I want well-researched, well-written, interesting articles. I feel like a lot of people just treat games journalism like garbage no matter what. That's definitely not the case.
I think that's what everyone wants.
I hope everyone forgives me for making an even larger point than perhaps this thread is purely about, but I think it all ties together:
Game Journalists two biggest problems are as follows:
a.) Credibility
b.) Writing Quality
The credibility factor usually arises in three scenarios: when a major site attempts to analyze a big piece of news about the industry in a way that is pretty transparently in deference to a particular company, when reviewers across the board are seen as refusing to critically analyze a title (i.e. AAA titles and their notoriously consistent 8.0-10.0 scale), or when a site is known for posting salacious and unfounded rumours.
The credibility factor does not go away by a well written piece like what is in the OP. I think we do want that, and Polygon should be commended, but it's an easy place to be - you're not siding with any groups of fans over the other, you're not taking sides with any company over another, you're not forcing yourself in a position to choose between consumers or your advertisers.
Articles like that in the OP do go some way to diffusing the writing quality complaints (that is to say I've read a fair bit into the article, although not til the end, and it seems fairly well edited). But because writing quality is so consistently bad across the board (look at Ben Kuchera's recent article comparing Dual Shock 4 to his first sexual experience, or the countless IGN articles that fail to get even the most basic details right about a game they're covering), it's hard to simply get past the perception with a few good pieces.
You mention Kotaku in your OP, BlackBanditSho. This is a good illustration of that problem. Kotaku has a few good pieces from time to time, I've read them when they're posted here, but the issue is Kotaku's signal:noise ratio is so dramatically high that it's impossible
not to often simply think of them as bad across the board. It's easier to simply see the occasional decent article linked on GAF than it is to surf the site and find something on my own, that's how bad it is.
These issues are only going to go away when a complete change happens with game journalists which
a.) Puts consumer rights above the desires of their advertisers
b.) Puts the negative influence of swag, free flights and hotel stays, desire to get jobs in the industry, etc behind them entirely and simply are brutally honest about the problems in the industry and their business practices
c.) Editors at various sites decide to start taking their jobs more seriously and making sure they feel how important it is that when you sign off on something, it follows your seal of approval and thus is a reflection on your own work ethic.
There's a long list of fixes that can be applied, but I simply don't know of any meaningful way to apply them.