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EA Sports' Moore: Metacritic Less Relevant To Wii Game Sales

EA Sports president Peter Moore tells Gamasutra that Metacritic scores don't mean success on the Wii and that it's more important to monitor user views, since Wii users "don't know Metacritic exists."

Brandon Sheffield, Contributor

June 10, 2009

2 Min Read
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For EA Sports' Wii titles, Metacritic is no longer the benchmark for quality, says label president Peter Moore. Now, it's user reviews. Discussing EA Sports Active, which recently saw Electronic Arts' best launch to date on Wii with 600,000 units, Moore tells Gamasutra that "We're not going to Kotaku or Operation Sports on this one, we're going to Amazon." "The thing is with the Wii, it seems to be for the gaming sites, it's the last platform they review," said Moore. "It takes a time to get an actual review score. I would pretty much guarantee that just about every Wii game ships without a Metacritic rating because [reviewers] haven't got around, to it or they're not interested in reviewing it." According to Moore, Wii titles seem to sell independently of their Metacritic rating -- some titles in the low 70s, for example, still sell multiples of millions. "So what truly is the value of a review on a Wii game?" "Now, yes, you still want to get the best possible review score you can get but I think it's less critical to the success of a game on the Wii than it maybe is on Xbox360 or PS3," Moore concluded. EA boss John Riccitiello recently said that the company would put 50 percent of its emphasis behind Wii titles in the coming year -- alongside the goal of raising the company's Metacritic ratings across the board. But for Moore, Metacritic is not the perfect solution, especially on the Wii. "I absolutely guarantee you, the thing we're watching most closely now [with Wii titles] is things like Amazon - and I'll go look at women's magazines that have powerful websites, and then we look at what we call 'mommy bloggers'," he says. "That's where those people go for their information. They are not going to Metacritic. They don't know Metacritic exists."

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About the Author

Brandon Sheffield

Contributor

Brandon Sheffield is creative director of Necrosoft Games, former editor of Game Developer magazine and gamasutra.com, and advisor for GDC, DICE, and other conferences. He frequently participates in game charity bundles and events.

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