not only this, but it actually saved the company. they had to pull a crazy redemption arc and became a sort of legend in the gaming community. negative reviews with constructive criticism make a product better if the company gives a damn
The irony is that without negative reviews, these products will never get better because the companies won’t know what the customers think is wrong with it so they can fix it
Both products had glaring mistakes that made me think they didn't bother sending prototypes for user feedback before fully shipping the product. Either that or they intentionally didn't want to test the product and just cash in on the AI trend. Regardless deserve a failed product. Test your product people and fine tune it until it suits most if not all. Not a single engineer or handful of people within the company.
Ok, I am not defending negative reviews at all, but its funny when these negatives reviews happen AND THE MARKET LOVES IT ANYWAY. Take Jinx for example, remember the huge wave of hate that came at him for being a "reviewer" basically ruining his RU-vid career locking him out of thousands of dollars just because what he was doing literally takes no effort or talent. Now everyone loves reviewers, hell even Charlie (who I enjoy watching, but he was not like this as much before) is a glorified Jinx type of channel. 90% of people with millions of subscribers (twitch streamers) are a Jinx type of channel. Its funny how a single negative wave created from someone can entirely ruin someones chance at success, when in reality its inevitable that the market with follow that path. Not saying it would have happened here, but it definitely does happen. People also say it isnt the reviews that kill these things, its the actual products, but in all honesty being first is what matters most of the time
While that’s partly true, the bad reviews people complain about usually aren’t helpful to the company. They usually don’t say anything about bugs. Just “bad game”. Then don’t elaborate on why. That’s not helpful
The first part makes sense though. It’s pathetic how some people feel high and mighty tearing into an impenetrable billionaire that doesn’t even hear them 😂
mrwhosetheboss pretty much summed up the logic in his tweet 'It's not a reviewer's responsibility to protect companies - Reviews are made to protect consumers'
The dumbest thing I've been seeing with reviews is someone will give something 5 stars or whatever the best metric is. Then write an entire paragraph on all the negatives about it, saying nothing positive...
This is actually done for a reason. Shady companies or websites will scrub and remove all 1 - 2 star reviews. Also 1-2 reviews, naturally, sink to the bottom of the pool, unless they sort from least to highest star reviews. Sometimes it's accidental but most of the time it's done on purpose to avoid censorship.
@@QuackZack it also could be used in situations where they know the company will penalize the employees for the review even for things that are entirely out of the employees control. So they want to warn other customers of issues they don't want to blame the workers for
Maybe they enjoy it, but still have problems with it. If I enjoy a product and want it to improve, that's what i would do. Its probably not the case all the time but I think it's a reasonable explanation
If you go to any recipe site it's filled with reviewers giving 5 stars and saying that it looks great and can't wait to try it, or else they made multiple changes to the recipe. I once gave a recipe 1 star and said I hadn't made it but was just attempting to offset all the 5 star reviews from people who didn't make it either. It was quickly deleted.
The whole "oh you're gonna discourage them from improving" thing is so dumb cuz that is literally what prototyping and development is. If a company is completely discouraged after some negative reviews, they're clearly not in the right line of business anyway. Improvement requires criticism
I own a startup burger business and I have encouraged customers to be very outspoken about any criticisms they have. Because critical evaluation is what creates improvement. If companies get away with making shit products, they have no incentive to improve!
"Negative Reviews are Controversial Now" The RU-vid Dislike after being stabbed to death and thrown into the ocean, only for extension programmers to put it back in critical condition:
@@AstralAnubes wasnt dumb for advertisers and thats what makes money. no competition so youtube has a monopoly and can do whatever they want. good decision for us or not, it makes sense cash wise
RU-vid got rid of dislikes because every video the official White House channel posted after Biden won was getting ratioed 10-to-1 with dislikes to likes. And that happening to the “most popular president in US history” was a PR nightmare so they shut it down.
