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Games Journalism! Wainwright/Florence/Tomb Raider/Eurogamer/Libel Threats/Doritos

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drkOne

Member
Reddit has a thing against Gawker, wether justified or not, it isn't simply blind hate. If Gawker had just left Reddit alone to begin with you wouldn't be in that position. As it stands, even if Kotaku is separate from Gawker, giving Kotaku hits will benefit Gawker, which Reddit won't do.

Also, Kotaku has a stigma going for it on a couple of communities. I think it's pretty cool that you're here discussing this stuff with us, and it really has improved the image I had of Kotaku. I'm pretty sure a lot of people on GAF liked Totilo pre-Kotaku, and then it just turned to, "eh, he's on Kotaku now, don't care".
No matter what you do, some people will still hate you, I doubt there's one website that someone on GAF won't come and argue about how bad it is, but I think you should take into consideration some of the stuff people criticize about Kotaku, as you guys have a good staff behind it. I'm pretty sure some of the freedom is taken away by the big corporation behind it, which without knowing any better, I'd say is my main problem with Kotaku.

Anyway, good too see you hanging around, Jason.
 
The PA Report wrote an editorial that covers some of the topics discussed: Bad linking, plagiarism, and re-writes: how game journalism is its own worst enemy

...re-write journalism continues to make up the majority of the stories you read on most sites.

It’s nearly unfair to point out examples, because this is how we as news gathering organizations work in game reporting. We find a good story, re-write it, sometimes we add a thought or two or a snarky caption, and the work is done. Every so often there is correct attribution.

If you want to know how truly bad it can get though, boy do I have fun examples.
 

Rufus

Member
Hasn't he announced that he'll address it eventually? It's not like there's anything particularly illuminating (or appeasing) that he could say, anyway.

Also, start using these ' instead of ´ , it's starting to bug me.
 

Ezi0

Member
Didn't Microsoft put Halo 4 double XP codes on Mountain Dew and Doritos products? I don't see what's wrong with Geoff appearing next to them if he was talking about Halo 4.
 

jschreier

Member
The PA Report wrote an editorial that covers some of the topics discussed: Bad linking, plagiarism, and re-writes: how game journalism is its own worst enemy

Good piece. I'm glad Ben brought up my Gabe story.

The solution isn't "don't aggregate news!" The solution is to be considerate and generous when you do have to aggregate, to give a prominent link to the original story and to make sure you're not taking more than one or two quotes from the interviewer. (with some exceptions, of course)

When I aggregate, I try to always encourage readers to go read the original source. IE: http://kotaku.com/5967657/theres-a-hilarious-reason-they-called-the-game-warface

We've also been doing more and more aggregation by just blipping stories in the Kotaku sidebar, which is essentially a way of saying "go read this!"
 

NateDrake

Member
Good piece. I'm glad Ben brought up my Gabe story.

The solution isn't "don't aggregate news!" The solution is to be considerate and generous when you do have to aggregate, to give a prominent link to the original story and to make sure you're not taking more than one or two quotes from the interviewer. (with some exceptions, of course)

When I aggregate, I try to always encourage readers to go read the original source. IE: http://kotaku.com/5967657/theres-a-hilarious-reason-they-called-the-game-warface

We've also been doing more and more aggregation by just blipping stories in the Kotaku sidebar, which is essentially a way of saying "go read this!"

So basically do what Go Nintendo does? They give a small bit of the story and link back to the original source.
 

Shaneus

Member
We've also been doing more and more aggregation by just blipping stories in the Kotaku sidebar, which is essentially a way of saying "go read this!"
That's probably a good way of doing it as well. Don't give it a full article's worth of publicity and space, but make sure it's in people's peripheral in case they might be interested.

Jason: Is there a post you made in this thread about said Gabe story? I'm curious.
 

Oersted

Member
Hasn't he announced that he'll address it eventually? It's not like there's anything particularly illuminating (or appeasing) that he could say, anyway.

There is a whole thread about it.

So basically do what Go Nintendo does? They give a small bit of the story and link back to the original source.

Shouldn´t this be a standard everywhere? Yeah some minor site maybe can´t do this, but is it really worth being mentioned when its done?

Don´t take it personal Jason ;)
 

jschreier

Member
So basically do what Go Nintendo does? They give a small bit of the story and link back to the original source.

