Wikipedia talk:Review aggregators#Tense

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Metacritic percent?

Our example says, "Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 49%..."

Metacritic calls the number a "METASCORE" and, to the best of my knowledge, this is not a percentage, but a weighted average of various critics' scores. - SummerPhDv2.0 18:00, 24 May 2019 (UTC)

: If you search for a film at Google it will often list a short description of a film and some of the scores it has received. For example my search for [https://www.google.com/search?&q=john+wick+3 John Wick 3] returns a short description of the film and also some scores: 8/10 IMDb | 89% Rotten Tomatoes | 73% Metacritic

: The Metacritic score is no more or no less a percentage than the Rotten Tomatoes score, they use different systems to add up and weigh the reviews but both scores are ultimately out of 100.

: Percentage literally means out of 100, from the Latin per centum "by the hundred". -- 109.79.86.175 (talk) 06:29, 21 June 2019 (UTC)

::While mathematically it's true that "43%" and "43 out of 100" are the same, I think there's still a difference when it comes to usage or connotation. In this case, the line is blurred because the Metascore is out of 100.

::Lots of scores are conveyed in plain number form ("I got a 5") or as a fraction ("I got 7.5 out of 10"). But if a judge gives a woman a score of 7.5 (out of 10) on a dive, wouldn't it be weird to say, "she got a 75% score on her dive"? Or if you scored 2100 on the SAT (back when the max was 2400), you wouldn't say "I got 87.5% on the SAT". The fact that Google uses "%" may just be arbitrary since Metacritic itself does not display the Metascore as a percentage or a fraction. They could just as well have used "/100", and their use case would probably not permit "out of 100" even though that's perfectly fine in prose. I would argue that the Metascore is "less a percentage" than the RT score simply because it is not displayed as a percentage by Metacritic, but rather as a whole number. But only barely less. Sorry for this pointless rambling lol. Winston (talk) 03:06, 21 September 2021 (UTC)

According to...

There is yet another variation on the wording for review aggregator that I've seen a lot more of recently. I've seen some editors use the wording "According to" for Metacritic, and it seems verbose and clunky to me, adding yet another variation of the Reception text for no apparent benefit, and not based on any discussion either. I think having a similar wording for both "On Rotten Tomatoes" and "On Metacritic" was more consistent and more concise. The two editors I've seen using it most were Sebastian/Nyxaros and TropicAces, but neither seem willing or able[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:TropicAces#According_to] to explain why they were using this wording. If anyone is aware of any discussion that lead to this change in wording favored by a few editors I'd be interested to see the discussion but I don't believe there was one.

Now I think I finally get why some editors favor the "According to" wording, it seems as if they were not looking at the headline scores and comparing Rotten Tomatoes to Metacritic, like I thought we were doing. It seems as if they are placing the focus differently and looking at Metacritic in isolation, and putting less emphasis on the score but more emphasis on the summary at the end, i.e. According to Metacritic ... blah blah blah ... the film received "universal acclaim". This wording -- with the score stuck in the middle -- feels awkward and disjointed, and I don't think the change of emphasis is an improvement. -- 109.77.210.114 (talk) 23:13, 27 August 2021 (UTC)

:Yes, I agree that "According to..." isn't the best phrasing to use in this situation. RT and MC are aggregators that compile reviews, so it's not really according to the aggregator. In actuality, it's according to the critics, which is summarized by the aggregator. Sometimes the phrasing helps with proper in-text attribution and is acceptable per MOS:SAID, but it doesn't really fit here. I prefer "On" instead. --GoneIn60 (talk) 20:40, 30 August 2021 (UTC)

  • Agree with Gonein60. However, I don't think it's necessarily about comparing the RT and MC scores, as the OP mentioned. Considering each review aggregator in isolation is fine, and I believe the default thing to do. That's not really why "According to" isn't the best phrasing. Winston (talk) 04:31, 1 September 2021 (UTC)

::"According to" has been used for years, especially in music articles. It is intended to emphasize that the reception "generally favorable", "mixed or average" etc. is from Metacritic. Critics don't distill their reviews to a single number. Or assign scores to their reviews, and apply a weighted average to summarize the range of their opinions. {{tq|According to/On Metacritic, ..., X received "...".}} is better than {{tq|On Metacritic, the film has a rating of ... based on ... reviews, indicating "...".}} in my opinion. Also, this user had an account before and has been editing from multiple IPs for months now because of their actions. ภץאคгöร 08:28, 2 September 2021 (UTC)

