide a supplementary discussion about the piece of media in question, including potentially discussing its social impact, issues of representation, metatextuality (how it fits in with other media) and so forth which wouldn't necessarily come up in the simple review. Critique is not there to give you a score or to tell you whether you should buy a game, that's your decision, it's there to provoke or contribute to a public discussion about games.
Now, I guess you could make the point that the line between the two is blurred, and yes it is. But it always has been. If you watch some old Siskel and Ebert, you'll notice that they're often reviewing and critiquing films
at the same time. They will give consumer advice, but they will also lace it with their opinions, impressions and background discussion. That is the normal role of a media critic, it is nothing exceptional, unique or sinister.
NuclearKangaroo said:
well im making fun of the people who misuse the word, thatd the whole bloody point
Well, that's not relevant to me, is it. So I don't see how it's "the whole bloody point" at all, since right now you're talking to me. I haven't misused the word.
When you talk about people being triggered and being "wusses", what exactly am I meant to think? Maybe there's some imaginary context which is going on in your mind, maybe you're so obsessed with the "SJWs" that you just assume that that's the first thing that comes into our heads when you use the word. It isn't, and the fact that you think it is is doesn't exactly fill me with a great deal of confidence.
NuclearKangaroo said:
"i dont have to defend my arguments"
No. I don't.
For one, you've been putting words in my mouth and twisting everything I say into your ridiculous, black and white notions of how the world works since this whole thing began. I'm not inclined to argue with someone who cannot argue in good faith.
NuclearKangaroo said:
the terms and words i use, those things you were criticing a minute ago
Oh wow. Are you claiming that you've prooved the philosophical objectivity of language, now?
Hang on. Let me call the entirety of the Western philosophical tradition. They're going to want to know about this. I mean,
fucking google image search, that's some true mic dropping genius right there!
NuclearKangaroo said:
so, you know they are antitled to be free, and yet you dont want them to be entitled to be free
Yes.
The purpose of any human rights discourse is to balance the conflicting needs of individuals. It is perfectly acceptable to say that people should be denied certain freedoms provided the case can still be made by reference to a liberal ideal in which freedom is valuable. Wanting to limit certain freedoms in no way implies a disdain for the concept of freedom itself.
Or did the last few hundred years of liberalism pass you by, because this is how it works.
NuclearKangaroo said:
because is totally not awesome to live in a society in which dissenting opinions are silenced?
i dont think you know what you are saying, killing jews was legal in nazi germany, does that means it was right?
Killing jews was made legal because many people bought into a Nazi ideology which was cynically propagated under the guise of protected speech. Does that mean it was wrong to treat it as protected speech?
Unlike your question. That's not a rhetorical one. I don't have a preconception of what is "objectively" right and wrong to which I can refer, I think it has to come out of some coherent theoretical position. If Nazi Germany showed us anything, it's how little the concept of human dignity means when it is stripped of legal substance.
NuclearKangaroo said:
so asking for both sides of the argument to be heard is not coherent?
Not when you must violate other people's right to autonomous control over their own property.
By the same token, if game devs don't want people to talk about sexism in their games, they can delete threads discussing it from their own public forums if they want. Again, the ability to use a platform is contingent on the approval of the person who actually controls the platform. The internet is not a public space.
NuclearKangaroo said:
"is not slander becuase they are actually lying and making false statement about more than ONE person"
A) Proove they were lying. Not just ill-informed, but maliciously lying.
B) Proove that "gamers" actually constitute a category of people. What
essentially defines a gamer?
Because as I read it, the whole point of the articles was that actually nothing does. The stereotypes about fat nerds in their parents' basement are just that, stereotypes. Now, if you want to say that that's not true, that that stereotype absolutely and essentially defines gamer, then make that case.
NuclearKangaroo said:
can you tell me if silencing dissenting opinions, via doxxing, hacking and abuse of influences is right?
Legally, it isn't, which reflects a liberal understanding that it is not in the public interest for that to be happening.
You still haven't shown me how "morality" matters though, or why it's anything other than a tool you're using to bludgeon people with your opinions.
NuclearKangaroo said:
facts are subjective now?
Do you really think there is a yes or no answer to that question?
NuclearKangaroo said:
what is clear is that many game journalists simply lack integrity based on such simple concepts like conflict of interests, and what are on actions? to show or disconform, to condemn what is clearly an unethical journalistic behaviour
Which doesn't explain why we're sitting here discussing what you can or can't put in a review.
NuclearKangaroo said:
so im less latino because i supprot gamergate?
You like making up statements, don't you.
NuclearKangaroo said:
yeah, it makes no sense, you dotn get to decide what diversity is, diversity is having people from all sorts of background in our movement, when you condemn people from the right and christians, you are actually acting agaisnt diversity
I'm not condemning your diversity. I'm pointing out that what you seem to think diversity is is completely meaningless. You're still pulling the equivalent of "I can't be a homophobe, I have loads of gay friends!" Do you see and understand why that argument is extremely flawed?