Sometimes. (Although Go Nintendo sometimes just copy/pastes entire articles, which is rather disconcerting.)

There's really no one hard/fast rule. It depends on the news. Like, for example, if IGN suddenly posted every single detail and tons of photos of Durango, we'd probably want to get all of that info up on our site. We'd link prominently, of course, but we'd be doing a disservice to our readers not to get huge news like that up in its entirety.

But often, I think a blip is good enough. "Hey, go read this cool story we found!" For example: http://kotaku.com/5968491/

This is another good example: http://kotaku.com/5968162/rockstar-wants-to-connect-all-the-grand-theft-auto-cities-in-one-big-world We take one cool piece of info out of an interview and then direct readers to go read the source material for the rest.

I'm working on a very large piece for Monday (a profile on Obsidian Entertainment) and it will be interesting to see how other sites aggregate it. Worth paying attention to, if you're interested in this sort of thing.
 

Syriel

Member
The issue I have with aggregation is a lack of sourcing, not Reddit etc.

I've seen stories I've written (and others, of course) aggregated on other so-called "big" industry sites without ANY credit.

As if they've magically found the same story.

That shit stinks.

There's plenty of sites (including large ones) which have no issue with taking stuff and not attributing it. Some will go so far as to copy text and screens and just crop the screens even further so the watermark isn't visible.

If you're going to copy stuff, you should at least bother to verify it yourself.

I've been writing about games for awhile, which means my byline is trusted. Aggregators will lift what I write because they know I won't screw up. But by the same token, that gives me (and anyone like me) an enormous amount of power because we could publish any rumor we wanted and the aggregators would run with it as if it was theirs.

That's how misinformation spreads.

There's nothing wrong with aggregation as a concept, but anyone who aggregates should verify everything with the original source (not the original reporter) before re-publishing.

That's journalism 101.
 

Tash

Member
I need an auto-summarize which sums out all the posts while I sleep. Totally impossible to keep up. How are you guys doing it?!
 

JABEE

Member
There's plenty of sites (including large ones) which have no issue with taking stuff and not attributing it. Some will go so far as to copy text and screens and just crop the screens even further so the watermark isn't visible.

If you're going to copy stuff, you should at least bother to verify it yourself.

I've been writing about games for awhile, which means my byline is trusted. Aggregators will lift what I write because they know I won't screw up. But by the same token, that gives me (and anyone like me) an enormous amount of power because we could publish any rumor we wanted and the aggregators would run with it as if it was theirs.

That's how misinformation spreads.

There's nothing wrong with aggregation as a concept, but anyone who aggregates should verify everything with the original source (not the original reporter) before re-publishing.

That's journalism 101.

Yes. This is why when you see sites hopping on these stories so quickly after someone else published it, you have to wonder if there is a journalistic process at the sites or if it's a free-for-all to get all of the hits you can get. When sites like Polygon or Kotaku quickly publish information they find on forums or twitter accounts, it doesn't seem like they have very stringent guidelines. In some ways, I think that is an abuse of power. You shouldn't post first, look for sourcing later. Slapping "Rumor" on something you didn't find yourself doesn't absolve you from the hit in credibility your site should take for jumping the gun along with the origin.

It has become so competitive and common to perform that journalistic practice that I believe the quality and credibility of the information being passed on by large outlets is tarnished. This competition to be first isn't exclusive to games journalism either. It has been the case with almost all areas of reporting since the increased popularity of blogs and the internet. There is no longer as much value in reliability and credibility of reporting.

I don't really believe that passing on bad information is something that would actually harm any major blog or outlet. Gaming enthusiasts have been conditioned to expect this. These sites profit and put credible sites out of business by having lax sourcing requirements.
 

NateDrake

Member
Yes. This is why when you see sites hopping on these stories so quickly after someone else published it, you have to wonder if there is a journalistic process at the sites or if it's a free-for-all to get all of the hits you can get. When sites like Polygon or Kotaku quickly publish information they find on forums or twitter accounts, it doesn't seem like they have very stringent guidelines. In some ways, I think that is an abuse of power. You shouldn't post first, look for sourcing later. Slapping "Rumor" on something you didn't find yourself doesn't absolve you from the hit in credibility your site should take for jumping the gun along with the origin.

