December 3, 2007 -
While GameSpot and its parent company CNET remain mum, gamer outrage over the Jeff Gerstmann firing continues.Employees of competing video game website 1up.com staged a demonstration on Friday outside GameSpot HQ in San Francisco. The impromptu gathering was a way of showing support for Gerstmann and the integrity of the game review process in general.
Meanwhile, GameSpot user Subrosian, who has maintained a detailed chronology of events related to the Gerstmann scandal, is calling for a "Blackout Monday" in support of the fired editor:
Please do not go on GameSpot, GameFAQs, CNET, Download.com, TV.com, et cetera... do not go on ANY CNET site... Don't come on the site, don't Google the site, don't click on a link to the site - don't do ANYTHING that generates a page view, search engine hit, or *anything*
...*we'll show CNET our silence*.
This issue is bigger than you, it's bigger than me - it's bigger than GameSpot. This is about big business being able to use *buy* public opinion...
GP: The ball would appear to be in CNET's court...



Comments
The thing is, GameFAQs is owed by the same people as Gamespot, Cnet. Cnet was the ones that apparently bear responsiblity for the firing. Additionally Gamespot and GameFAQs are the same site on the back end. Cnet is the one people are ultimately targeting, not Gamespot.
I know they are mostly the same forums since the merger(there are some site specific ones).I know that they own by the same company, CNET(it's branded across everywhere on it).
Look it just doesn't sit well with me, but I'm doing nonetheless.
Anyway the point is moot, I'm boycotting them for 24 hours
There are plenty of people who have serious doubts about this rumor, and letting them talk freely can only be good for CNET. But instead of doing that, they've clamped down on the topic altogether. Even if there's nothing unethical about Gerstmann's firing, CNET deserves to have its reputation trashed by being too heavy handed in their response.
So disgusted.
Download.com, on the other hand, is too goddamn useful. I'll limit my interaction, though, and won't be going there for at least a month in protest.
Why does that sadden and disgust you? I visit several sites each day because they offer me news of topics I enjoy. What does it matter if I, or someone else, offers their opinion of whether or not they would enjoy going a day without visiting the site(s)?
It saddens me that of all the things that could sadden you, you choose people that visit certain sites each day and would miss them if they didn't go.
So disgusted (although there is quite an amount of sarcasm in my post here).
I would miss a GP if I didn't come here every day. One of the more intelligent forums I visit. It has drama (JT suing people), comedy (JT in general), satire (people replying to JT)... it has everything. It is Shakespearian, classic, perfect. It is like baseball and apple pie.
You act as if this sort of thing happens all the time, and are so detatched from it that it doesn't even effect you. You're wrong, however. What happened here was a travesty, which in fact effects everybody.
After all, how are we to know now whether someone is telling the truth or really LYING when it comes to consumer products?
http://www.1up.com/do/newsStory?cId=3164656
And as Valleyweg has already confirmed, this goes far beyond corporate control of gaming media. It extends to other entertainment products as well, and makes the likes of Consumer Reports look like the panacea of customer service.
These companies are mainly out to rip people off, is the point the community is getting at. They should be trashed and thrashed along with their credibility, not defended by simple ingrates like you- otherwise, I wouldn't be surprised if people start buying off product reviews like apple cider!
Wouldn't that be something, if tomorrow the next consumer review for "T-Mobile phones" was entirely BOUGHT and PAID for by T-Mobile?
What if they automatically bypassed all our fair trade laws, and all of a sudden began selling THOUSANDS of low-cost phones for less than $49.99 a month to unsuspecting consumers who otherwise would have bought the superior Alltel or Nextel?
What if amazingly, those phones had completely unfounded bugs in them all over every orifice, which made them not even respond or continue to work after 30 days?
Gee, I can just smell the class-action suits piling up all over the place!
And a red-consumer boycott revolution!!!! Until all their products are buried alltogether, and certain corporations are dissolved.
That's definitely NOT how I imagined some kind of example being set for the future, but that seems to be directly what you are implying?
