Hey guys,
I've been looking at steam for a number of years now and haven't recalled so many games having so many reviews. Every game I look at has amazing positive reviews, perhaps those are the ones that show up first. A ton of those have to be BS right?
You guys still buying games on the Steam Winter Sale?
I got:
Witcher 3 - $20
Tex murphy detective thingy - $2.50
mount and blade - $2.50
Cit V stuff DLC's - $10
life is strange episode 1 - for free
Got pulled over for not coming to a complete stop on a stop sign taking a right (empty intersection), late at night, in a ritzy suburb, cuz of a stupid cop making america safe (was only sober person leaving a party) - - - $hundreds of dollars to -Cali-take-my-money-fornia.
What did you guys get? What oo you know about the validity of steam reviews?
Cryomatrix
Catch me streaming at twitch.tv/cryomatrix
You can see my sci-fi/WW2 book recommendations.
Comments
Out of the games you did mention though, Witcher 3 would likely have the most content and generally everyone loves it. Mount and Blade would be a good choice of you like strategy and conquest. I don't know about the rest.
EDIT - I thought you were looking to buy, not bought. Excuse my post.
You always need to remember that all reviews done by people are just that, reviewed by people, not you, we all have different interests and what they find fun might not be what you do....
So I'd say reviews are pretty accurate on Steam. If a game gets bad reviews, I always avoid it since in my experience out of 38 games I've purchased...9 of those have been with bad reviews...I only really enjoyed 1 of the 9 that were reviewed badly and that was wildstar (and yes its free, but I bought bunch of stuff for it) lol
My Skyrim, Fallout 4, Starbound and WoW + other game mods at MODDB:
https://www.moddb.com/mods/skyrim-anime-overhaul
As for the sale, I didn't buy much because my backlog is so huge and many of the heavily discounted games are the same ones that are on sale every holiday, but I did pick up Pyre and Grim Fandango Remastered.
"We all do the best we can based on life experience, point of view, and our ability to believe in ourselves." - Naropa "We don't see things as they are, we see them as we are." SR Covey
Anybody with less than a couple hours in the game I tend to ignore unless everyone has around the same time and is refunding.
Contrary to The Scavenger, I also tend to ignore any crusader backlash reviews. Otherwise, nobody would buy any Paradox games after they tried their regional pricing thing and got tons of negatives. I'd miss out on some pretty great strategy games based on something that had zero effect on my region or the actual quality of the games. Also, some companies just receive more hate on every game ever because of one so so game.
On that note, popular games tend to have more middling reviews than niche or indie games. They grab more attention from a wider audience. Some of which just aren't THAT into the game or genre. So a 75%+ popular AAA game is usually about on par with a 85%+ indie/niche game that has a much more focused playerbase that likely searched specifically for it or was recommended that game based on more than it being popular. Otherwise, the data suggests nearly every single visual novel and pixel art game is on par with The Witcher 3.
Curators help by providing a singular voice if you trust that voice.
I have 1500+ games on Steam. I've left one single line review (for the badge). I've bought relatively few turds along the way, but I rarely pay attention to reviews or curators. I find games that interest me, sometimes by tags, then I might skim the reviews to see if I notice any trend in them. I usually pay more attention to the negatives because I'm already leaning positive if I'm looking.
In light of what is happening right now with Rotten Tomatoes and the botting with the Last Jedi regarding the negative reviews, it's safe to say there are more than a few people out there doing this. The reports suggest that one single IP address has swayed the user reviews by 34% on the negative side. Newsweek and Forbes both have articles discussing this and I saw it reported on my local CBS news report.
Never forget 3 mile Island and never trust a government official or company spokesman.