It has become so competitive and common to perform that journalistic practice that I believe the quality and credibility of the information being passed on by large outlets is tarnished. This competition to be first isn't exclusive to games journalism either. It has been the case with almost all areas of reporting since the increased popularity of blogs and the internet. There is no longer as much value in reliability and credibility of reporting.

I don't really believe that passing on bad information is something that would actually harm any major blog or outlet. Gaming enthusiasts have been conditioned to expect this. These sites profit and put credible sites out of business by having lax sourcing requirements.
That right there is the problem. Sites like to use the word 'Rumor' as a method to coverup bullshit. If it is fake, oh well, they said it was only a rumor. If it is true, then they are great.

Too many sites use Rumor stories just for hits -- like that site that claims their source 'Geno' knows what PS4 will launch with, what MS is planning with the next Xbox, and what games Nintendo will show at E3. If they are correct with any of it or even remotely close they think they are gods. If they are wrong they say stuff changed or the info just wasn't accurate and all is forgotten.
 

bernardobri

Steve, the dog with no powers that we let hang out with us all for some reason
Still nothing from Keighly? Good lord he's pathetic. Shouldn't say I'm surprised.

Not trying to justify his position, but he's in the middle of a no-win situation, so you can't expect him to get out of this mess just by an essay.
 

Rufus

Member
Not trying to justify his position, but he's in the middle of a no-win situation, so you can't expect him to get out of this mess just by an essay.
.

If, against my personal expectation, he manages to say anything that doesn't have any danger of exploding in his face while also assuaging the sharpest critics, he should probably go into politics. It's not going to happen.
 

Shaneus

Member
Not trying to justify his position, but he's in the middle of a no-win situation, so you can't expect him to get out of this mess just by an essay.
True, but when you say something like this:
Has this been posted?

Keighley responded the other day. Kinda.

keighleydoritosgateburis.jpg
You sort of expect him to have delivered *something* within the past month. I mean, I'd say this whole thing has slowed down a *lot*. But that's just me going on the fact that we've had less than 30 posts in this thread in the last week, compared to how many were being logged prior to that.
 
What are you expecting Geoff to say? May I go into the future? The response will be something bland like that:

"In the videogame industry we have to judge our passion and integrity against business realities. Like it or not, those ad money allows us to bring you new and premier content.".

He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.
 

excaliburps

Press - MP1st.com
Sometimes. (Although Go Nintendo sometimes just copy/pastes entire articles, which is rather disconcerting.)

There's really no one hard/fast rule. It depends on the news. Like, for example, if IGN suddenly posted every single detail and tons of photos of Durango, we'd probably want to get all of that info up on our site. We'd link prominently, of course, but we'd be doing a disservice to our readers not to get huge news like that up in its entirety.

But often, I think a blip is good enough. "Hey, go read this cool story we found!" For example: http://kotaku.com/5968491/

This is another good example: http://kotaku.com/5968162/rockstar-wants-to-connect-all-the-grand-theft-auto-cities-in-one-big-world We take one cool piece of info out of an interview and then direct readers to go read the source material for the rest.

I'm working on a very large piece for Monday (a profile on Obsidian Entertainment) and it will be interesting to see how other sites aggregate it. Worth paying attention to, if you're interested in this sort of thing.

Sadly, there is no rule when it comes to proper sourcing and whatnot. But if the writer's foundation is sound (ie: trained properly), they should know to always give credit to the original source of the news and not the middle-man. One example is, say, Kotaku found a piece on Polygon, you write the news up, source Polygon but credit Kotaku too for bringing it up.

Same with interviews. You read it, pick the part that interests you or is fitting for the site, and then source them for the whole interview. One example of this is Schreier's piece on Obsidian. I got what I liked the most (talk about KoToR 3), and then linked to the entire piece.

It's sad that more and more sites abandon this and just copy-and-paste everything. I've made some mistakes along the way, but generally, I try and do the job properly.

Kotaku might get a lot of flack from GAF for a ton of things, but plagiarism? I haven't seen it there that much -- or at all. There is a "very" big UK-based site that thrives on plagiarism and misquoting interviews, which a ton of people at GAF know which site I'm talking about.

