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Just Say No to Paid Reviews

Started by RPGPundit, June 14, 2023, 08:13:35 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

RPGPundit

Will you take the No Paid Reviews Pledge?
#dnd #ttrpg #osr

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KindaMeh

Yeah, you give pretty good reasons not to trust paid reviews, much less compromise integrity and the broader rating systems by giving them. I'm never gonna be in a position to give a paid review, since I'm not on par with professional critics and influencers and the like, but even if I were I'd like to think I would decline the money. Glad to hear you yourself have never taken money, and have always been aboveboard with letting folks know your potential biases whilst still trying to remain unbiased.

You also make a good point about objectivity and comprehensiveness and considering who would and wouldn't like the product specifically, and how it could be used in play. As well as needing understanding and experience to pull off an effective review. All too often folks do indeed look at things without context and within their own subjective preferences, and that's not as informative, admittedly the latter being a hard trap to escape.

Anyway, good luck on your guest star appearance.  8)

S'mon

I promise not to take money for a review.  ;D
Shadowdark Wilderlands (Fridays 6pm UK/1pm EST)  https://smons.blogspot.com/2024/08/shadowdark.html

Bedrockbrendan

I think a lot of people don't realize how much pay to play occurs in RPGs and in gaming. It isn't everywhere but it definitely happens. I don't pay for reviews (it just doesn't seem like a good expense for me and marketing is already a pretty thin margin). I do send out review copies (not that many, usually a few physical books and a bunch of PDFs). Some reviewers consider that sponsored. I think in that case of just giving someone the book to review it is different from paying but it is good for people to mention they received a copy from the publisher. I don't mind if people want to charge and want to pay but I do think that sort of arrangement ought to be clearly stated in a very visible and obvious way.

brettmb

I don't have a problem with giving away a book for review. That's fair. It's one thing to get paid to do reviews of products for periodicals, but for the publisher of the product to pay for it -- that's just shady.

Brad

#5
What sucks is magazines like Dragon and Space Gamer no longer exist so all I can go by is either blogs, forums, or Youtube videos to get any sort of information. People can say whatever they want about printed periodicals, but those were not only fantastic toilet reading material, but usually written by guys who didn't give one fuck if they pissed anyone off. Modern reviews seem to be chasing social media clout and not really trying to provide any sort of objective analysis. Yeah, I disagreed with Allen Varney more than once, but I could also figure out what he liked/disliked and read his reviews and determine if I would like a game. I cannot say that about any reviews I see anymore.

I wrote a bunch of reviews for my old blog and I was sent plenty of messages by people who thought I was too harsh...maybe write better stuff?
It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance.

Omega

Quote from: Bedrockbrendan on June 14, 2023, 02:06:04 PM
I think a lot of people don't realize how much pay to play occurs in RPGs and in gaming. It isn't everywhere but it definitely happens. I don't pay for reviews (it just doesn't seem like a good expense for me and marketing is already a pretty thin margin). I do send out review copies (not that many, usually a few physical books and a bunch of PDFs). Some reviewers consider that sponsored. I think in that case of just giving someone the book to review it is different from paying but it is good for people to mention they received a copy from the publisher. I don't mind if people want to charge and want to pay but I do think that sort of arrangement ought to be clearly stated in a very visible and obvious way.

Oh its been rampant in board gaming for at least a decade. Some just demand a free copy of the game. Others want a free copy AND be paid as well.

It has been known for years that these sorts of reviewers that demand some sort of kickback to do a review are not as trustworthy as they will skew their review to keep getting free games and cash.

Rob Necronomicon

I've done one review on my channel and that was because I was very impressed with it. The fuck I'd do it for money. For me, that whole concept is very unethical and ikky.

Venka

Paid reviews or insertion of product, disclosed openly, is arguably ethical.  But is it really?  You could make a case that advertising as a whole is extremely damaging, because it inserts relationships that don't exist.  If you see an advertisement for some toy or car, and then a nephew or friend expresses an interest in that, you now have a basis of familiarity because you've seen the ad- the fact that this alien thing doesn't feel alien will change your reaction to them discussing or purchasing the thing, which in turn encourages more of that behavior.  This doesn't even assume that you, the advertised-to, are interested by the ad or even in the market for the thing- it has the power to sand the edges of society down for its own benefit, open a path for it.

Now, there's no real way to stop advertisements whilst still having free speech (that I've been able to think of, at least), but the critique of advertisements applies in full to fully disclosed paid reviews, and it's not a trivial critique.  But there's another side to it- if you assume two similar reviewing groups or people, A and B, and A does paid reviews and B refuses morally, B will have more honest (and generally better) reviews.  But fast forward a year and A has been able to pay for promotion, may have a larger staff, and will likely have better writing and editing and special effects- production value in general.  Because the audiences of such reviews will often be seeking entertainment, A will become dominant over B in marketshare and influence.  So the mere existence of fully disclosed, paid reviews will eventually have the result of shrinking legitimate, honest, and non-sellout voices about whatever is being discussed.