:::Thanks for weighing in, Nyxaros, but there's nothing wrong with editing anonymously. --GoneIn60 (talk) 14:19, 2 September 2021 (UTC)

::::I didn't write "there's something wrong with editing anonymously." ภץאคгöร 15:20, 5 September 2021 (UTC)

:::I mean I still think it's fine to use "according to". It's just not my just personal preference. Winston (talk) 16:52, 2 September 2021 (UTC)

:::: It is interesting to finally learn that (allegedly) "According to" is a wording favored by Wikipedia music articles. It is a shame that it took so long for Sebastian/Nyxaros to explain themself even if he persists in presuming guilt because an IP editor disagrees with him.

:::: As far as I can tell this essay WP:RTMC came primarily from an editor heavily involved with Wikipedia Film and has tended to reflect that, whereas Wikipedia project Television tends to use slightly different wordings. Being aware of other wiki projects like Music and Games will be useful in any discussion about getting a more consistent wording we can all live with. Thanks to User:GoneIn60 for starting the above discussion trying to discuss different wordings, I'll try to add to that discussion later. -- 109.76.142.195 (talk) 22:54, 2 September 2021 (UTC)

:::::Rant. You could've easily searched the encyclopedia instead of coming after me. I've already explained everything with sources, just keep writing them over and over because you continue to repeat your comments without any policy, guideline, essay or source. You cannot refer to editors with their old usernames. ภץאคгöร 15:20, 5 September 2021 (UTC)

:::::: Sebastian/Nyxaros continues to push their personal choice of wording without anything to back it up, despite claiming that there were discussions and not showing those discussions. Sebastian/Nyxaros only just claimed "You cannot refer to editors with their old usernames" but again with nothing to back it up, and I do not believe there is any policy to support that claim, since they continue to exhibit the same terrible aggressive attitude despite a name change what I'm doing is warning other editors who may also have encountered them before. Sebastian/Nyxaros continue to falsely claim on their userpage that they are "No longer here". Their terrible attitude and falsehoods would be merely annoying if weren't for the fact that Sebastian/Nyxaros turns around and makes straw-man attacks on me for editing anonymously. Show your sources, remove the false message from your user page, discuss the actual topic of this page. -- 109.79.162.117 (talk) 14:07, 16 September 2021 (UTC)

:There is the part that, usually with MetaCritic, that we include MC's prose assessment (eg "generally positive reviews"), which in such case, we should say something like "according to MetaCritic". --Masem (t) 00:10, 3 September 2021 (UTC)

:: You say "should" but I'm saying that does not seem to have been established yet. If we were succinctly writing "According to Metacritic reviews were mixed" that would make more sense, but when we are using a long verbose and detailed wording and interrupting it in the middle "According to Metacritic ... verbose explanation of how the score works ... the film received "universal acclaim" it seems poorly written to me (not quite Yoda level but awkward writing) and does not seem like something we should be doing. Try reading it out loud and then tell me it isn't verbose and clunky. The consistency of having both scores "on Rotten Tomatoes" and "on Metacritic" respectively seems simpler, cleaner and more consistent to me. -- 109.79.162.117 (talk) 14:07, 16 September 2021 (UTC)

::: {{tl|MC}} (and consequently it's subtemplates {{tl|Metacritic album prose}} and {{tl|MC film}} are currently using the "According to" wording. The template appears to have been created by User:Koavf so here where there is actually active discussion I'd really like to establish if there is consensus in favor of "According to" or if other like me or User:GoneIn60 people think it is a little clunky. -- 109.79.162.117 (talk) 14:17, 16 September 2021 (UTC)

