captainballsack said:
I respect her point of view and now I know the certain issues that the game can raise in regards to a female game journalist's perspective, or more "usefully", an intelligent female gamer's perspective.
And how useful for a general population is to give such a "controversial" game specifically to a feminist writer?
"Ultimately, the review gave Dragon?s Crown a 6.5 out of 10, compared to the Metacritic average score of 83 (or 8.3 on a 10 pt scale). The discrepancy between the two scores seems to pivot on a personal value that Riendeau places on the games more controversial art.
(...)
This statement that headlines the original quote is the basis that seemingly drops the whole review away from being about the quality of the product and makes it about a personal value system. Given that Dragon?s Crown?s character designs of abnormally large chested female characters with disfigured bodies have been heating up across the internet since screenshots were first released, it almost seems like Polygon decided to give the review to the one writer on staff that would be most likely to have the biggest problem with the game.
(...)
Looking at the way the whole review was handled, it is almost as if Polygon was looking to create controversy instead of just reporting on something already within the industry. We don?t know if Polygon gave her the review simply because of her background or if it was just a chance occurrence. But, the scoring of a game should, in my opinion, not stem from a personal stance against values you are not the target demographic for. Especially when that scoring system impacts a much bigger scoring aggregate like Metacritic, which strips away personal views for a qualifying score."
http://www.playstationlifestyle.net/2013/07/31/daily-reaction-sizing-up-polygons-dragons-crown-review/
And an important reminder from their comments section:
"They scored Remember Me higher than The Last of Us, which is just a joke."