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WHY I DON'T LIKE RATINGS By Andrew Livings April 10, 1999 note: This is The Column, a part of Apolyton where primarily Markos and Dan write whatever we want :). Well, not just the two of us. The Column is open to everyone. If you feel like writing submit your article to civ2@gamestats.com
Many Civilization 2 sites - excepting this one - do this for all submissions and especially for links to other sites, usually by awarding little stars like we used to get in junior school. Site, scenarios, mod-packs, maps; all must be labelled, perhaps because originally they were carefully considered judgements, but later? They would need a label simply to fit in with previously labelled items. But who asked these people to decide that label, which is passing a judgement on that work that they have no right to do. Unless, in very small print at the bottom, you read the disclaimer: "the scores here are the personal opinion of the web-master and should not be considered definitive", which in fairness should be at the top in quite large print. Commercial products are a different category to the world of Civ2, because companies submit their products for review by magazines as both a means of publicity and endorsement. But with Civ2 we are all producing add-ons in our own time for no reward. It is in our interests to publicize and receive warm words of thanks or congratulations if they're any good, but it is unfair for these add-ons to be submitted to the "scoring" method that passes for review on many sites. An exception to this practice is of course the Scenario League, whose members will undertake to review your submission with the purpose of constructive feedback. And how do they present their findings? You guessed it: by a "score". In fairness they have established a code for reviewing, and the "score" is derived from an objective assessment of four areas. But the reviewers' assessment of these criteria is still highly subjective, indicated by the variances in the "score". And is the purpose of the League to review or to rate? If you submit for review, you then also submit for rating; they are inseparable where this is concerned. To summarize:
We may also wish to consider the other journalistic principle of "right of reply". If designers submissions are scored without their prior approval, or even with, they should have the chance to counter an unfavourable review. The opinions expressed on this page do not necessarily reflect those of Apolyton CS or GameStats. They are just the personal opinions of the writer.
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