So, the previous post here on relative pricing between UMD and downloaded games for the PSP was really my first attempt at an original news story. I thought the results of my quick research were interesting so I emailed a link to a bunch of different news blogs. The story got some nice traffic from a link over at VE3D and another at Shacknews.
I also got a response by email from Brian Crecente at Kotaku. He said this:
Hey there,
Neat idea but you may want to consider a different headline if you want links.Brian Crecente
Editor In Chief
Kotaku
He was right, so I changed the title and replied to let him know I had. I thought the change would be enough to get a link from them. But I couldn’t have been more wrong. Look what he ran today: PSP Game Price Check: Playstation Store vs Used UMD.
You’ll notice Crecente used a top ten list from Gamerankings to generate his list of games to check, all but guaranteeing the list would include some of the best selling PSP games, and therefore most plentiful in the used market keeping prices low. He also fails to account for shipping charges whatsoever in his comparison.
So to sum up, Kotaku will steal story ideas from other bloggers, fail to acknowledge that fact with a link to the original research and then do a poor job with their own version.
Keep it classy, Crecente.
Did you notice the credit I gave you at the bottom of the story? I said it was inspired by your story. We didn’t just link to your findings because they weren’t complete, and you kept that headline up for two days, well past when I started working on my version.
well holy crap crecente is pulling the same stunt he did when he worked for kotaku http://t.co/m93vaUKsth
@voxmediainc @crecenteb can you comment on this pluralism accusation? http://t.co/2TVD3c9CZp
@HULKGAMECRIT well crecente is kotaku’s former editor-in-chief and has done this before http://t.co/m93vaUKsth http://t.co/AB5DLCMUwf
RT @Nanashrew: @HULKGAMECRIT well crecente is kotaku’s former editor-in-chief and has done this before http://t.co/m93vaUKsth http://t.c …