Shake Appeal
Member
Good post. Eurogamer sometimes split reviews and cover the multiplayer a week or two after the game has seen public release, but even then it feels cursory, and you can tell their hearts aren't in it. And how do you review an MMO properly, for instance? After ten hours? Twenty? After its first expansion? After a thousand hours?Popeck said:The problem with this kind of review sessions is of course that you usually don't get a good picture of multiplayer or any online components. I think you might have noticed a thing or two about journalists and their gaming skills.
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And yet the perception of multiplayer is highly related to how well you do in it.
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I rarely see good, thorough analysis about multiplayer in game reviews.
Fortunately, Reach is one of those one or two games that come along each year were reviews are completely irrelevant to me.