Regarding being "first," it's unfortunate that a lot of sites post stories without verifying, but that's the nature of the business. I mean, at the end of the day, people get their info for free and sites do need to pay their writers (middle to big tier ones, at least).

As for me, I try to verify something first before running something -- especially if it's "too big" and X site had the scoop. Not a leak, mind, but a scoop. Not to say I've never made mistakes, but generally, I try and verify something before putting it up.

What are you expecting Geoff to say? May I go into the future? The response will be something bland like that:

"In the videogame industry we have to judge our passion and integrity against business realities. Like it or not, those ad money allows us to bring you new and premier content.".

He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.

Yeah, I don't see what GAF expects Geoff to say. Should he be apologetic? If so, for what? The image showed him behind Doritos and Mountain Dew, but that's not a sin, nor did he "sell out," in my opinion. I mean, the event was sponsored by Pepsi and Halo had a long standing relationship with them.
 

Goldmund

Member
What are you expecting Geoff to say? May I go into the future? The response will be something bland like that:

"In the videogame industry we have to judge our passion and integrity against business realities. Like it or not, those ad money allows us to bring you new and premier content.".

He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.
That's the thing, though, isn't it? You don't need to be a bastion of personal integrity or a journalist to have at least some sense of decency and integrity. Geoff Keighley clearly doesn't.

I'm not expecting him to say anything more than what you've divined. He has remained and will remain true to his character, a questionable one at that, but still.

Yeah, I don't see what GAF expects Geoff to say. Should he be apologetic? If so, for what? The image showed him behind Doritos and Mountain Dew, but that's not a sin, nor did he "sell out," in my opinion. I mean, the event was sponsored by Pepsi and Halo had a long standing relationship with them.

It's not about the picture, it's about his interview/infomercial spiel:

Geoff Keighley said:
Part of what I'm talking about today is the double XP program that Mountain Dew and Doritos are bringing back which actually allow gamers to rank up inside of War Games in Halo 4 by purchasing Mountain Dew or Doritos. So, that's a great example of a brand saying: "Hey, we actually want to give benefit and value to gamers." So if you buy, uh, you know, uh, if you buy, uh, Mountain Dew, you buy Doritos, you get a code, you go to dewxp dot com or doritosxp dot com, enter that code, link it to your gamer tag and then you're gonna get some experience in the game. So, it's-it's, uh, it's a good partnership.
 

Jackpot

Banned
He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.

I always viewed Geoff as on par with a TV presenter. Only way you can criticise him is if he claims he's not beholden to sponsors or that he is an journalist.
 

Shaneus

Member
What are you expecting Geoff to say? May I go into the future? The response will be something bland like that:

"In the videogame industry we have to judge our passion and integrity against business realities. Like it or not, those ad money allows us to bring you new and premier content.".

He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.
I'm expecting him to elaborate on "I have a lot to say". If he hadn't said that, I don't think I'd expect him to say anything.
 

kafiend

Member
I'm expecting him to elaborate on "I have a lot to say". If he hadn't said that, I don't think I'd expect him to say anything.

Sometimes people say they have a massive dick and threaten to wave it around in public while silently praying that nobody asks to actually see it.
 

Curufinwe

Member
What are you expecting Geoff to say? May I go into the future? The response will be something bland like that:

"In the videogame industry we have to judge our passion and integrity against business realities. Like it or not, those ad money allows us to bring you new and premier content.".

He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.

His own twitter profile says "videogame journalist."

@geoffkeighley

Videogame journalist Geoff Keighley, host of Spike TV's GTTV
 

Oersted

Member
What are you expecting Geoff to say? May I go into the future? The response will be something bland like that:

"In the videogame industry we have to judge our passion and integrity against business realities. Like it or not, those ad money allows us to bring you new and premier content.".

He is right. Geoff is really not at fault here, he NEVER pretended to be a journalist and a bastion of personal integrity.

You could have gone to his webpage or to his Twitterpage to prove yourself wrong. As a matter of fact, that whole " Keighley never pretended to be a journalist" is just trolling at this point. For a start, watch the interview where this whole thing started. The industry leading journalist explains you how to become like him.


