But now the drought begins
The game is budget-priced already. Comes off silly.
It is already 40 bucks for a brand new retail game.
What did you expect ?
My short review: 8/10
Fun and cute. Camera can be a pain in the you know what. Some repetition. Still great and you should play it.
I gave up on anything GB does with Nintendo a while ago
Am I in the minority in that the price should never be part of a review? Focus on the game, I'll worry about the price.
I also don't think price should ever really be a factor in a review. Prices change all the time. In two years this game could be $10 or it could be $200, but the scores reflect the $40 price now. Do all reviews inherently take the price into account, or just this one?
At the end of the day, I'd rather have more reviewers take pricing and value proposition into account than fewer.The fuss over the price is funny when you take into account people paying above premium for broken games with zero complaints.
Looking at the GB review, there's still plenty of focus on the content, and the review doesn't stop you from evaluating the price on your own as well.Am I in the minority in that the price should never be part of a review? Focus on the game, I'll worry about the price.
And apparently $40 or being labelled a "budget-priced" game is still too much in Dan's opinion. Which is a completely fair criticism and should absolutely be factored into a review, so good on him.
Ye, they are. Their quicklooks is embarrassing when it comes to Nintendo games too. Jeff is the worst. I like Vinny but he is not enough for me to start back watching them.
I wish Nintendo would just let me pre-load this already!
Is it just me or are giant bombs Nintendo reviews always significantly lower than everyone else's
Why is this lol? It seems like the kind of thing worth noting especially with Nintendo games because they are the ones that rarely drop in price within any time near release.
Is it just me or are giant bombs Nintendo reviews always significantly lower than everyone else's
How is the camera a pain when you have full 360° movement and the game is about manipulating the camera to solve the puzzle of where to go/how to get there?
Don't have time to read reviews right now, how long is the game supposed to be? I assumed $40 was already taking into account a relatively short experience, but even at that price it stills feels a little too expensive? So, about how many hours of playtime are we talking about here, roughly?
But now the drought begins
I don't necessarily agree with the reviewer's assessment of the value (having not played the game), but I think all reviews should take into account the value proposition put forth by a game's initial pricing. How it devalues in price (or perhaps rises in Nintedo situations) is irrelevant to how valuable it is now.I also don't think price should ever really be a factor in a review. Prices change all the time. In two years this game could be $10 or it could be $200, but the scores reflect the $40 price now. Do all reviews inherently take the price into account, or just this one?
Nah. I believe that too. Critics shouldn't make assumptions of value for me. Talk about the game, movie, book etc. and I'll decide if it's worth my money.Am I in the minority in that the price should never be part of a review? Focus on the game, I'll worry about the price.
Has Toad ever had his own game before? Be interesting to see if he can carry this.
going by what a quick internet search 6-9 hours depending on skill to 100%.
But now the drought begins
Ye, they are. Their quicklooks is embarrassing when it comes to Nintendo games too. Jeff is the worst. I like Vinny but he is not enough for me to start back watching them.
I gave up on anything GB does with Nintendo a while ago
The last couple of Nintendo reviews were written by Dan Ryckert (he mostly lead the Quick Looks, too), who's quite a big Nintendo fan. Maybe you should take another look.No surprise that Giantbomb is lowballing here - their nintendo-coverage is absolutely ridiculous and has been that way for a long time. The other reviews looks about what should be expected I guess. Sucks that this wont arrive in Europe before next year though![]()
Surprised by the price-complains, I would guess this takes way longer to complete than the general 60 dollar AAA-game (and it also doesnt ship broken).
It is a puzzle game.No 5/5, 10/10, 100% or 10's yet?
I thought this would get very high scores myself.
And apparently $40 or being labelled a "budget-priced" game is still too much in Dan's opinion. Which is a completely fair criticism and should absolutely be factored into a review, so good on him.
But now the drought begins
I also don't think price should ever really be a factor in a review. Prices change all the time. In two years this game could be $10 or it could be $200, but the scores reflect the $40 price now. Do all reviews inherently take the price into account, or just this one?
I don't necessarily agree with the reviewer's assessment of the value (having not played the game), but I think all reviews should take into account the value proposition put forth by a game's initial pricing. How it devalues in price (or perhaps rises in Nintedo situations) is irrelevant to how valuable it is now.
It is a puzzle game.
I think the only puzzle game to ever get 5/5 is Tetris.
That being said if the low is 6/10 then I think I will enjoy it.
Source: http://www.polygon.com/2014/12/1/7312633/captain-toad-treasure-tracker-review-wii-uPolygon said:For anybody else, Captain Toad's weird little experiment would be an afterthought. But Nintendo's exercise in digging has found something pretty special - an action puzzle game that succeeds on charm and smarts, rather than reflexes and spectacle. - Arthus Geis
8.5/10
I don't mind price being brought up into the context of the review so long as its a constant. Unfortunately its always done selectively. It always seems to be these mid-tier kind of games. Full price big budget games that are over in 8 hours get a pass, as do $10 indie titles that end in 2 hours and offer no replay value.
err, shouldn't the people who want to buy the game when it's $10 actually read the damn reviews so they can see if it says something like "great game but a little overpriced so wait until it's $10 HINT HINT HINT HINT READER FROM THE FUTURE IF IT'S $10 THIS LINE APPLIES TO YOU!!!!!!" and if it does then they can rub together a few braincells to decipher the meaning of these ancient occult writings?
or are we going with "once something is factored into a review, it is permanently etched in stone and so anything you say that might not be true by 2077 must never be spoken aloud"?
Selective memory is a thingIt's just you. Most of the games have been given 4 or 5 stars.
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