Paid reviews that are not disclosed- basically payola- are more universally decried as bad.  They are also less common, but there's still plenty of that going around.  And because it's agreed to be unethical, it's handled under the table and extremely hard to prove.  Generally speaking, if two parties stand to gain by conspiring together in a fashion that is fully legal, regardless of ethics, they will be much more likely to do so, and if your examination case is economic, then there exist some parties doing that right now.  This is why actual payola on radios had to be banned- otherwise it would be fully ubiquitous.  How common is this in the tiny corner RPG stuff?  Probably not very, but it being so small means that there's no government agency poking their head around, no New York Times reporter gathering all the data and doing an expose.  We really don't know how common undisclosed paid reviews are in any areas of the RPG hobby, TTRPG and otherwise.

MongooseMatt

Quote from: Venka on June 15, 2023, 11:27:41 AMWe really don't know how common undisclosed paid reviews are in any areas of the RPG hobby, TTRPG and otherwise.

Can give you one data point - in 22-odd years, I don't think I have even heard of somewhere doing paid reviews for RPGs, let alone been actually approached.

Typically, if we see someone do a review of one of our books and they make a good job of it, we send them a bunch of stuff to do with as they will (this is what happened with Seth Skorkowsky, for example, after we saw him do his Paranoia review off his own back).

Don't think it is all that common.

Slambo

Quote from: MongooseMatt on June 15, 2023, 11:51:10 AM
Quote from: Venka on June 15, 2023, 11:27:41 AMWe really don't know how common undisclosed paid reviews are in any areas of the RPG hobby, TTRPG and otherwise.

Can give you one data point - in 22-odd years, I don't think I have even heard of somewhere doing paid reviews for RPGs, let alone been actually approached.

Typically, if we see someone do a review of one of our books and they make a good job of it, we send them a bunch of stuff to do with as they will (this is what happened with Seth Skorkowsky, for example, after we saw him do his Paranoia review off his own back).

Don't think it is all that common.

For another point, Kelsey from Shadowdark has said Questing Beast's youibe channel only does paid reviews.

brettmb

Quote from: Slambo on June 15, 2023, 12:15:21 PM
For another point, Kelsey from Shadowdark has said Questing Beast's youibe channel only does paid reviews.

Disappointing if true, but it would explain a few things. I'm starting to think that there has been a lot more pay to play going on over the years than I suspected.

Venka

Quote from: brettmb on June 15, 2023, 12:17:36 PM
Quote from: Slambo on June 15, 2023, 12:15:21 PM
For another point, Kelsey from Shadowdark has said Questing Beast's youibe channel only does paid reviews.

Disappointing if true, but it would explain a few things. I'm starting to think that there has been a lot more pay to play going on over the years than I suspected.

Questing Beast explicitly discloses the fact that it's a paid review (aka an advertisement) whenever he does one, so it should be easy to see if it's only paid reviews, mostly paid reviews, etc.  But Kelsey would have no reason to lie about that, and the two are on friendly terms, so it's likely accurate.  But again, I believe you'll actually find the statement in each relevant video.


RPGPundit

Quote from: Brad on June 14, 2023, 10:06:03 PM
What sucks is magazines like Dragon and Space Gamer no longer exist so all I can go by is either blogs, forums, or Youtube videos to get any sort of information. People can say whatever they want about printed periodicals, but those were not only fantastic toilet reading material, but usually written by guys who didn't give one fuck if they pissed anyone off. Modern reviews seem to be chasing social media clout and not really trying to provide any sort of objective analysis. Yeah, I disagreed with Allen Varney more than once, but I could also figure out what he liked/disliked and read his reviews and determine if I would like a game. I cannot say that about any reviews I see anymore.

I wrote a bunch of reviews for my old blog and I was sent plenty of messages by people who thought I was too harsh...maybe write better stuff?

Well, Mad Scribe games has recently started a gaming magazine. Called "Mad Scribe Magazine". I contributed an article to issue #1, and to issue #2 also which I think is coming out any time now.
LION & DRAGON: Medieval-Authentic OSR Roleplaying is available now! You only THINK you\'ve played \'medieval fantasy\' until you play L&D.


My Blog:  http://therpgpundit.blogspot.com/
The most famous uruguayan gaming blog on the planet!

NEW!
Check out my short OSR supplements series; The RPGPundit Presents!


Dark Albion: The Rose War! The OSR fantasy setting of the history that inspired Shakespeare and Martin alike.
Also available in Variant Cover form!
Also, now with the CULTS OF CHAOS cult-generation sourcebook

ARROWS OF INDRA
Arrows of Indra: The Old-School Epic Indian RPG!
NOW AVAILABLE: AoI in print form

LORDS OF OLYMPUS
The new Diceless RPG of multiversal power, adventure and intrigue, now available.