Last night, Bethesda laid clear its policy on media reviews from Dishonored 2 onwards. In a short statement on its official site from global content lead Gary Steinman – himself a former games journalist – Bethesda announced that you won’t see any reviews before the launch of its games because it will continue to send out code to publications a day before release. It’s not a particularly surprising statement, even if Bethesda deemed it shocking enough to put behind an age gate.
It is anti-consumer, though, and riddled with inconsistencies. “We want everyone, including those in the media, to experience our games at the same time,” reads the statement, knowing as well as we do that final code for Skyrim Remastered is currently in the hands of many ‘influencers’ and has been for some time. Bethesda claims it wants you to get the game the same time as everyone else, at the same time as announcing a pre-order bonus that lets people play a day early. Where to find the truth in that message?
It’s not unknown for publishers to favour preferred publications when it comes to supplying review code – as recently as last week 2K elected to hand out Civilization 6 code to a handful of sites while the rest of us had to wait until a few short hours before its official release, which meant getting a review up of a game of Civilization’s scope and size at launch was impossible for those outside the chosen few.
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What publishers do with their code is their prerogative, of course, and the truth is we have no god-given right to early code. Why should a publisher hand over its most prized asset to us well ahead of the rest of the world and risk us kicking its face off? When it comes to the fate of a multi-million dollar project, there’s not much to be gained from such a gamble.