I'm happy being a number on Metacritic

Trit_warhol
Friday, April 20, 2012
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Sam Barsanti

No matter how you feel about Metacritic (and other sites like it), it’s still cool seeing somebody make it to the big leagues. Congratulations, Tristan.

Street Fighter X Tekken

Pardon the self-indulgence, but this past week I achieved one of my life’s goals: Metacritic listed one of my reviews.

Since its inception, Metacritic has been a mysterious arbiter for the video game industry. It doesn't have as great an effect on me now, but I won't lie to you about this: The website has resolved a great many purchase decisions in my lifetime. Maybe now I can contribute to someone else's. Not that people don't read my reviews here, it's just that thousands (who am I kidding, millions) more people consult Metacritic than my humble blog or Bitmob. Perhaps even more to the point, I wasn't able to achieve this goal through either of those outlets (although my experience with both surely helped land the unpaid writing gig).

Now, I'm sure that there are plenty of people who see my newly achieved goal as naïve or destructive to my passion. I've read stories of developers being denied royalties on account of lower-than-expected Metacritic scores or sales diminishing due to middling reviews, but I refuse to accept that this is the fault of Metacritic alone. To all of the naysayers, particularly those who contribute to games journalism in any form that has a score attached, I say we're all to blame. We -- or perhaps more appropriately and less self-aggrandizing, you -- contribute to those numbers in a lot of cases. If you're not comfortable with franchises ending on account of your words and scores, I have a simple message for you: 

Give every game a perfect score, a zero score or better yet, no score at all.

 

The future of Metacritic?
Metacritic: The future

That may sound a bit cynical, but the Quantitative Cultural Zeitgeist will be rendered impotent if there are no numbers feeding into it. I've read some journalists argue that their reviews (and the scores that are a part of them) are nothing more than opinion. Like it or not, collectively, your opinions determine the fate of developers, new and existing intellectual properties, and the industry at large.

For now, though, seeing a strategically-selected piece of my work on Metacritic marks a teenage dream realized. That awkward excerpt from my Street Fighter X Tekken review may be the first and last time I see my opinion in the same arena as Game Informer and IGN, but I'll take it.

 
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Comments (5)
Default_picture
April 14, 2012

Congrats, Tristan. I totally get where you're coming from. You've written plenty of reviews, but seeing your score alongside the big guy's for the first time must definitely give you a warm and fuzzy. 

To be totally honest, I've always checked out GameRankings instead, because I've always found it easier to find a specific pub's score, and from there find out who reviewed the game. If I knew their tastes were similar to mine that it would influence my decision to purchase or not.

Congrats again, and I'm sure it won't be the last time you'll be a number. ;)

Trit_warhol
April 14, 2012

Thanks, Danny. Huge warm and fuzzy (complete with awkward hand movements and screaming).

There's a select few reviewers that I agree with often, and I find that particular pubs are more forgiving or brutal on the whole. I used to go with GameSpot and Giant Bomb for reviews, but now I usually buy games that I'm interested in regardless of trusted writers' opinions or metascore. That approach has yielded a few disasters though (Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City being the most recent example).

Default_picture
April 20, 2012

Congrats, dude. And congrats on getting front-paged again. That's two in a row and three of your last five. Keep 'em coming!

Trit_warhol
April 20, 2012

Thanks, Jason. Will do.

Default_picture
April 24, 2012

Metacritic  crushes creativity under its corporate thumb. The website has been horrible for Gaming. At least in my opinion. Cool you're happy though. I'm happy for anyone who does something that makes them happy. Racoon City a 10 eh? I bet Capcom was happy, considering the thrashing the game has received.

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