XDLieju said:Well I spot a lie right there. Diving was never 'really neat'.
IGN being paid off by Team Aqua confirmed.
Maybe Team Aqua is holding their favourite Pokés hostage?
With zero to investigate upon specifically, this is a weak claim and not worth considering.MarsAtlas said:Honestly, I don't even remember. I did this back in 2011/2012 when I had a lot of spare time. Just started checking out the history of some the reviewers, and honestly there was a lot of inconsistency. They'd like one game yet when a similar game came out, even if it was considered generally superior, people dissed it. Stuff like that. I chalk it more up to limited time frames and the need to plow through games quickly and sloppily to get the review out more than that they might've been bribed.
Which misses the point of the statement. With the site's consistency across reviews, and especially in line with other publications, it sees horribly unlikely that you would see an inconsistency across individual reviewers. According to Metacritic, they are about 3% off from being a perfectly lubed weathervane.Again, its not a matter of the publication, its a matter of the reviewers.
To put this another way, if your claim of reviewer inconsistency were to be tested as a model with real, predictable capacity, I would offer the hypothesis that we should see a significantly less consistent between games than we do, or more appropriately than would be statistical norm. We don't see this. While it doesn't disprove the underlying belief, it does put it into question.
Without specific examples, there's not much to go into, either, just tenuous claims of patterns that may or may not exist. But my point was that I would actually expect to see less consistency from the publication if the individuals were inconsistent. To say what you did is to ignore what I said. It'd be one thing if you had a reason it was wrong (And "they hire a lot of people" is not one, since you're talking about patterns amongst similar games, which should show up in the overall scores of similar games), but you just ignored the premise of the line you were rebutting.
As for the actual point, it'd be one thing if you at least had a single piece of evidence, like the smoking gun of the hypotheticals you proposed, but I can't find examples of this at all. Maybe, maybe if I followed dozens of reviewers across their careers, I might find something. But then, the fact that this score comes with legit criticism about a game that Pokémon fans have been making (Hell, Lieju says that some of these date back to the original Gen III games, though I sat 'em out) for years doesn't help the idea that this was a well-founded statement.
That's it's based on claims that another party can't verify makes me wonder if it's even remotely true. Hell, that this author seems to demonstrate consistency[footnote]based on a google search for the author of this review and looking at her other work for IGN[/footnote] doesn't help, either. Are you working backwards from a conclusion?