486DX2, on 02 June 2013 - 05:54 PM, said:
I love this. We're required to have printed sources in a discussion about basic human nature?
He was not presenting theories about "basic human nature" but silly, unbacked opinions about the power of marketing.
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I'll never understand this...Okay, so you join a forum. A really good one, with people who share the same interests as you. Instead of thinking "Wow, new friends to make, new alliances to forge" you're browbeating two of the best posters on the site. Again. Because you think you're smarter than they are.
I mean, really? Radar and MusicallyInspired? They're nice as hell, and damn near everything they say is interesting. Of all the people...those two?
I don't understand. Do you seriously join forums in order to make friends? I've got enough friends in real life. I'm here to discuss things that interest me, things that I cannot discuss with my real-life friends. You're not gonna come across many Duke3D mappers in real life; there are maybe 3-4 active Duke3D mappers in Finland. Moreover, do you avoid heated subjects with your real-life friends? I sure as hell don't. I argue a lot with my best friends. You probably don't have any real friends if you don't feel the same way.
Fox, on 02 June 2013 - 05:56 PM, said:
Since you are the one who brought them up, shouldn't you be the one to prove they are reliable?
How do you prove that something is reliable? You can only go by reputation and by considering possible conflicts of interest. IGN and other gaming sites make money because people visit those sites. If it were revealed that IGN sells ratings their readership would plummet. And since these sites compete in the same market, each one has an incentive to not only maintain a good reputation but actively scrutinize the reputation of their competitors. Even so, no scandal has broken out, despite what is probably a high degree of employee mobility between competing sites. A former employee with knowledge of behind-the-scenes arrangements between the site and publishers could easily sell his story to a competitor, not only making money in the process but allowing the competitor to capture a large share of the market.
What I don't doubt is that sites sometimes assign reviews to fanboys. This obviously happened with IGN's Black Ops 2 review. You can screw it up the other way around too, for example, by assigning Duke Nukem Forever to a gay reviewer. Of course, the former is better of the two since it better caters to those games' fanbases.