Ass of Can Whooping
Gold Member
I am trying to figure out what's going on here.
If this is over inflation of scores by media or justified??
If it's gonna be new normal going forward, I will adjust my expectations accordingly.
I am trying to figure out what's going on here.
If this is over inflation of scores by media or justified??
If it's gonna be new normal going forward, I will adjust my expectations accordingly.
Which is the cunt reviewer who dropped it to 90
Find me his email address
It’ll go to 89 just watchWhich is the cunt reviewer who dropped it to 90
Find me his email address
are sony games the most reviewed games ever ? i dont see MS and Nintendo games having 125+ reviews ever.
are sony games the most reviewed games ever ? i dont see MS and Nintendo games having 125+ reviews ever.
You voted 96-100, so... It under-delivered from what you expected?It's a taste thingy as well.
Assuming 87 for first part is accurate score, going 4 points higher on metascore would need game changing improvements. At least that's what I expect.
Based on the actual content of most reviews, it should be in the 80s (I predicted 85-90 in the poll), if review standards were consistent. Most of them talk about how it's more of the same. I'm not sure what it does differently to deserve a score that's any higher than the previous two. Obviously my mindset could change once I actually play it (sometime next year), but I have yet to see anything that makes it stand out over Remastered or Miles Morales.It’ll go to 89 just watch
You gave gaming journalist a colorful irreverent polished superhero game featuring their childhood favorite superhero Spider-Man complete with the token superfluous accessibility options, the token 60fps mode, the token ugly female lead and wow you get to play as her even! It’s tailor fucking made for gaming journalist to eat up so yeah there may be some bias present to explain what you’re saying.Based on the actual content of most reviews, it should be in the 80s (I predicted 85-90 in the poll), if review standards were consistent. Most of them talk about how it's more of the same. I'm not sure what it does differently to deserve a score that's any higher than the previous two. Obviously my mindset could change once I actually play it (sometime next year), but I have yet to see anything that makes it stand out over Remastered or Miles Morales.
You gave gaming journalist a colorful irreverent polished superhero game featuring their childhood favorite superhero Spider-Man complete with the token superfluous accessibility options, the token 60fps mode, the token ugly female lead and wow you get to play as her even! It’s tailor fucking made for gaming journalist to eat up so yeah there may be some bias present to explain what you’re saying.
It’s still got like ~25 ish more reviews to come in by my count. Could very well dip under 90
Yeah that’s also possibleOr it could go back up to 91 or even 92
How would that be possible though?Or it could go back up to 91 or even 92
How would that be possible though?
Sequels are more of the same and many of them scored as good, or even better, than their predecessors. The game doesn't need to be docked points for doing something that it did well before, but even better now. That's .....silly.Based on the actual content of most reviews, it should be in the 80s (I predicted 85-90 in the poll), if review standards were consistent. Most of them talk about how it's more of the same. I'm not sure what it does differently to deserve a score that's any higher than the previous two. Obviously my mindset could change once I actually play it (sometime next year), but I have yet to see anything that makes it stand out over Remastered or Miles Morales.
How would that be possible though?
That's why I said, if review standards were consistent. In the past, if a game we're largely derivative/too similar to its immediate predecessor, it would frequently garner a score that is lower than it equal to that predecessor.Sequels are more of the same and many of them scored as good, or even better, than their predecessors. The game doesn't need to be docked points for doing something that it did well before, but even better now. That's .....silly.
It got its high marks for a reason, and based on everything they've shown, and those who've played it that aren't writing numbers for a publication, it deserves those accolades.
Then it's a pointless thing to take issue with. The one consistency that counts is "is Spider-Man 2 better than the games that came before it". Reviewers seem to think it is, so that's what matters. Individual numbers are only a major deal to people who focus on that and not what a game does better than it did before to warrant additional praise.That's why I said, if review standards were consistent. In the past, if a game we're largely derivative/too similar to its immediate predecessor, it would frequently garner a score that is lower than it equal to that predecessor.
This was also the case with a lot of Nintendo games that were ported from the Wii U to the Switch. Super Mario 3D World, for example, has a 93 metacritic on Wii U, but an 89 on Switch. Despite being the same main game and including a whole new separate game (Bowser's Fury).
