Remember Yahtzee is paid to satirize and exaggerate flaws and annoyances in video games (that others over-look) both real and imaginary.
Unlike reviewers at IGN and Gamespot he has less than a week to play, make an animation for, and review a video game. As such, his reviews may only skim the surface, and leave an incredibly different impression on viewers.
He regularly ignores the aspects that make a video game attractive to its players, unless they're ground-breaking innovations that haven't been done by any other games before.
USSR said:
I' mildly disappointed until I realize some of the stuff he says is hilarious and true..
Hilarous?
Often.
True and accurate?
NOT always.
I've had my annoyances with the occasional bits of inaccurate information coming from zero punctuation:
1. Halo Reach: Little variety and only one flying mission and one bit with the jetpack?
INCORRECT: he only played campaign and so didn't experiment with customizable game types
and firefight. Also there's are at least 4 missions where you get to fly around
(one with the falcon in a crumbling city), must have slipped his mind when he reviewed it.
2. Portal 2: He also complained about the interactive cutscenes dragging on,
which is kind of sad as single player was intended as a "story driven experience".
He also didn't mention any of the new game play features that were added in.
3. Witcher 2 (assassins of Kings): Unskippable cutscenes, way to difficult and unforgiving
combat, ridiculously long and grinding game play?
According to the user comments, there was a lot of miss-information:
cut scenes can be skipped with a single button, there is an "easy" option, and the game is
only about 40 hours.
He also overstepped the threshold of professionalism when he implied that all
fans had were ex-workers at the "d* sucking factory".
DISCLAIMER: I haven't played Witcher 2,
but I'm thinking of getting it after getting a second opinion from reviewers at IGN, Good Game and GameSpot.
I don't find it offensive when he pans a game I like,
but I do get a bit irritated when he occasionally releases incorrect/misleading information to the masses.