Yelp removes bad reviews now. If multiple people give 1 star they mark it as "suspicious" and are no longer public. Went to a restaurant and seen the owner berate a homeless man for standing on the sidewalk, customers seen it and all got pissed. We gave 1 star and with photos and it's now all gone. 5 stars on Yelp now.
most amazon reviews this happens with too. they removed a fair honest review of mine about some counterfeit item and i literally called customer service to complain at scamazon. The guy refused to help me until i implied i'd do a survey and give him 5 stars for helping me. He fixed the comment, i never gave the service guy stars though. Which is better than young version of me wouldve done, by giving all 1 stars to him and the product i was reviewing.
I understand why they implemented the feature. Sometimes places get review bombed for stupid reasons. LGBT friendly businesses sometimes go through this when they go viral, bigots get mad, and then they all leave 1 star reviews. But Yelp’s system also isn’t perfect. I can’t say what the solution should be, but it definitely needs to change in some way
my town has a local page for "foodies". negative restaurant reviews are not allowed and if you say anything even remotely negative about your experience in a business. they will just straight ban you.
Easy fix: Post 'positive' reviews that are actually negative. Example: 4/5 Stars. Recommend this restaurant if you love the taste of waking up to your pitiful life on a Monday morning after a good night's sleep devoid of your horrendous life 😁👌
With restaurants, I think they're trying to overcorrect for all the boomers who leave 1 star reviews and yell at restaurant staff because of minor mistakes.
@@youdonegoofedwhile partly true, regular people who have nothing do with stocks simp for companies just the same, i’ll never understand it. These companies dont give a shit about you only the money in your wallet
And yet they all do it. Just look at cyberpunk. People gave massive amounts of money to a company that straight up LIED to their faces, and now they're praising them trickle releasing some of the features they initially promised over years and another DLC. People are just retarded.
"Never buy a product based on future promises" is a phrase I keep hearing more and more often in review videos. I need companies to stop shipping beta products to consumers. You don't need my today money for a tomorrow product.
The thing is that with the current economy these companies are aiming for early adopter yuppies that will basically beta test the product because of the hype of "being first on a new thing", rather than the average person, they know the product sucks but it doesn't matter if the hype is enough
this practice has been widespread on all kinds of products unfortunately its getting so frustrating seeing these companies think they can just release unfinished product
Take halo Infinite for example. People def bought that game thinking Co-op would be put in, only to be left hanging when that 'promised' feature was dropped without care.
I need consumers to stop buying beta products. Or if they do, quit bitching about it as though you didn't know. Maybe flavor of autism gives my brain an above average ability to notice bullshit, but from where I'm sitting, I'm a moron. Why can I figure this shit out on my own? They wouldn't be selling if nobody was buying. So, who's buying?
Bad reviews are precisely what lead to things gets better. No bad reviews = our product is flawless, let's not fix it. Bad reviews = we made a piece of shit, let's fix it.
Had a legitimately bad experience with a company sending me a subpar product and left a bad review. Not even _bad_ just like, 3 stars and the company emailed me saying how bad reviews can hurt companies and if I can remove it. Like maybe don't send me a faulty product and talk to me like I'm an idiot.
@@NotTheDAHASAG Edit: After posting the review the representatives at the company have begged me to delete this, so the rating goes from 3 stars to 1 star.
This is the same thing with RU-vid removing the dislike button. Without it you cant really grasp how the audience accepts something, so you need negative reviews
Companies put out a box with an off brand Google assistant in it for $700 and act like it's bleeding edge tech and then get mad when someone calls it bad
Negative reviews save products. There are countless examples of products being disliked on their first iteration, only to eventually become a good/popular product once the flaws had been fixed. Companies NEED bad reviews to make good products.
And now you know why ppl hate negative reviews lol. This is common sense. I dont want to be told how something is good, im already interested, i want to know how it could be bad.
would be an intetesting plot twist if all reviews default negative instead of positive... This is how evil ideas get made tho. Imagine only having bad reviews as a rule. You'd click the item based on genuine curiousity. But then have to read far more bullsh.