You are implying that it is perfectly "OKAY" to lie about consumer products, that people should be able to buy off their own way into the market all the time.
Boy that's going to be interesting, if the likes of Nokia can all of a sudden pay off a editor to give a scathing review of none other than "AT&T" - their direct competition. Just so that they can save some more dollars for the market, and effectively slice away the competition.
Oh and then let the unsuspecting masses, who did not realize this was a fraudulent and peppered review -- skip AT&T for now on and go with Nokia!
But, but.....Nothing. It is exactly the same here, only its the games & entertainment industry which multiple sources have caught doing the same thing. And they can't get away with it unless they want to lose "THEIR" support!
Hence the reason, why as in every situation the boycott works and does the job to stifle away these corporation's money until they give up. They can not do whatever they please, or else we'll punish them. That's the way it has always gone, and they can get a far worse bruising by saying otherwise.
And once again, GameSpot and the like needed to be taught a direct and lasting lesson....which leaves a "scar" on their corporate exterior. Its policy, and when GameSpot violated their own written policies they deserved everything they got- or will get, and they already know it.
That is a good point...GameSpot/Cnet is in a Catch 22 situation. But in that sort of situation, is picking "C" really the right thing to do?
The longer Cnet keeps quiet about this whole thing, the longer the rumor mill is going to keep turning and eroding their public image until there is nothing left. The only way to stop that from happening is to pick "A" or "B".
The difference is your every day life is not affected by boycotting CNET, while gas is for most.
I still can't get my fire up over this, but I do think I'll be giving them a miss when I go looking for game reviews.
Same is useuall true of Gamespot posters, at least from what I've seen in my lurking between the two sites. Both sides beleive the others are moronic, really it varies more by the particular board. The more regular posters there are the more things thend to get nasty.
As for the boycott, I don't know how much good it will do. I mean how much revenue will be lost from a single day? In my own opinion a better idea would simply be to do a general boycott of Eidos and Cnet i.e. nobody visits either site until one or the other says something. Never going to happen sure but there are more possibilities with a general boycott.
The abysmal A Knight's Tale and several others. Can't forget that 9/10 Lair review by Play either.
@jdmdsp911:
What I didn't like about it was his overuse of the word "ugly". It's not like it has a dearth of synonyms he could use in its place. Other than that? Nothing
True, there are plenty of idiotic gfaqsers too. But I don't associate with them
http://www.gamespot.com/news/6183603.html?action=convert&om_clk=latestne...
The above SHOULD bring you to a news item giving some degree of an official response.
Assuming that he was fired for a legit reason (I'm guessing it's more of a rationalizable reason), then whoever did this should still be fired for incompetence or at least banned from further meddling with the internal operations of GameSpot. The reaction to unexpectedly firing a senior editor who was one of the original employees of the site and is now one of your most visible employees is fairly predictable.
http://kotaku.com/gaming/gamespot-on-the-spot/gamespot-may-see-mass-resi...
I find this account far more realistic of how I know corporations to act.
http://www.joystiq.com/2007/12/05/comparison-shows-significant-edits-to-...
I disagree with the term significant but they did do some that changed the tone of the review. In some cases that made it a better negative review. It is certainly not the whitewash that was claimed or feared. It removed words like "lazy" and "lame" and put it into far more professional wording. I think the new editing makes the review better and even more negative on the game while being fair to the few parts that do work.
1.) Eidos, make a good game, get a good review. (there's a novel idea)
2.) Make games $10 - 15 dollars, then you can make/sale all the crappy games you want.
3.) Don't cry like a bunch of little girls, when some one says something mean.
(It's just 1 review of 1 game. Eidos is suppose to be a game company right? I mean, you do make games, right? So, stop whining, go back to the drawing board -- and don't let this situation happen again. Duh.)
Replacing "letdown" with "disappointment, especially when you consider how well this same sort of stuff worked in the developer's previous squad-based game, Freedom Fighters." tells you exactly the same thing plus why it. When games costs 60 bucks, as you have said, you need more information and not less. A one word review might work for a cheap game in a passing review. It doesn't fly for a professional review.