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翻訳の問題を報告
With the Steam reviews I find the positive ones are rarely ever worth looking for - the negative ones are the ones I want to see. I'm not going to buy a game without any negative reviews - no game is perfect, I just want to know if the things it gets wrong are going to be deal breakers or not.
And this is a perfect example of you no tusing the site correctly, as I detailed in the post RIGHT ABOVE yours.
That's where I read the Metacritic user reviews, then Steam forums.
It's just not straightforward.
Hours played isn't necessarily a great way to determine whether or not a game is fun, at that point you'd be comparing content to price which is another section altogether. For example, quite a number of games I've played and beat in under thrree hours, yet I had extreme fun for it whereas another game I beat in a little over an hour, quite a number of people praised, I personally did not like overall. It had some fun things, but for $20 of empty gameplay, yeah, that's not worth it.
Metacritic works for what it does, condensing all user reviews into one number. I don't think it's meant to be the final say of whehter or not a game is good or bad. I'm sure many use it as a point, but if you don't see what people have to say about it, you're going to miss out on a lot of potentially critical information.
The thing is, that might be relevant to YOU, but that is not major point for the majority, not is it a very good metric at all on the whole - it's WAY too narrow, and about as much use in itself as
scores are (which is, not at all).
And for that reason, it's not a good idea to post it, otherwise you'd have to include just s much other stuff that a few people equally find important to them, which'd create a confusing clutter.
Better you just use a site like howlongtobeat.com, even though it's not well populated with data