And if you could also find how many returns they did in a year. (Friend got me a high end wifi card and this guy looked legit to him with 4.7 stars but had over 1000 returns in a year with 3500 sold). Wanna know what happened? Waited over a month for something that wasnt even it came so took 3 more weeks than suppose to and got a very lowend cheap walmart card. 🤷♂️ ebay let us have our money back and keep the card and they put a hold on his account and reviewing it and we put a low review warning others. Rule #1 never just trust someone online "4 stars" or more can always be toyed with. I'm a seller sometimes and was auto suspicious cause the dude never messaged of hey its coming or hey its here at this place and on it's way. Huge flag is no communication so thankfully ebay cares about buyer
He's credible for sure, but also if you or anyone else disagrees with his opinion, good job you are a fully functioning human being and have more sense of self than like 90% of people on the internet these days.
I don’t think it’s the companies, it’s the bozos who are overly loyal to those companies that are trying to blame people for not acting like them! (I’m sure there are companies out there who behave just like this too. But so far it just seems that the people supporting the companies are doing this!)
I think it's because the crypto bros are trying to enter the consumer market, I expect many more products like this will gain investors and flop on arrival, on the bright side though there is a good result from all this: people will get wise to this kind of shit fast and it'll be less likely to happen again
Not sure about the Rabbit ( though the Verge did an article recently about a good chunk of the Rabbit's software being able to be ran on a phone, and the CEO was saying it wouldn't work with their service if it was on a phone lol), but the Humane CEO was actually grateful to Marquis for his honest review.
Love how the tweet says he needs to have more responsibility but they also want him to just blatantly lie about the product he's reviewing instead of giving his honest opinion like he did. How is lying and giving the product a good review when its a bad product more responsible than giving an honest review?
Simple, they think his responsibility should be to the company to make sure their products sell well, and not to the consumer to make sure they don't waste their money. Essentially they think Marques is part of their marketing team or something. It's ridiculous.
It's not. One of the worst things about his video is his corny/goofy gaming talk or weird reddit style references and odd gaming/streaming metaphors. It looks tailored to children, which most streamers/youtubers audience is.
@@bbrradd1Not your fault, seems like you aren't chronically online like the rest of us, but pretty sure this isn't just kid/children lingo, it's pretty much a ubiquitous Internet lingo.
It really is. People are so sensitive these days. I’m in quite a few movie/book groups and they’re so quick to take down posts/comments for ‘shaming people who like it’? Taking any negative opinion as a personal attack
I understand avoiding conflict if it's like, irl. Don't want to cause fights and leave in a bad mood or in a bad state of mind. But when it comes to reviews, you want to know the honest truth
Boom & absolutely agree. It’s not only ignorant & irritatingly irrational…it “can” become dangerous & hurt future projects & lower expectations of what is considered great Proof? Look at Hollywood & similar examples-a whole ilk in the same thought bubble, not listening instead of applying construction based off reaction-instead trying out denial & blame Millions upon millions have been lost 👏 👏 👏
This isn't toxic positivity. It's tech bros who invested money into something becoming furious that people will know the product is bad before they buy it.
I'ma just reference the Sonic the Hedgehog movie. When they released the trailer and showed the original Sonic, it got roasted by basically everyone who saw this character model. After seeing that, the production made the call to redo the model and now they're doing well as a franchise. The thing about a business is that it isn't a business without its consumers. So, do right by them, and you'll succeed. Release hot garbage? Well.. it gets lit on fire.
"You paid $70 for it, you have a complete right to say hey this sucks" - I'd go a step further and say you don't have to be a paying customer to say their product sucks... have these people not heard of free speech? If you start a company selling literal shit as food, I'm gonna tell everyone your company sucks. Yeah, really!
I read like a dozen reviews before deciding which *refrigerator* to buy. Critical reviews are so helpful - they let me know that I'm probably not going to have to replace an absolute turd of a device two seconds after buying it. I will never understand undying loyalty for corporations. They don't give a shit about you, so why fall on your sword for them?
I love critical reviews. Even if the review is overall negative, if the negative points aren't applicable/unimportant to me and the positives points are I might buy the product anyway, I just want to know exactly what I'm getting
I won't buy an item if there's no negative reviews. It's shows me they edit their reviews to only keep nice ones and there could be more things wrong with it than I realize. Negative reviews let me know actual humans are using the product
@@theldapperapple2382He's not saying otherwise, he's just saying these are startups with billion dollar investors that might dip out, not a billion dollar company
People don’t understand business. You shouldn’t buy a product in the hopes that it will get better in the future, because if that product is making the business money, then they won’t spend any more money making it better, because that’s time, effort, and money that could be spent dealing with things that aren’t visibly making them money.