Disclaimer: I am IGN's mobile games editor. Thought NeoGAF might be curious about the winners. IGN's overall picks for 2012 Game of the Year are now live:

http://www.***.com/wikis/best-of-2012/Best_Overall_Game

WINNERS:

Action: Dishonored
Adventure: The Walking Dead
Fighting: Persona 4 Arena
Platfom: New Super Mario Bros. U
Puzzle: Crashmo
Racing: Trials Evolution
RPG: Mass Effect 3
Shooter: Far Cry 3
Sports: FIFA Soccer 13
Strategy: XCOM
Multiplayer: Halo 4
Graphics: Halo 4
Music: Journey
Sound: Halo 4
Story/Writing: The Walking Dead

BEST OVERALL GAME: Journey


Great timing.
 

jschreier

Member
While ME3 would certainly not be my pick for RPG of the year (that'd be The Last Story), it's infantile to pull out the "omg lol game journalism" card because you disagree with an outlet's choice of awards.

And when are you people going to stop harping on Keighley? I thought you wanted to discuss actual issues in games journalism (which is why I'm still here), not continuously berate someone because he chose not to comment on this controversy.
 
While ME3 would certainly not be my pick for RPG of the year (that'd be The Last Story), it's infantile to pull out the "omg lol game journalism" card because you disagree with an outlet's choice of awards.

And when are you people going to stop harping on Keighley? I thought you wanted to discuss actual issues in games journalism (which is why I'm still here), not continuously berate someone because he chose not to comment on this controversy.

I don't think it's a your taste is bad but rather there's a conflict of interest seeing as how one of their employees actually was in the game.
 

Oersted

Member
While ME3 would certainly not be my pick for RPG of the year (that'd be The Last Story), it's infantile to pull out the "omg lol game journalism" card because you disagree with an outlet's choice of awards.

And when are you people going to stop harping on Keighley? I thought you wanted to discuss actual issues in games journalism (which is why I'm still here), not continuously berate someone because he chose not to comment on this controversy.

A little reminder:

I thought this thread might as well be appropriate: With the news of IGN including Mass Effect 3 in their GOTY nominees list, they actively demonstrate a severe conflict of interest, given Bioware's inclusion of one of the IGN employees in the selected game. This is a perfect example of the seemingly corrupt relationship between pubs/devs/PR and journalists, yet are other gaming journalists and media going to comment on this? Or at least point it out and how it actively deteriorate the reputation of all gaming journalism?

IGN doesn't even make the conflict of interest explicit in their nomination. If any gaming journalists want to be taken seriously as professionals, they need to talk about and exhibit reflection on this "controversy".


Or to quote your response:

Jessica Chobot is a voice actor for Mass Effect 3. So it's kinda gross that she previewed it two weeks ago: http://g4.tv/wR5heD

You are absolutly right, its kinda gross that a fulltime-IGN- employee previewed Mass Effect and was also a part of the game. I would go only a little bit further and say it adds up to the misery that this game won also an award by IGN.


On the Geoff Keighley case:

He, being a "journalist", was doing a commercial disguised as journalistic talk. Than shit happened. Weeks later, Keighley said he will comment on this after VGA. Didn´t happen so far. Surprisingly, we talked about this in a thread called "Games Journalism! Wainwright/Florence/Tomb Raider/Eurogamer/Libel Threats/Doritos ". Not only because this was the topic in beginning. It is an actual issue. It is an issue that the industry leading journalist is breaching ethical conduct. It is an issue that noone nails him down. And that he won´t comment on this. It is an issue. And this won´t disappear if we always yell "but the bigger picture". The bigger picture has its pieces and Geoff Keighley is one of them. But if you want to discuss other pieces, feel free to say why and and name them. Go ahead.
 

Game Guru

Member
I don't think it's a your taste is bad but rather there's a conflict of interest seeing as how one of their employees actually was in the game.

To be fair, Mass Effect 3 is likely going to get most of the Best RPG rewards this year, since that is usually a reward given to either Bioware or Bethesda at this point and Bethesda lacks an RPG entry this year. I would like it if we got out of that trend, but more people are going to have played Mass Effect 3 instead of something like The Last Story, and Mass Effect 3 getting the reward would be expected.
 
