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https://steamcommunity.com/games/593110/announcements/detail/1808664240333155775

Some time ago we made some changes to how we presented the User Reviews for games, and their resulting Review Score. We talked about those changes in this blog post. As we describe in that post, we want to ensure that players who've played a game can voice their opinions about why other people should or shouldn't buy the game, and that our summary of those opinions into a single Review Score should represent the likelihood that a future purchaser will be happy with their purchase.

Since that post, we've continued to listen to feedback from both players and developers. It's clear to us that players value reviews highly, and want us to ensure they're accurate and trustworthy. Developers understand that they're valuable to players, but want to feel like they're being treated fairly. We've also spent a bunch of time building analysis tools to help us better understand what's happening in the reviews across all titles on Steam. With that feedback and data in hand, we think we're ready to make another change.

That change can be described easily: we're going to identify off-topic review bombs, and remove them from the Review Score.

But while easy to say, it raises a bunch of questions, so let's dig into the details. First, what do we mean by an off-topic review bomb? As we defined back in our original post, a review bomb is where players post a large number of reviews in a short period of time, aimed at lowering the Review Score of a game. We define an off-topic review bomb as one where the focus of those reviews is on a topic that we consider unrelated to the likelihood that future purchasers will be happy if they buy the game, and hence not something that should be added to the Review Score.

Obviously, there's a grey area here, because there's a wide range of things that players care about. So how will we identify these off-topic review bombs? The first step is a tool we've built that identifies any anomalous review activity on all games on Steam in as close to real-time as possible. It doesn't know why a given game is receiving anomalous review activity, and it doesn't even try to figure that out. Instead, it notifies a team of people at Valve, who'll then go and investigate. We've already run our tool across the entire history of reviews on Steam, identifying many reasons why games have seen periods of anomalous review activity, and off-topic review bombs appear to only be a small number of them.

Once our team has identified that the anomalous activity is an off-topic review bomb, we'll mark the time period it encompasses and notify the developer. The reviews within that time period will then be removed from the Review Score calculation. As before, the reviews themselves are left untouched - if you want to dig into them to see if they're relevant to you, you'll still be able to do so. To help you do that, we've made it clear when you're looking at a store page where we've removed some reviews by default, and we've further improved the UI around anomalous review periods.

https://steamcommunity.com/games/593110/announcements/detail/1808664240333155775
Censorship is always the solution.
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Is there something more in the links? Because there's nothing in what you've posted that has anything to do with DRM or EULAs as far as I can see.
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I wonder if this will also apply to "review bombs" that praise games, I suspect that somehow they will not be investigated quite so closely.

But who cares? I have nothing to do with Steam and will have nothing to do with them in future, so I couldn't give a rats ass about their future plans.
this is why demos and trials are a good idea just going on a reviewers opinion alone isnt enough and its not just steam with review issues we have issues here with weird reviews and people just bombing a game cos they dnt like it or something. the best way to know if the game is good for you is to demo it or trial it. but u cant do it free anymore cos u have to pre order for betas and pay for early access
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moobot83: this is why demos and trials are a good idea just going on a reviewers opinion alone isnt enough and its not just steam with review issues we have issues here with weird reviews and people just bombing a game cos they dnt like it or something. the best way to know if the game is good for you is to demo it or trial it. but u cant do it free anymore cos u have to pre order for betas and pay for early access
I agree, that's definitely a tendency.
But why is this thread about game reviews on steam on a forum for GOG? Sorry it's late, maybe I missed something
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Senteria: But why is this thread about game reviews on steam on a forum for GOG? Sorry it's late, maybe I missed something
hmmm, just for fun i guess.

do we need a reason for everything that we do ? i think not. :P
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Senteria: But why is this thread about game reviews on steam on a forum for GOG? Sorry it's late, maybe I missed something
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falloutttt: hmmm, just for fun i guess.

do we need a reason for everything that we do ? i think not. :P
Nah, just carry on and enjoy the discussion :)

*poofs away*
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falloutttt: hmmm, just for fun i guess.

do we need a reason for everything that we do ? i think not. :P
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Senteria: Nah, just carry on and enjoy the discussion :)

*poofs away*
thanks!

and you have a wonderful day! :)
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Senteria: But why is this thread about game reviews on steam on a forum for GOG? Sorry it's late, maybe I missed something
You have missed nothing.

Many from steam seem to want to post their thoughts and ideas here now.

What it means, I am not entirely sure.

I am optimistic that it is good news for GOG though.

Personally I believe that the influx of new specific clients defending their own IPs means that the steam crowd cant get their games under one umbrella any more- so they look to GOG.
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TerriblePurpose: Is there something more in the links? Because there's nothing in what you've posted that has anything to do with DRM or EULAs as far as I can see.
Q: I care about some things that I worry other players don't, like DRM or EULA changes. Review bombs have been about them in the past. Do you consider them unrelated or off-topic?

A: We had long debates about these two, and others like them. They're technically not a part of the game, but they are an issue for some players. In the end, we've decided to define them as off-topic review bombs. Our reasoning is that the "general" Steam player doesn't care as much about them, so the Review Score is more accurate if it doesn't contain them. In addition, we believe that players who do care about topics like DRM are often willing to dig a little deeper into games before purchasing - which is why we still keep all the reviews within the review bombs. It only takes a minute to dig into those reviews to see if the issue is something you care about.
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Calm down there with your theories. lol

I simply posted this thinking it would be interesting to read. That's all there is to it.

Don't make an elephant out of a little fly. ;)
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lazydog: Personally I believe that the influx of new specific clients defending their own IPs means that the steam crowd cant get their games under one umbrella any more- so they look to GOG.
So, they want their game on Steam, but they can only get the game they want on say, the Epic store, so they'll go to GOG which is neither the place they want their games nor carries the game they're after?
Post edited March 17, 2019 by Pheace
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or if you watch the snioer elite v2 remaster trailer its pretty much available on all platfroms including GOG