I left a negative review at a restaurant and they hunted me down using my email, called me and threatened to fire the waitress unless I took the review down. Absolutely ridiculous
Hope you reported them to the authorities that sounds like something the Dept of Labor and Employment or whatever equivalent in your country could take on.
The idea that bad press kills motivation to innovate is also particularly backwards. You'll never get a masterpiece if you keep encouraging them to make 50 cent macaroni art at a 500% markup.
I wonder if a lot of it has to do with super sensitive people in the GenZ column that just can’t take criticism properly and so when they get a negative review, they feel like they can’t do anything anymore.?
Also it's a question about HOW you try to push innovation. And yes, innovation is expensive. They shouldn't sell the AI pin just now... or at least with some big notes and warnings that it's not yet what they want it to be. And if they lack the funding to continue it really sucks but is just the way it is. Hand it over to someone else.
Negative reviews that point out problems, bugs, or mistakes aren’t the problem. It’s the people that say “bad game” and then don’t elaborate on why. Why was it bad? What made you not enjoy it. It’s not a review as much as it’s a complaint
Mrwhosetheboss said this in his tweet. “It’s not a reviewer's responsibility to protect companies - Reviews are made to protect consumers” Companies should listen to Mrwhosetheboss and MKBHD instead of getting angry at them.
Reminder that the Humane Pin is priced at $699 retail and ON TOP OF THAT, you need to pay $24/month to even use it's only function which is the "AI" companion.
Yeah, I don't know who did the research on this in the company, they seem out of touch what people will pay for this thing. In the Netherlands you pay that for a phone subscription with a nice Samsung smartphone with it. I will only pay $699 with the month subscription if it can "beam me up" to places
@@daniellebroekhuizen76 you can get a nice smartphone and a plan to go along with it anywhere in the world for those prices. from dubai to reykjavik to lima to bangkok. it's for "ai beliebers". people who believe justin bieber wasn't diddled by diddy and that AI will do everything for you, after all they made chatgpt tell them that they are justin bieber AND that it's self aware so if chatgpt said "i'm self aware" why couldn't it do everything for you from a button.
And it does even less than any smartphone that was released in last 5-6 years. Google Assistant or SIri does better job and comes free with the phone you bought.
Yeesh. I just don't get what the point is supposed to be. It doesn't work well, it doesn't work quickly, and as far as I can tell (from my very very quick google) it doesn't do anything that a phone can't.
I'm in a local restaurant review group on Facebook, and the stuff people say to anyone who leaves even a slightly negative review is borderline psychotic.
“How dare you talk about Martha’s restaurant like that! I’m sure they were just having a bad day! They’re usually impeccable! Yes they were screaming about their marriage issues but You don’t ever have bad days? You don’t go through things in life? How soulless are you?!”
Thanks Charlie this is a really important topic. It's like a dictatorship where anything negative is censored or silenced. Not only on Twitter, but basically everywhere on the internet, if a product is objectively at least decent or even good but you don't like it/it's not your taste and you say that, it's like people say "yeah then don't be here/don't buy it/etc." and you're getting disliked to hell
At an old company I worked at, the President, who was the retired CEO's brother, said in a training module that he encourages people to speak their mind then said that the company does their best to get rid of negative reviews.
My town has a local Facebook group that posts food reviews, but deletes posts and even ban people if they post anything negative about restaurants. I cannot tell you how many dog water restaurants I have been to because of that.
@@Game4Lordnah it’s just because the people running the group are friends/family with those restaurants, that’s the case like 90% of the time criticism is removed
Negative reviews only sink companies that were just set up to be a scam. If you're serious about your product, then negative reviews are the best thing as they let you know what the consumers want from you. Sometimes those desires are unrealistic, but most of the time they just want the product that was promised or that actually innovates. A negative review on a new product doesn't kill a company, a negative review that is tossed aside does.
