Peter Moore doesn't need to defend EA on the label "Worst Company in America". It's a video game company. There are far more businesses and companies that should, could, and would be considered as the "Worst Company in America".
Beyond gamers, this list by The Consumerist became a joke to most consumers, readers, and analysts when a video game company somehow came out on top.
Seems like Battlefield 4 is trying too hard to take on the role of both Medal of Honor and Call of Duty 3 with lackluster AI (Friendly and Hostile), Hollywood style sequences, a team taking out a much larger enemy, and apparently at the end, poor plot/narrative. Fortunately no one buys a Battlefield game for its singleplayer. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem much change or improvement from Battlefield 3 that would warrant a full price of $60.
If it wasn't for the Battlefield 4 title, I would've thought this to be a trailer for Bad Company 3.
@nick-nikol If such mount exists, you sure do cap it believing your rant against Gamespot producing content of a game over another is something that merits attention and response. No one is sorry that you've been hurt, and I mean emotionally hurt, because Gamespot didn't extensively cover a game you liked.
Producing misleading trailers for the sake of preserving player's experience and suspense is lazy. A good trailer would be both entertaining and true to the game while still preserving most, if not all, of the excitement and suspense of the game to the player. The latter requires some thought and creativity, the former just tries to avoid it.
When watching the conference, that tear gas comment and the monologue after was indeed awkward, exaggerated, and pitiful as if the person went through some hell. The last scene was brilliant from it.
Good video and concept, but the narration felt like I was listening to a young store manager having a clearance sale. Maybe that's the style, but it "cheapened" the games mentioned along with the mood being awkward as some users have said.
@King_TigerMK3 Considering how large Sony is, I wouldn't be surprised if they could afford having two hardware development teams working separately. Slimming down the PS3 even slimmer (and cheaper) should be a safe decision considering Sony is still manufacturing PS3s and a lot of people will still be buying PS3s after the release of Playstation 4.
Although I agree with the score, along with the Good & Bad in the full review, I'm disappointed that the review itself seems to just tell you what the game is than why the game itself (ignoring the online connection issues) is good/bad.
Barely few analysis of the game's quality, something you'd expect from a review. In all, both the written and video reviews were written poorly, something I didn't expect from Gamespot over their rivals.
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