A New Review System Approaches!
crafted by: PaulIf there is one area in the realm of writing about video games that is always under debate is the manner in which games are reviewed. It used to be that a magazine could just slap a score (or 3 or 4, thanks EGM) on a game and call it quits, but in the internet age the notion of a number-less review has gained much more credibility.
We've been doing reviews in the titular theme of our site, staging "boss battles" between games and writers. While that approach was fun, it was often hard to sum up a game's review in one fantastical sentence, so we've decided to shake it up a little.
In an age of GameStops and Amazons and Cheap Ass Gamers, a game's price is easily determined and highly fluctuating, meaning that a game's price (new or used!) is just as important to a purchase as a good review. Taking this idea, we will be rating new games on the scale of it's MSRP. For example, if Halo Reach is a great game, truly worthy of your spending $60 on, we'll give it a $60/$60. If it blows, on the other hand, we'll rate it appropriate to what price we'd pay to pick it up (so, say, $25/$60). If it's not worth buying or playing ever, it gets a Final Fantasy X/$60. Just kidding! A TURKEY/$60. Keep in mind that we are telling you what we think the game is worth, so this may mean in rare cases that we think a game is actually worth more than the MSRP. In situations like that, likely a downloadable or budget game, you may see a score of $15/$10. Don't forget, these are OUR opinions, but at the same time, we have YOUR money in mind.
We're using this scale to bring some quantitative measurement to our reviews, but also because we think it is a useful scale for real gamers, like us, who don't have a ton of money to spend on games. We're also brewing some more review tools for use down the line that take our system a few steps farther.
So look for our inaugural review using this system soon. It's Final Fantasy XIII!
Image: MaccaMacca91 - DeviantArt
Random Encounters: GameStop casts GP Rain!
crafted by: PaulA few days ago the video game blogs were abuzz with the news that GameStop would be offering two of March's biggest titles, Final Fantasy XIII and God of War III, for $20 with the trade-in of two select titles. After sizing up the list of titles they'd accept for the promotion, I realized that I could part with two Xbox 360 games I wouldn't miss if that meant getting Final Fantasy for a relative steal. Not many hours later, even bigger news broke that GameStop would be offering a whopping 50% bonus on all titles traded in for the next three weeks. Hot damn that's a good deal, I thought, but no way would the games I intend to trade be over $40, so that Final Fantasy deal is still top notch.
Yesterday I strutted myself into GameStop after work and dropped my two trade-ins down before the emaciated sales assistant. I said I wanted to pre-order the PS3 Final Fantasy with the $40 off deal. He screwed his dead eyes to mine and explained that the games would prob be worth more with the 50% trade-in. "All right, let's see," I dead-panned back, trying to keep the upper-hand, which is lost sometimes in a treacherous swamp like GameStop.
"With the trade-in bonus, you'll make $54 off these games," the clerk breathed.
Let's stop the story-telling before I hurt myself. So in two weeks, I'll be getting Final Fantasy XIII for $10 thanks to this sweet GameStop deal. I highly reccomend you consider selling those "meh" games you own and trading in for at least something new. I'm debating getting rid of the two Modern Warfares in exchange for Darksiders or Battlefield: Bad Company 2. Why? Tanks.