History dictates the majority will go after whatever is flashier and trendier over what's most sensible. Can't lie that i've made similar mistakes before it's just how it is unless you know what to look for.
The problems with a company always lays with the consumer consistently buying the product regardless of quality. The whole point of a company is to create a product that sells and if it keeps selling and making a product then it's achieving that goal.
we live in a world where people think that if you have nothing nice to say about a scam don't say anything at all do I think it's a coincidence not at all I strongly believe it's all connected.
One time I wrote a negative Google review and the company literally hunted me down on all social medias, found my personal company website, found my day job company and reached out to my boss, sending her an email about how inappropriate my negative review was and how mean it was to her small business. So uncalled for. I was asked to call the business (so I didn’t lose my day job) and apologize for writing a review and I got a lecture over the phone on how mean negative reviews are. WHAT WORLD DO WE LIVE IN?!?!
Negative reviews, if done right, can be the tools for companies to improve their products and services. I had learn about business development during my college classes and one thing you don't want is the silent disappointed costumers, sure they won't leave bad reviews that others can see but they also won't recommend your products to anyone else too. Verbal promotions can attract new potential customers. it's better that people talked about your products, good and bad, and see how you can improve from it. Don't put your ego into your products and be mad when someone criticized it because to some extend it also criticized your ego, that'll your downfall and it's mostly on you as the company's owner then.
I owned a small business. We absolutely WANT to hear those reviews. Reviews aren't there to deter other customers, they're there so the business can learn what they did wrong and do better next time. ESPECIALLY early access stuff! Everyone thinks they can own a business now, and this is the result.
There is a game store in my state that has sooo many negative reviews and scams yet still has a 4.6 rating, ratings and reviews mean literally nothing. Companies just pay for them
You don't want to hear the reviews. In this case you know the product is sh*t but you know the reviews will scare investors This isn't about being blindsided so that you can make something better, its about perpetuating the scam
Yup i follow a TON of small businesses on social media bc i love shopping small & they regularly actively encourage customers to email them with their complaints so that they (the company) can work on resolving those issues. The companies that accept criticism like this often provide higher quality products than multi-million dollar businesses do.
@@idontwannatypeanamethose are the reviews to just disregard. But the OP is correct: bad reviews should be used by companies as insight into what they got wrong, then work to improve. Expecting nothing but praise and reacting like this to negative reviews just leads to stagnation.
I read this in the screeching voice of that ancient "Leave Brittany Alone!" video 😂 (though to give props, the guy was way, way ahead of us with understanding celebrities have mental health issues the same as anyone else can have. While his screeching and sobbing is still hilarious, he had a point).
I wonder what the Venn diagram is of ai, crypto, and nft bros looks like. I’d venture to bet they are all the same brain dead people scammed over and over.
This is the difference i find between Tech Lovers and People who love tech. Because there is a very large difference (much like the difference between girls that love horses and Horse girls) Someone that loves tech will appreciate a peice of technology regardless of whether they would own it or not, and be pretty forthcoming about its value as well as its shortcomings, whreas tech lovers are almost obsessive about technology and must have it and will defend it with their life even if its bad.
Exactly. I think the majority of people agree with Marques' video. The guy who feels reviewers have some kind of responsibility to protecting companies or something is an outlier.
If there are no bad reviews, there are no bad products. Scientists bad reviews about climate is the reason why the climate has become such a bad product.
I’ve always liked the restaurant analogy: - Customer goes to a steakhouse and is given a vegetarian meal. - Pissed Customer: gives ‘a negative review’ - Restaurant owner: you shouldn’t be eating so unhealthy. Take your meal and thank me. - Customer: gets up to leave - Restaurant owner: but look how hard the cook and wait staff worked (to give you a meal you didn’t want). Think of them! - Customer leaves and tells everyone how bad the restaurant is. - Restaurant owner commissions multiple articles explaining how ‘toxic customers’ are ruining the reputation of the restaurant. - Social media clout-chasers rush in to defend the poor restaurant owner. And on to the next restaurant…
Imagine attacking your customers and then whining when they don't buy your product. Seems to be the industry standard nowadays, especially in entertainment, especially in the west.