Obviously reviewers change and one person might feel differently about a game than another, but that's why there needs to be an actual set of review standards in the review industry. Otherwise they are completely arbitrary without something by which to measure.
I get this... but also there's something to be said about a review which mentions a game is bigger and better than its predecessor and then giving it a lower score. At that point... it's not clear what the sequel is intended to do? completely switch direction?That's why I said, if review standards were consistent. In the past, if a game we're largely derivative/too similar to its immediate predecessor, it would frequently garner a score that is lower than it equal to that predecessor.
This was also the case with a lot of Nintendo games that were ported from the Wii U to the Switch. Super Mario 3D World, for example, has a 93 metacritic on Wii U, but an 89 on Switch. Despite being the same main game and including a whole new separate game (Bowser's Fury).
Obviously reviewers change and one person might feel differently about a game than another, but that's why there needs to be an actual set of review standards in the review industry. Otherwise they are completely arbitrary without something by which to measure.
You don't even know what you are arguing for anymore. People played the game, and gave it a score to match their experience with it. That's it.Sure, but then shouldn't the contents of the review specify what exactly makes it better?
That's why I mentioned the actual content of the reviews. Most of the ones that I've read do not go into any real detail about what makes it any better. They generally describe the gameplay as mostly being the same. And Miles Morales/Remastered already had the graphics and loading improvements, so what's actually better?Then it's a pointless thing to take issue with. The one consistency that counts is "is Spider-Man 2 better than the games that came before it". Reviewers seem to think it is, so that's what matters. Individual numbers are only a major deal to people who focus on that and not what a game does better than it did before to warrant additional praise.
And plenty of reviews have done this to sequels.I get this... but also there's something to be said about a review which mentions a game is bigger and better than its predecessor and then giving it a lower score. At that point... it's not clear what the sequel is intended to do? completely switch direction?
Ign specifically mentions that it "refines the combat". that's the one quote that sticks out, i'm sure they mentioned more specific things, but i'm not going to look at their review again.That's why I mentioned the actual content of the reviews. Most of the ones that I've read do not go into any real detail about what makes it any better. They generally describe the gameplay as mostly being the same. And Miles Morales/Remastered already had the graphics and loading improvements, so what's actually better?
IGN is one of the ones that's actually following what I'm talking about. They gave the previous two a 9, and they gave this one an 8 for being largely the same.Ign specifically mentions that it "refines the combat". that's the one quote that sticks out, i'm sure they mentioned more specific things, but i'm not going to look at their review again.
Interesting,are there that many reviews for just Tears Of The Kingdom or do other Nintendo games get a similar amount of reviewers?Tears of The Kingdom has 152 reviews on MetaCritics.
Interesting,are there that many reviews for just Tears Of The Kingdom or do other Nintendo games get a similar amount of reviewers?
Insomniac devs who stand to lose thousands of dollars in bonuses if it drops below 90:Which is the cunt reviewer who dropped it to 90
Find me his email address
Stevivor:Insomniac devs who stand to lose thousands of dollars in bonuses if it drops below 90:
STOP THE COUNT!
Edge and stevivor right nowInsomniac devs who stand to lose thousands of dollars in bonuses if it drops below 90:
STOP THE COUNT!
You voted 96-100, so... It under-delivered from what you expected?
You talk about consistency yet miss IGN's inconsistencies. The majority of that review praises it, yet docked an additional point mainly because "the world is bigger, but not better". But, they acknowledge the technical love, better combat, better swinging, better story, and increased fun factor.IGN is one of the ones that's actually following what I'm talking about. They gave the previous two a 9, and they gave this one an 8 for being largely the same.
Thank god we still have people asking the important questions:
So I don't know if this has been asked or answered before but: do any of the reviews go into detail on how Spider-Man 2 deals with its protagonists' relationship with the cops?
I just watched Across the Spider-Verse (amazing movie, just as the first one) and fell in love with the character of Miles Morales again. I remembered that Miles had a DLC-turned standalone title of Insomniac's Spider-Man and I started reading reviews from back then. And both Spider-Man 1's and Miles Morales' reception back then was heavily influenced by how they both portrayed their relationship to the police.
