Highlights
- Take-Two Interactive highlights the severe impact of review bombing on game reputation and sales.
- High-profile games like Helldivers 2, Starfield, and Apex Legends have faced significant review bombing in 2024.
- With GTA 6’s 2025 release approaching, Take-Two braces for potential review bombing from disgruntled gamers.
In the modern era of digitization, gamers have become exceptionally powerful. The moment a developer does something that they don’t like, they flood its page by review-bombing a game.
These kinds of tactics have become pretty much a concern for publishers. Take-Two Interactive has outlined the dangers of review bombing.
Which was first reported on Game File. Yes, it’s the same publisher behind the extremely anticipated (Grand Theft Auto) GTA 6 from Rockstar.
Rockstar’s GTA 6 Publisher Take-Two Sounds the Alarm on Review Bombing
The Alarming Trend of Review Bombing
Review bombing isn’t an annoyance; it’s a surefire way to slaughter a game’s reputation and its sales. In an update to its recent 10-K SEC filing, Take-Two outlined its financial health, specifically calling attention to the importance of high game ratings on third-party platforms.
If the review scores are high, then gamers will be enticed, but if there is a deluge of negative reviews, this could bury the game—making it impossible to find or recommend.
Take-Two’s filing says, “We may be targeted by negative review campaigns or defamation campaigns seeking to negatively impact our ratings.
Any such decline may lead to loss of players and revenues, additional advertising and marketing costs, and reputation harm.” This does show a real issue within the gaming community, wherein a single wave of bad reviews can change everything for a game.
Impacting Real Life: The Case of Helldivers 2
Take-Two’s concerns are not entirely unfounded. The recent review bombing of Helldivers 2 stands as a stark reminder of this.
In May 2024, when publisher Sony mandated that players should have a PSN account to play the co-op shooter on Steam, gamers became furious and conjured up more than 220,000 negative reviews.
It did work in having Sony reverse its decision but not before it was a little too late; the game’s player base, already shrinking, imploded further as a result of the review bombing.
Review bombing has hit several high-profile titles this year alone. Starfield was very recently targeted with a huge influx of negative reviews after it had introduced paid mods.
In July, Apex Legends suffered the same fate due to a few highly debated changes in its battle pass. These instances go on to prove that review bombing is not an issue restricted to isolated cases but a growing concern across the industry.
The Double-Edged Sword of Review Bombing
Viewed by many as toxic behavior, review bombing unmistakably gets things done. Players have used this measure to express their discontent, and quite often, publishers actually listen and respond. T
his kind of responsiveness encourages the practice, so review bombing becomes a double-edged sword for the gaming industry.
It provides a platform for players to express their opinions on the other. On the other hand, it may destroy a game in terms of credibility and sales, thus losing millions of dollars in development and elevating marketing expenses.
Preparing for the Release of GTA 6
With the impending release of Grand Theft Auto 6 in 2025, Take-Two is getting ready for a review bomb. The overwhelming popularity makes it an easy target for disgruntled gamers.
Both Take-Two and the gaming community will be very keen to know how GTA 6 will sail through this challenge of review bombing.
The impact of this result is likely to affect the way future games are received and reviewed by the ever-growing and emboldened gaming culture.
Review bombing has hurt the gaming industry the most. Publishers like Take-Two should balance between addressing the apprehension of players and the guarding of the reputation of games.
With the continuous changes in the digital scene every day, how player feedback will be managed should also evolve to keep up the quality of games.