::::I think that's a valid point and a very good explanation of the issue you're seeing. I don't disagree necessarily, but it may be a minor contention/bullet point that we wouldn't really be able to (or even want to) control with a MOS guideline, and it may lack the significance needed to be mentioned in this essay (especially if the hope is that elements from this essay will eventually be promoted to MOS:FILM). One might even argue that the score itself tallied by the aggregator is "according to" them. So the entire sentence could reasonably be interpreted properly with that introduction. I prefer "On", but I don't think I'd go out of my way to change it from "According to". Interested to hear other thoughts. --GoneIn60 (talk) 16:05, 16 September 2021 (UTC)

::::: A certain editor continues to make arbitrary changes to stable articles pushing their preferred "According to" wording.[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lara_Croft:_Tomb_Raider&diff=1073381708&oldid=1073179198] Of all the slight variations Wikipedia editors choose I don't get why anyone insists on pushing this one. It is actively worse than the boiler plate text {{tq|"Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 100 out of 100 based on 200 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".}} currently used by {{tl|MC film}}. -- 109.77.204.189 (talk) 20:14, 27 February 2022 (UTC)

RT critical consensus discussion at WP:FILM

Thought you might want to check out Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Film#Rotten Tomatoes summaries. Winston (talk) 08:19, 28 September 2021 (UTC)

: Don't you hate it when the normal routine archiving of discussions actively makes it more difficult to find anything and in effect breaks the links. I certainly do, so here's the link to the same discussion Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Film/Archive_78#Rotten_Tomatoes_summaries after it was archived. (In summary, the discussion expressed concern about the addition of Rotten Tomatoes to almost every article, as being formulaic and perhaps placing too much emphasis on one particular website. Some editors reiterated past discussions (which this essay WP:RTMC already largely summarizes) and recommended against using Rotten Tomatoes for films pre-2000 or where better sources of analysis were available, and another advised adding not only Rotten Tomatoes but also Metacritic or Cinemascore if available (don't forget PostTrak) so as not to rely too much on Rotten Tomatoes.)

: I personally continue to think of Rotten Tomatoes as providing a generally useful limited overview to readers but that in an encyclopedia it is more important to include prose and excerpts from reviews that get into the specific details and explain why critics thought a film was good or bad (acting, cinematography, costume, direction, design, effects, etc.). -- 109.76.128.45 (talk) 23:56, 27 January 2022 (UTC)

::Another recent discussion here (which is bound to need updating as well once it gets archived!). I closed with similar comments. RT and MC are good starting points for newer films and hit/miss for older films, but in no way do they make the critical reception sections complete on their own. Editors hate seeing review aggregators listed all by their lonesome with no other content, but the solution isn't removing them. Do the work and expand the section first, then decide on RT and MC's relevance last. --GoneIn60 (talk) 06:18, 28 January 2022 (UTC)

Couple of suggestions

I have a couple of suggestions for this essay. The first is that the "minimum number of reviews to be valid for inclusion" should be more fleshed out in the essay. It implies that about 10 review is not enough (I agree that it's not), but never really tries to set a lower limit. I think I've seen 12 reviews, 15 reviews, and 20 reviews variously suggested (e.g. in WT:FILM) as the lower limit to include something like the RT or MC score – I think this essay should at pick a suggested minimum number.

AFAICT, this essay also makes no mention of "audience scores" and whether they should be mentioned or not. I'm guessing as with IMDb user ratings, they should not be mentioned in articles – if so, this essay should definitely make clear that they should not be mentioned. There are a number of movies out there like Redeeming Love that have very low critical ratings (12% at RT), but have high audience scores (95% audience score with >500 ratings at RT). If the latter are not to be mentioned, this essay should make that clear, especially as some of the streamers (e.g. Peacock) actually report RT audience scores.

My $0.02. --IJBall (contribstalk) 05:47, 6 July 2022 (UTC)

: This essay does not need to mention audience scores because the higher level rules and guidelines take precedence over an essay. The guidelines on WP:USERGENERATED content and WP:RS already make it clear that audience scores are not allowed. (Rare exceptions can be made if reliable secondary sources report the user/audience scores but there doesn't seem to be much enthusiasm for that, and there are usually better ways to indicate that a show is popular without resorting to user voted web polls). In one sense though IJBall is correct, the guidelines of WP:FILM and WP:TV could do a whole lot more to address this matter and clarify the general consensus and best practice on this issue. -- 109.76.201.113 (talk) 14:18, 9 July 2022 (UTC)

::But is that any reason not to remention it in this essay? The more places that mention "don't use audience scores", the better. And an essay is maybe in a better position to "suggest" a minimum number of reviews in include, because, as an "essay" it would be not "binding", just a "suggestion". --IJBall (contribstalk) 15:16, 9 July 2022 (UTC)

::: Ask User:Erik, it is his essay (iirc). Maybe there is room for this essay to include a bit more about what not to do, I personally don't think it is necessary to repeat the already firmly established guidelines against using unreliable sources and user generated content here.