(goes to steakhouse) "Customer asks to order a finest steak, instead you'll given a dull looking vegetarian salad" Restaurant Owners: you should GO VEGAN now! "The customer is pissed, and rates negative reviews"
I find this especially "funny" after considering the Boeing whistleblower's "self-inflicted" death, negative reviews don't kill companies, companies kill negative reviews.
The audacity of these companies getting mad at bad reviews. This Is like all those terrible movies getting "review bombed" They really unironically want us all to just "Don't ask questions. Just consume product, then get excited for next product" Get out of here with that crap.
The funny thing in this case is that the company didn't complain about the review. They accepted it. It's just random people white knighting them for some unfathomable reason.
@@tsurugizakiright like,,, the big corps don’t care about you why are you such a dickrider, your just a piggybank to them, they’re probably laughing at how pathetic these people are
Yes, many entrepeneurs have no soul. They'd smile and sell you spoiled food out of their BBQ truck, because they'd lose money if they tossed it. They'd genuinely regret if they found out for sure that it made people sick... yet they'd make the same decision next time. It's like a religious belief that everything's fake, a story, and money is the only important thing. Also, I've found out that most people (easily over 50%) are legit crazy, and not in a creative way... in a cruel or careless way... so, good luck! There still are many people who aren't self obsessed and on urge autopilot. You can recognize them, unless dollar signs fill your vision.
And since they believe everything's a story, make-believe, then if a story is true for you, then it's true. Therefore, they really can believe that negative reviews are lies. It's a bizarre way to be, but I think the stalker who owned the fancy paper company, that Charlie spotlighted a couple months ago, seemed like the same kind of person... living in a whole different reality.
America is too stupid to vote Libertarian. We’re just gonna have to ride it out and be lucky to enough to watch the world burn while barely making it. Womp womp Welcome to the real world
The world has taken "If you have nothing nice to say, don't say it" TO "If you have nothing nice to say, then say on the internet, where you cant get punch in the face"
It actually is really scary how many people will end real life friendships and relationships over stuff like this. Really weird how many people will pick corporations and CEO's they've never met and prioritize that over real people they actually know in real life.
Yeah, it feels like an actual cultural shift that people are suddenly acting this way about corporations. As much as I want to say they're bots or on the company's bankroll, I've met too many people IRL who genuinely believe companies only have their best interests at heart and that their coworker, neighbor, whomever who says otherwise is simply motivated by jealousy.
@@tc2865 Unfortunately this kind of tribalism is ancient. What we're seeing is a regression towards feudalism. These people are defending giant corporations like they're part of the same tribe. What they don't understand is that corporations and CEOs aren't part of our tribe at all. They're looking to make money and are happy to fuck everyone else over to get it, providing the optics aren't excessively bad.
i think the funniest part of this is the fact that MKBHD himself spent the first half of the Humane pin video talking about that future promise essentially, going over what it should be and will be able to do before talking about where it is now
I am glad he did those AI pin reviews. They feel like a Big Brother straight line to the government product. I never use assistants and only use google searches when I absolutely have to. Most browsing I do now is in privacy mode.
There are people that defend businesses just so they keep people employed, simply because they want more people employed and tangentially less job competition. Without a care if it's a good product or service or not. Why wouldn't they? There are entire political theories and intentions to just keep people busy and comfortable for abstract and real reasons.
I'm not surprised that these people exist, before RU-vid hid the dislikes I saw this wholesome video (basically an abused animal being given a good home) and while the amount of dislikes were ratioed by the likes it opened my eyes that there is not a single thing in this world you could do that someone with an opinion will take umbrage to. Saw that review and while I was really hoping it might be something to look forward to, but after getting burned enough from over hyped products I decided to see how reviews turned out for the R1 before buying, really glad I did.
Bad reviews can help companies too. Imagine i bring out a new type of product. Some reviewer points out the flaws in my product. I can take note and make sure that by the time i release the 2.0 version of my product i improved on the flaws of the first version.
