Welcome to another installment of This Week
In Video Game Criticism with me, your host, and and all your favorite pieces of video game blogging and criticism from around the web.
Unless its critics start becoming more familiar with the study of its scholars, it will be a while
before video game criticism gets a footing in punditry.
Brian Taylor's «Save Aeris,» which is one of the best pieces
of video game criticism of all time, documents some of the reaction to Aeris's death.
Video game criticism, as a form, just doesn't exist.
The objects of analysis should be clearly related to video games,
video game criticism, video blogs, blogs, play, etc..
As the figure approaches you see it is none other than your trusty host of This Week In
Video Game Criticism!
The Journal of Games Criticism will not serve as a replacement for the vibrant community of
video games criticism; instead, we would like video game reviews to be reflexive performances of criticism that comment on the video games criticism community.
Time to wade through the latest This Week in
Video Game Criticism, now in rapidfire - mode since there's so much to get through.
Hello loyal readers, welcome to another This Week In
Video Game Criticism!
After watching the video, I had several thoughts on the subject from many personal perspectives including character development in media, close experience with sexual assault advocacy, and
video game criticism.
But that's neither here nor there; it's time for This Week In
Video Game Criticism.
Even so, by the traditional measures of
video game criticism, Street Fighter V is an unfinished catastrophe, a game delivered half - cooked, as if to meet a financial deadline rather than an artistic one.