To be fair, Mass Effect 3 is likely going to get most of the Best RPG rewards this year, since that is usually a reward given to either Bioware or Bethesda at this point and Bethesda lacks an RPG entry this year. I would like it if we got out of that trend, but more people are going to have played Mass Effect 3 instead of something like The Last Story, and Mass Effect 3 getting the reward would be expected.

I really have no opinion on this either way personally TBH...I was just reminding Jason why people are up in arms about this.
 

jschreier

Member
You are absolutly right, its kinda gross that a fulltime-IGN- employee previewed Mass Effect and was also a part of the game. I would go only a little bit further and say it adds up to the misery that this game won also an award by IGN.

Dude, did you not see my link? It's Chobot previewing Mass Effect for G4TV. Why would a full-time employee of IGN be previewing games for G4? I know you posted an interview earlier of Chobot calling herself a full-time IGN writer years ago, but again, I'm pretty sure she's a freelancer (based on the fact that she's doing work for G4). And hey, if you're really that curious about this, why don't you just ask her?

REGARDLESS, whether Chobot is full-time or freelance or just hangs out at IGN's offices during her lunch breaks, I think there's only really a conflict of interest if she was involved with selecting IGN's Best RPG. Do you know if she was? If not, how is it a conflict of interest? I'm curious to hear specific arguments here.
 

Foffy

Banned
Dude, did you not see my link? It's Chobot previewing Mass Effect for G4TV. Why would a full-time employee of IGN be previewing games for G4?

She's married to someone who works at G4TV..

You make a fair point if she had nothing to do with the IGN RPG nominations though.
 

Oersted

Member
Dude, did you not see my link? It's Chobot previewing Mass Effect for G4TV. Why would a full-time employee of IGN be previewing games for G4? I know you posted an interview earlier of Chobot calling herself a full-time IGN writer years ago, but again, I'm pretty sure she's a freelancer (based on the fact that she's doing work for G4). And hey, if you're really that curious about this, why don't you just ask her?

REGARDLESS, whether Chobot is full-time or freelance or just hangs out at IGN's offices during her lunch breaks, I think there's only really a conflict of interest if she was involved with selecting IGN's Best RPG. Do you know if she was? If not, how is it a conflict of interest? I'm curious to hear specific arguments here.

Maybe a example makes it easier for you:


A face of New York Times(and therefore obviously hired by them) , presenting NYT, appears in a Pepsi commercial. One year later, in the " New York Times- products of the year"- list Pepsi appears as the best drink. The conflict of interest is not necessarly there for the face, but on the side of New York Times. Or in this real case, IGN.
 

Lancehead

Member
REGARDLESS, whether Chobot is full-time or freelance or just hangs out at IGN's offices during her lunch breaks, I think there's only really a conflict of interest if she was involved with selecting IGN's Best RPG. Do you know if she was? If not, how is it a conflict of interest? I'm curious to hear specific arguments here.

You have this backwards. Chobot's position with IGN determines whether there's any conflict of interest REGARDLESS of whether she's involved in selecting IGN's Best RPG. The latter condition only makes it blatant or not.
 

jschreier

Member
Maybe a example makes it easier for you:


A face of New York Times(and therefore obviously hired by them) , presenting NYT, appears in a Pepsi commercial. One year later, in the " New York Times- products of the year"- list Pepsi appears as the best drink. The conflict of interest is not necessarly there for the face, but on the side of New York Times. Or in this real case, IGN.

Well I don't think the NYT is a great parallel, because it's a newspaper, as opposed to IGN, an entertainment organization with multiple branches.

Here's a different example: say an ESPN television broadcaster stars in a commercial for Gatorade, while ESPN.com's editorial staff does an article ranking the top ten sports drinks. Is that a conflict of interest? I don't think so. So long as that ESPN broadcaster has nothing to do with the editorial side of things, I don't see the problem there.

ALL THAT SAID, when it comes to conflict of interest, appearance can be just as important as reality, so it might have been ideal for IGN to add a note disclosing that they've paid someone who worked on ME3. But there are bigger problems in the industry, I think. For example: the fact that game journalists/reporters/hosts/whatever are starring in video games in the first place.
 

zkylon

zkylewd
The big problem here is Bioware being so creatively dead that they thought putting Jessica Chobot in the game was a good idea in the first place.

I fired her just to get her hackjob of a face (in-game, she's quite lovely in real life) out of my ship.
 
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