I mean.. there *IS,* but they're rare. I'm sure you've seen one: like a 1-star review by some angry busybody getting upset with a business because another customer rear-ended them in the parking lot (or something). That's a negative (as in bad) review because it informs nobody _and_ unfairly hurts the company (the latter of which is of lesser concern)
Nah that's not true. There are absolutely negative reviews for good products. Usually it's from someone not reading the instructions and then getting mad when it doesn't work.
I have seen people give my local supermarket 1 star reviews, even if they have previously given it 5 star reviews along with calling it the best supermarket in the city, because of the most arbitrary of reasons. The dumbest by far has to be that a nation-wide offer let you buy cans of red bull at a reduced price, and someone tried to buy multiple dozen of them. Of course, the offer did not let you buy this many, and when that was explained to them, they gave an one star review _for the supermarket that had no say in the offer._ If an actual problem occurred (still never enough to justify an one star review), the owner is always quick to fix it and reply, yet the one star reviews stay. There are negative reviews. It's just that big companies are not the one affected by them, it's local businesses who have to deal with petty and spoiled manchildren (e.g. Karens) who believe anything that goes wrong in their lives has to be blamed on the closest thing.
To add to Charlie's point about early access games, negative reviews are also important at putting pressure on the company to fix problem areas or implement balance changes in updates.
Someone writes a bad review about a newbie chef after getting food poisoning Twitter:” you shouldn’t of written that review, that chef is going to get better at cooking”
Companies are basically using their products as kick starters to further their development. Which sucks because a lot of people buy the prototype then once the product is actually finished it’s dead and forgoten
7:50 this reminds me of the "it isn't even out yet. How do you know it's sh_t?" meme with a dude stood on a table trying to drop a steaming log on someone's plate, which I first saw after the TLoU2 leaks lmao
I don't remember ever watching Marques start a review by saying: "This thing is bad at almost everything it does basically all the time." He knows how much power he holds when it comes to make or break fora tech gadget, especially a new gadget from an unknown company. So the fact that he chose to say this tells me how bad this device really İs.
Report this loser bot commenter for spamming. This should become normalized, sick of seeing it. Edit: To be clear just in case the comment is gone when ppl see this. I’m not talking about OP. 🤖 reply was first comment.
@@sm64istrashlolHOW DOES MY COMMENT GET DELETED TELLING PPL TO REPORT A SPAMMER BUT THE SPAMMERS COMMENTS REMAIN?! FIX YOUR SITE YT. REPORT THIS 🤖. SICK OF SEEING IT. NORMALIZE REPORTING SPAM.
This is a problem that exists in so many forms for the longest time now and it's beginning to bleed onto the surface. One example is how Amazon will automatically ban users from making any reviews or questions on products if they make too many negative reviews. They straight up remove your entire review history and you can't appeal.
This actually happened to me. I wrote one review with language Amazon didn't like. They didn't want me to know which review it was, so they removed EVERYTHING; THOUSANDS of my reviews which have HUNDREDS of thousands of 'helpfuls' and positive comments. They went on to nuke millions of accounts which contained triggering keywords which obviously annoyed customers. Ironic that Jeff Bezos has just sold millions of dollars of his shares possibly due to the backlash from this. The thing that annoys me the most, is that even though they hate my language, they still like my money and I can still be a customer, but anybody affected by this is banned from any Amazon Social platform (reviews, Amazon Community, asking for help from other customers etc.).
I know someone who is on Amazon Vine, and they often leave negative reviews. Not only have none of their reviews been deleted, they have also been promoted to gold tier. I suspect people who get blocked from reviewing have more to do with the content of the reviews, than them being negative. The negative (and positive) reviews should be constructive, not "It sucks". If you are not going to leave a constructive review just star it and don't type anything.
This isn't an only amazon issue. Just think about the era (that we are still kind of in) of hotels, resturants, ect wanting you to leave a review on yelp, but only if it's a good one. You are expected and wanted to not post a review if you have anything bad to say of their service. Any non amazon site you go to for products, from ads you see on tiktok or instagram you will only ever see positive reviews. People don't want negative reviews, at all.