Thursday, October 9, 2014

Kotaku Promises Critical Video Game Coverage Post-Release

Video game journalism is about to read a lot less like corporate advertising. Kotaku editor Stephen Totilo announced today that the gaming news site will shift their focus to reporting on games and gamers long after a video game has been released. This is in contrast to the current and long-held standard in video game journalism of previewing and reviewing games before they come out, then ignoring them once they are released.

Totilo says this change will help their articles seem less like press releases as they begin to write more people-centric stories that cover games once they are actually being played. His reasoning is that addressing the community of players surrounding a game is more important and more interesting than simply covering games before they are released. This is an effort to get out of "a cycle of coverage dictated by public relations firms."

Authenticity is a big theme at Kotaku, where Totilo wrote similarly about the downsides of previewing games in February of 2013, saying that they are "reporters and critics ... trying to find the truth," and that the truth is rarely found in the small preview of a game. An article in 2012 also criticized the cozy relationship between journalists and the developers of the games they write about.

As Kotaku prepares to make video game journalism more journalistic and interactive, they have set up an email address for people to send their story tips and ideas, and made it clear that contribution opportunities are available.

You can find the full article on Kotaku here.

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