Of course, this was at the height of BLM and police brutality was on everyone's mind. A global pandemic, a war of aggression by Russia, a global recession with heavy inflation and now a heating up of the longbrewing tensions in the Levant later, the discussion about police brutality and Black life in the US (and everywhere, really) has almost come to a halt.
But again, both of Insomniac's Spider-Man games before where heavily brought in relation with that discussion when they released. It was a whole thing! But the few reviews I read about the sequel did not mention its policing politics at all. Which makes me wonder: did any review go into that? Or more to the point: what is Spider-Man 2's relationship with the police, police brutality and race politics?
according to Metacritic this is the first game Indiewire has reviewed since Metroid Dread and only the 12th game they’ve reviewed overall? that seems very strange, why it’s not listed as unscored given there doesn’t seem to be any sort of rating now on Spider-Man 2 is the strangest part (comparatively Metroid Dread was given a B which somehow Metacritic says is equivalent to a 75 )Something wrong with the indiwire review because they don’t give it a score in the article and the words don’t match the score on metacritic, which is the exact same score Miles Morales got and there you can see how the words would match a B+.
but yet , they named Spider-Man 2 the best Spider-Man game....IGN is one of the ones that's actually following what I'm talking about. They gave the previous two a 9, and they gave this one an 8 for being largely the same.
according to Metacritic this is the first game Indiewire has reviewed since Metroid Dread and only the 12th game they’ve reviewed overall? that seems very strange, why it’s not listed as unscored given there doesn’t seem to be any sort of rating now on Spider-Man 2 is the strangest part (comparatively Metroid Dread was given a B which somehow Metacritic says is equivalent to a 75 )
the only games they’ve given better than an a B+ to is Demon’s Souls Remake (which got an A- which Metacritic turned into a 91) and Returnal (which got an A which Metacritic turned into a 100)
IndieWire Reviews
Metacritic aggregates music, game, tv, and movie reviews from the leading critics. Only Metacritic.com uses METASCORES, which let you know at a glance how each item was reviewed.www.metacritic.com
The IGN review literally begins with this:You talk about consistency yet miss IGN's inconsistencies. The majority of that review praises it, yet docked an additional point mainly because "the world is bigger, but not better". But, they acknowledge the technical love, better combat, better swinging, better story, and increased fun factor.
That sounds like a largely improved sequel, not a step backwards.
Reading through the review, the only thing I've noticed that they explicitly say is outright better is the story. If the argument is that "everything is mostly the same, but the story is better, therefore the score should be the same or slightly higher," I'm on board with that (which would leave Spider-Man 2 right about at an 89, given that the other two are 87 and 85 respectively). But that would have to carry over throughout all reviews of all games, meaning that no game should have a much lower review score than another game that is largely the same. Which goes back to my argument about consistency of reviews.With Marvel’s Spider-Man 2, Insomniac has the unenviable task of following up two riveting superhero fantasies full of excitement and heart. While that may sound like a good problem to have, the question becomes where do you go from there? Well, its answer is to double down. Double down on Spider-Men. Double down on the size of the map. Double down on explosive action sequences. In doing so, the studio has crafted another consistently exciting rollercoaster ride and the best story of the series yet – but stand the original alongside this sequel in other ways, and it can look a bit like two Spider-Man games pointing at each other. The excellent combat hasn’t gotten old, but it is largely the same fun as before, and despite that larger map, most of the open-world activities found within it are in desperate need of evolution. The result is a blockbuster in the most modern sense of the word: undeniably thrilling for long stretches, but by the numbers for others. Despite a couple of new tricks up its sleeve, Spider-Man 2’s combat is very familiar – it doesn’t have that new suit smell anymore, but it still feels incredibly comfy to slip back into.
TotK is an outlier from what I can tell. Most big Nintendo games are between 100-130.Interesting,are there that many reviews for just Tears Of The Kingdom or do other Nintendo games get a similar amount of reviewers?
Ask, and it will be given to you (matthew 7,7)Amazing. Has this been cleared up yet?
I seriously doubt they brought Spider-Cop back