Fired IGN Editor Plagiarized Dead Cells Video game Review (update iGN removes all his articles)

fonzerrillii

BGOL Elite Poster
Platinum Member
It's about time.... they got caught...

So yesterday.. I peeped a video from a Youtuber that I subscribe to.





I didn't think anything of it...
but then... Then shit started to gain traction..


IGN Pulls Review After Plagiarism Accusations [UPDATE: Writer Fired]

The gaming site IGN has removed a review for the game Dead Cells after allegations surfaced yesterday that the review’s writer had plagiarized from a small YouTube channel.

“As a group of writers and creators who value our own work and that of others in our field, the editorial staff of IGN takes plagiarism very seriously,” reads a note now in place of the review, which was written by IGN Nintendo editor Filip Miucin. “In light of concerns that have been raised about our Dead Cells review, we’ve removed it for the time being and are investigating.”



UPDATE (7:20pm): IGN has let go of Miucin, writing in a statement that it plans to re-review Dead Cells. “We apologize to our readers, developer Motion Twin, and most especially the YouTuber known under Boomstick Gaming for failing to uphold those standards,” the outlet said.

The original story follows, along with a second update below this piece illustrating a second discovered example of Miucin’s apparent plagiarism.

Last night, a YouTube channel called Boomstick Gaming posted a video titled “IGN Copied my Dead Cells Review: What do I do?” In it, the video’s maker plays a sequence of clips from his own review of the roguelike action platformer and compares them to IGN’s video review, revealing a number of phrases that are strikingly similar.

“This combat system is fast, fluid, responsive, and one of the most rewarding representations of 2D combat of the entire genre,” reads Boomstick Gaming’s video, which was published on July 24.

“Fights are fast, fluid, responsive, and hands down one of the most gratifying representations of video game combat I’ve ever experienced,” reads Miucin in IGN’s video, which was published on August 6. The written review includes the same text.


Some other examples:

Boomstick Gaming: In most games of this genre, your coolest skills and spells are often set to strictly long recharge timers or a limited mana system, but in Dead Cells, your abilities have incredibly quick recharges and allow you to seamlessly integrate these gadgets in normal encounters and it doesn’t make you feel penalized for using your cool stuff.

Filip Miucin: Most games limit your most useful skills with long cool-down timers or a limited mana system, but Dead Cells encourages you to use your deadliest gadgets with a fast recharge timer. It never punishes you for using your best tactics.

Boomstick: Dead Cells only falters slightly with some repetition setting in, especially on the early areas and during longer play sessions.

Miucin: Dead Cells does falter slightly with some repetition but it’s only felt in its earlier areas and during extended play sessions.

Boomstick: Dead Cells figures out an intriguing way to have your rogue-like and Metroidvania experience all in one by focusing on your failures and encouraging you to try something new the next time.

Miucin: Dead Cells strikes a perfect and engaging balance between the Metroidvania and rogue-like experiences by focusing on your failures and urging you to experiment every time you do fail.

Boomstick Gaming’s video went viral last night, skyrocketing to the top of Reddit and other forums. The similarities between the two reviews were too numerous to be coincidental, and many observers saw the incident as a massive outlet taking advantage of a smaller one. (Before this, Boomstick Gaming had around 11,000 subscribers on YouTube. IGN has over 10 million.)

“No hate man but I wish I was cited, collaborated with, and or compensated in some way for the healthy views your site saw on your Dead Cells review,” Boomstick Gaming wrote to Miucin on Twitter this morning.

Miucin has not yet commented publicly, and did not immediately respond to Kotaku’s request for comment. IGN also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

UPDATE 2 (7:35pm): Earlier this evening, a tipster pointed Kotaku to another example of striking similarities between Miucin’s work and another outlet’s, this time from before he was hired at IGN.

Here’s an excerpt from a NintendoLife review of Fifa 18 for Switch posted on September 29, 2017:

However, because it’s not running on the Frostbite engine, FIFA 18 on Switch doesn’t play exactly like the other current-gen versions. The pace is slightly faster and player animations and physics aren’t quite as fluid, lending the game an ever-so-slightly more arcade feel (but not to any major degree).

And an excerpt from a video review from Miucin posted on October 1, 2017:

Only this time, it’s running on a custom engine that EA designed specifically for Switch, which means that it doesn’t play exactly like the Xbox One and PS4 editions of the game do. The animations and physics are definitely not as fluid and the pacing feels slightly faster, ultimately leaving the game feeling a little less realistic and slightly more arcadey.

