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I believe this sort of article is warranted, someone might care the game includes something that might offend them and might not want to support the dev. Like I’d be happy if Liam told me some game included a beer called “All heterosexual white males should be killed with a shovel” as I wouldn’t buy it then. Just like I demand my money back every time I walk out of the cinema after I’ve found out the bad guy was a white middle-aged man.
And we have no god-given right to voice our opinions on anything anywhere, only where other people have given us the ability to do so. Liam correctly anticipated the comments on those articles to go downhill (now that’s an understatement) and locked them for his own reasons, even if those were just to save him the hassle of having to read them, as I’m sure he has better things to do with his life. It’s fully his prerogative and as far as I’m concerned he’s been completely successful as now there’s just people complaining they can’t comment instead of the thing that would have happened if they could.
Good job and thank you.
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Isn't it a bit extreme? :S:
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Ok, if you feel that way it's your right.
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Worried about servers being stuffed with downvoted rubbish threads over time? Make the most downvoted threads have a timed purge of 30 days, because who needs a huge thread with people saying "you're an idiot" to someone the community already decided it doesn't like?
Honestly trying to save you from either of the above poll options here, because if the community has chosen what to do with a comment, it isn't as arbitrary-seeming for a comment to be hidden away.
You'd probably want to write gaming articles that make you excited and spend time with your family, instead of worrying about moderating comments about the latest controversial gaming gossip (which you chose to write about) the rest of your day.
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Secondly, I made a mistake with the "opinions on your own time" comment because you run the site. I also said a [RANT] disclaimer would have improved the situation. I don't want to shut you up. Turning the comments off on the second article gave you a captive audience, or perhaps you wanted to not deal with the drama of moderating that day (despite focusing more on the drama in the first place).
rkfg said it best, so I borrowed it.
Courting controversy for attention is the same slippery slope Slashdot made (good moderation, bad article/topic choices). The more off-topic things became, "How is this tech news?" became a sitewide meme. The users were disillusioned by "What Trump/AOC/whoever said on Twitter will shock you!", instead of getting what they were coming for: tech news. Slashdot's flawed reasoning for the off-topic Tweets were that they were a part of Twitter: a website, so that makes it tech news. I used to read Slashdot, but left because of too many irrelevant articles, not because of its users and their behaviour.
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As for gaming censorship in general: I despise the current pressure in the world to make art "safe". No matter how much additional material a creator is told to remove or add, nobody will be completely satisfied. The devs of Ion Fury are still making a huge donation to The Trevor Project and *still* no one is satisfied. What does it take for their sins to be forgiven?
Humour isn't: "I make fun because these people don't deserve my respect, or to even exist". We didn't used to think humour was like this, sometimes even if it was offensive to many people, why is it different now?
We can act completely differently in the real world in contrast to whatever bad examples a video game will give us, we're not children.
We still played Duke Nukem as teens precisely because it pissed our parents off, not because we were closeted chauvinist, arrogant pricks. Let's not forget our past and paint homages to those games, like Ion Fury, as homophobic because of a couple of jokes some people hated.
With respect, neither of those options have ever been on the table. I don't need saving, I run the show ;) -> If people don't like it, they can leave (as some over time have) and start their own site (as some also have).
I respect the opinions shown here and there's some interesting points to think on. However, I think I'm personally done on this debate now :).
The article was tagged as an editorial.
Whether you like it or not, everything is political. I sure as hell wouldn't contribute to GOL if I thought that you couldn't talk about industry-wide issues. Where do you draw the line? Is it okay to talk about the epic games store and its exclusivity if it were to start selling Linux games? What about the various other controversies regarding publishers or developers? I could name a dozen. I have enough faith that people have enough agency in their lives to see posts that are marked as opinions and make their own conclusions. When I write reviews, for example, I explain why I like a game or not and never present it as objective fact. The same goes for the few editorials and the like that I have written. I believe Liam does the same.
This is about as disingenuous as your original premise of there only being one of two choices for the situation here. Liam writes things because he thinks they're relevant and not because of clicks or likes. If you haven't noticed, this website isn't run on ads or corporate interests.
I don't believe anyone here has argued anything similar to what you're saying there.
You're all free to think what you want and do what you want with your time and money. I just think it's unreasonable to expect Liam or any others to cater solely to your interests. As evidenced by some of the other responses here, people do care to hear about this sort of stuff. And speaking as someone who has had to deal with toxic posts (name-calling, flaming and irrelevant tangents) it's entirely reasonable to lock comments after a while. The last Ion Fury article was not made in a vacuum - it followed a large and contentious discussion where it was just childish back and forth. I definitely think it's reasonable to preempt the same noise elsewhere. It's like when we get "Steam is DRM" and "Is not!" posts - after a certain point there's nothing of value to that.
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This is the most overused argument in these situations. If I had the time, tech savvy, hardware, money, and sanity available to do such a thing, why the hell would I make suggestions in the first place?
If you really want to know why I made these suggestions to you rather than starting my own website and implementing them myself, it's because I'm a fan of GamingOnLinux and I thought it might help you, your personal life, and the community. Pardon me for caring so much. Next time I'll try harder to care less.
Cestarian is right, though, it just made me more pissed off to not have an outlet for dissent (visible in the comments, not hidden here) so that you -- and other readers -- would know what other people think too, even if you didn't like what the commenters had to say. That's how you respect people's opinions, not by just claiming to and telling them to piss off if they don't like how things are run.
It would have been simpler for everyone to let the comments go on until they burn themselves out (unless they do something against the rules or law). Too much to ask for?