mitchmy
mitchmy
mitchmy

This looks an awful lot like a paid endorsement illegally masquerading as an editorial. See this shit all the time on my news feed from Kotaku and Forbes Gaming lately. It’s blatantly obvious what’s happening here, and the practice is so common in gaming media it’s disgusting, particularly when the articles are

The issue isn’t the game being perfect. The issue is the deceptive manner in which it was presented and marketed. That’s the controversy, so don’t try and placate people with this meaningless article about chasing the dragon of a perfect game and pretending like the reader is stupid enough to have those expectations.