NintendoLife:

It actually works well; as long as you aren’t a stickler for intricate animation detail, you’re going to have fun here. It runs smoother than a greased-up jazz musician too, with a full 60 frames per second in both docked and handheld mode making for a silky performance and the general feel that you’re playing a high quality product. Although its (slightly less silky-smooth) cutscenes and other close-up moments reveal that the character models are a good deal less detailed than their Xbox One and PS4 counterparts, squint a bit during normal gameplay and you’d genuinely struggle to tell the difference.

Miucin:

But when you’re playing the game, it actually works really well, and it’s easy to look past the graphical setbacks. Because whether you’re playing docked or undocked, the game seems to run at a consistent 60 frames per second, which looks silky smooth and really leaves you feeling like you’re having a true triple-A home console experience but on a console you can take with you on the go. However, when you get up close and get a good look at some of the character models, it’s pretty clear they do have a good amount of less detail than the Xbox One and PS4 versions do, but any imperfections are pretty much unnoticeable during gameplay.

https://kotaku.com/ign-pulls-review-after-plagiarism-accusations-1828157939




the next day.. IGN Posted this.









I've followed IGN since fucking Freshman year in College. Hell my Communications project video was a commercial about IGN Wrestling. It is killing me to see how this once great gaming Site has completely lost its way....
 
Well damn... BGOL POWER...

I thought the story was so obscure that I didn't even search before posting..... I didn't even think another member would have posted it.


@Lexx Diamond or @TEN hey fam... Can I get a Merge.

You know how I don't like to take any shine from another member. @playahaitian posted this first.

stop that cuz...

I'll delete it in a minute.

I thought this was a great discussion topic for he board cause we have so macy real writers and bgol novelists...

and I always wonder if our bgol content is being stolen.
 
IGN Investigating Their Own Potentially Plagiarized Review of Dead Cells

IGN has removed its review of rogue-like Metroidvania game Dead Cells after YouTube channel Boomstick Gaming noticed some major similarities between its review and that put out by IGN's Nintendo editor Filip Miucin. At the moment, the company is apparently investigating this alleged plagiarism.

Dead Cells itself is a game with heavy rogue-like leanings, as the player adventures around a constantly changing castle. With no checkpoints and a nod to the Dark Soulsseries of games in terms of learning through failure, the game has had an extremely good reception from critics so far. However, this controversy could heavily overshadow the release of the game overall.

Related: IGN Acquires Game Publisher Humble Bundle in Controversial Deal

Boomstick Gaming, who also goes by the name of Deadite, released his review of Dead Cells in July but recently noticed some serious similarities in IGN's own review of the title. Over the run of the two reviews, the notion that it could all be a coincidence potentially goes out of the window and is instead replaced by some serious allegations of plagiarism. Those looking for a side-by-side analysis can find one below, courtesy of Boomstick Gaming.


Off the back of this allegation of plagiarism, IGN itself has begun to investigate. Both the written and video review of Dead Cells have been removed, with the written review instead replaced with an editor's note. "As a group of writers and creators who value our own work and that of others in our field, the editorial staff of IGN takes plagiarism very seriously," reads the note. "In light of concerns that have been raised about our Dead Cells review, we’ve removed it for the time being and are investigating."

Should IGN find that its review did plagiarize the work of Boomstick Gaming, then it shows a serious betrayal of trust from the company, particularly since Boomstick Gaming is a relatively small channel with 14,000 followers as of the time of writing. The fact that the review came from one of the site's editors makes it a much bigger headache for IGN than if it was from a contributor as well.

It's not the only time that review quality and integrity has been called into question, with cases such as the paid-for positive Warner Bros. reviews scandal hitting such big names as PewDiePie, and similar happening with EA and Battlefield 4. There's no excuse for ethical failures from reviewers or trusted personalities in gaming, whether with reviews such as this or the gambling controversy that hit Counter-Strike over CSGO Lotto.

After all, gaming is big business, and one look at some of the payouts found in video game-related lawsuits proves that ignorance is not an excuse.


https://screenrant.com/ign-plagiarized-review-dead-cells/
 
The interesting part is that he sent a response to IGN asking for a percentage of the revenue that they got on Youtube from the posting of the video.

Something tells me that this isn't going away.

in a world were now EVERYONE

is a cinematographer, critic, writer etc?

and content is king?

and the entire system of value on entertainment news and media is in constant flux?

those is a MAJOR deal.

@fonzerrillii

so what type of law covers this stuff?

is that a wise move for people planning to practice law?
 
