I agree with most of what you said... except this. Review embargoes exist primarily to stop someone from playing the game for as little as possible, then rushing out a half-baked review to get their reviews up before anyone else (the first reviews getting by far the most views is a provable fact). Yes, some companies DO in fact try to use embargoes to control information about their game, but that's simply not the case the majority of the time and those who do quickly end up with a sour rep across the board from both reviewers (those worth their salt, anyways) and gamers in general.Wasted said:Review embargoes also do nothing to benefit the consumer while giving publishers a substantial control of information. Gaming websites essentially need to ask permission of the publishing companies on what they can and cannot show.
Properly done embargoes - that is, those lifted before launch - do actually increase review quality, which is good for the consumer. It's only those that wait until launch day or provide early reviews to specific reviewers that are problematic (which they are), and it's unfair to group all embargoes together under the same wide net. Don't believe me? Ask any highly trusted reviewer about it (Jim Sterling is a great example here) and they'll tell you the same thing.