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| [Jan 06, 2012, 11:49 am ET] - Share - Viewing Comments |
A post to the Steam Users' Forums by Team 6's Ronnie Nelis calls out Eurogamer for its scathing review of Flatout 3: Chaos & Destruction, which gave the racing sequel a miniscule 1/10 ranking. Nelis calls the reviewer a "liar," saying the review was copied (thanks Joao). A subsequent post expands: If you don't believe the text, check the screens: They don't show any deformation for example, someting that is present for quite some weeks now. There's only one reason how this is all possible: He is playing a non-official, old version of the game. It's not what people see when they purchase the game, thus not representive.
Also worth noticing: our publisher has only sent out review copies to the press as from today.. (so how could he have 'received' it earlier?)
I don't mind people complaining, giving feedback, or just disliking the game in general. I have plenty of positive and happy fanmail to cheer me up again after reading this article, but what bothers me is that he is not telling the truth. Shouldn't a reporter be fair and tell the truth?
If you are interested in fair reviews, i currenly recommend the one on gamespot. http://www.gamespot.com/flatout-3-ch...%3Bread-review
To make this comparision fair: This one is not positive neither, but the text is open-minded, fair and therefore better. The gamespot reporter also used an old version and not the official publisher-review copy which has been sent out only today BUT he did actually played and obviously enjoyed the game. Worth noticing: The two things he marks as "bad" are completely fixed nowadays. (too bad we can't get a re-review hehe)
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| 7. |
Re: Team 6 versus Eurogamer |
Jan 6, 2012, 12:01 |
meezookeewee |
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| I really liked the Flatout series, the best of them being Ultimate Carnage. But when I heard that Flatout 3 wasn't being made by Bugbear Entertainment, the guys who did the others, I lost interest. There was simply no way it could match the other ones. It's a good thing I stayed away from this one. If developers are going to get all butt-hurt over bad reviews because they shipped shitty games, they're going to need to learn to bend over and take it, because that's exactly what's coming. If you don't want bad reviews, don't put out bad games. |
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