How about them just copying the same Madden review for the past 10 years and giving the shitty ass trash game a high rating when the game is pure ass and the same bullshit for a decade with updated rosters!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Fuck EA fuck Madden!!!!!!!!!!
 
The interesting part is that he sent a response to IGN asking for a percentage of the revenue that they got on Youtube from the posting of the video.

Something tells me that this isn't going away.

Wrong move imo
Should've just been like my reviews are good enough for the editor to steal hire untapped talent to keep your platform fresh for the regular rate you give other reviewer's
No intern shit just straight up job
 
IGN reviews are just trash.

A lot of ass licking going on over there. Just listen to there COD reviews.
 
@largebillsonlyplease

So is something like that intellectual property?

Nope

It's a weird thing
Ppl go viral but don't get paid
The woman who made up on fleek has made companies millions of dollars off of her phrase
Marketing firms have made millions off of her phrase

She ain't get nothing

Social media has made things muddy

Instead of paying for focus groups they tap into the people

But also steal from them too and sell it back
 
Nope

It's a weird thing
Ppl go viral but don't get paid
The woman who made up on fleek has made companies millions of dollars off of her phrase
Marketing firms have made millions off of her phrase

She ain't get nothing

Social media has made things muddy

Instead of paying for focus groups they tap into the people

But also steal from them too and sell it back


So OK Shiggy? that dancing kid...

In a COURT OF LAW

Drake don't owe that kid anything?
 
Media take out took some shit from me.


I posted my jr high yearbook with Lauren London on here and they took it.
 
At all
He threw him a solid for pr.

Shiggy need to parlay it into stuff he really does well to get money

See I don;t get this...

I remember awhile back Kevin Smith had a podcast where him and a famous comic book writer diagrammed the ENTIRE 3 season of a potential Gotham series based on a young Bruce Wayne...

and less than 6 months LATER

BOOM Fox announces Gotham

HE has had to publicly address this NUMEROUS times over the years and explain

even IF Warner Brothers DC DID "steal" his idea?

HE doesn't OWN that intellectual property

he has NO RIGHTS to it.

but I think in this age of streaming media fan made films and social media?

These laws might have to change.

Cause OK

If you SAMPLE a record without clearannce...

the samples artist doesn't AUTOMATICALLY get all the proceeds FROM that song...

its negotiated and in THOSE cases HEAVILY in favor f the original artist

FAIR.

I feel like it should be similar...

If a studio sees a fan made movie or script like it?

pay them...

Ok they arent UNION and are NOT under contract but they should get SOMETHING if you use it..

I think that is actually a WIN for the IP owners...

its a pittance and you saved yourself potential MILLIONS if its a hit.

And got possible talent on the cheap too.
 
See I don;t get this...

I remember awhile back Kevin Smith had a podcast where him and a famous comic book writer diagrammed the ENTIRE 3 season of a potential Gotham series based on a young Bruce Wayne...

and less than 6 months LATER

BOOM Fox announces Gotham

HE has had to publicly address this NUMEROUS times over the years and explain

even IF Warner Brothers DC DID "steal" his idea?

HE doesn't OWN that intellectual property

he has NO RIGHTS to it.

but I think in this age of streaming media fan made films and social media?

These laws might have to change.

Cause OK

If you SAMPLE a record without clearannce...

the samples artist doesn't AUTOMATICALLY get all the proceeds FROM that song...

its negotiated and in THOSE cases HEAVILY in favor f the original artist

FAIR.

I feel like it should be similar...

If a studio sees a fan made movie or script like it?

pay them...

Ok they arent UNION and are NOT under contract but they should get SOMETHING if you use it..

I think that is actually a WIN for the IP owners...

its a pittance and you saved yourself potential MILLIONS if its a hit.

And got possible talent on the cheap too.

Not if you don't own the characters you creating

Kevin Smith didn't own Batman

Fan trailers don't own power rangers and Street fighter

If you create an original idea and it's stolen you got a case

Shiggy did a dance to a song that exists
If shiggy created that song and the dance and Drake took the song
Then he'd be owed cash

Big difference

On fleek is the example

That phrase didn't exist. The word fleek didn't exist she created that she should have gotten intellectual property

Feel me?
 
Not if you don't own the characters you creating

Kevin Smith didn't own Batman

Fan trailers don't own power rangers and Street fighter

If you create an original idea and it's stolen you got a case

Shiggy did a dance to a song that exists
If shiggy created that song and the dance and Drake took the song
Then he'd be owed cash

Big difference

On fleek is the example

That phrase didn't exist. The word fleek didn't exist she created that she should have gotten intellectual property

Feel me?

got it.
 
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