::: As for the minimum number of reviews, the text in this essay {{tq| Single-number "averages" of opinion can be insufficient on their own,}} is as far as I can tell already warning readers against putting too much emphasis on scores based on a low number of reviews. It is an interesting question and I would encourage you to ask WP:FILM. The idea didn't get much traction before but it might if you float it again. I think it seems like a nice idea in theory but in practice even more difficult to enforce than not including audience scores. Good faith editors are going to want to add Rotten Tomatoes anyway. For smaller films (often horror, sometimes kids films, straight to DVD films etc) the review count is not going to be very high, but I think it serves the readers better to include the Rotten Tomatoes score anyway so long as editors include the number of reviews counted in the blurb for context (obviously a big score based on 4 reviews is not as impressive as a big score based on more than 10 reviews, etc.). In some film list articles editors have already agreed by consensus not to include Rotten Tomatoes scores for films with less than 20 reviews, I expect you could easily argue to doing that again in other similar cases but I think it would be difficult and counter-productive to try and do it in every case. -- 109.76.201.113 (talk) 21:39, 9 July 2022 (UTC)

::::It's not my essay anymore. {{smiley}} Honestly, I'd write it differently today, and it would be more away from the general community consensus. For example, I think in the long run, the rating average from Rotten Tomatoes, and not the percent, is more important for a film's encyclopedic article, and I think Metacritic's positive/mixed/negative breakdown should be used more often. So for this essay, have at it, but realize that it has no teeth since it is not a guideline or policy. It's only a recommendation that any editor is free to ignore. Erik (talk | contrib) (ping me) 22:16, 9 July 2022 (UTC)

::::: {{tq|the rating average from Rotten Tomatoes, and not the percent, is more important}} and {{tq|Metacritic's positive/mixed/negative breakdown should be used more often}} I respectfully disagree. I understand why you say it but I'm not sure any more emphasis on Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic than we already have would be an improvement. Other opinions are available. (I can also demonstrate that editors are confused by the Rotten Tomatoes "average rating" because I recently had an editor accuse me of WP:OR and WP:SYNTH for including it, and I was not actually adding it, only reverting to an earlier version of the same Reception section. He thought I made up the number and did not know that clicking on the percentage revealed the extra information including the Rotten Tomatoes average rating. It would be strange to put more emphasis on information that Rotten Tomatoes has deliberately hidden.) But who knows what conclusions a larger discussion might bring. -- 109.76.201.113 (talk) 00:15, 10 July 2022 (UTC)

::::::Technically the rating average on RT is a much better indicator of how positive the reviews are. The percentage just tells us how many critics gave it at least a somewhat positive review. That is why we can get differences between RT's percentage and MC's average rating. - adamstom97 (talk) 02:04, 10 July 2022 (UTC)

::::::In addition, our perception of what Rotten Tomatoes is doing with the "average rating" is just an opinion. Ultimately, I would argue it doesn't matter what we think; it's all about how secondary sources present the information. Most do not report the average rating, but quite a few do. Here's just two examples: [https://comicbook.com/marvel/news/thor-ragnarok-100-rotten-tomatoes-score/ Ragnarok] and [https://www.deseret.com/2018/6/6/20646439/worst-jurassic-film-ever-here-s-what-critics-are-saying-about-jurassic-world-fallen-kingdom Fallen Kingdom]. --GoneIn60 (talk) 11:36, 10 July 2022 (UTC)

:Some essays exist with the intentions of representing a minority view. Others are created in hopes that one day the essay will be elevated to guideline or policy level. Then there's the huge void between those two extremes, which is where I feel this essay lies. Feel free to attempt changes anytime and see if they stick. All I can recommend or advise is that the more granular we get in the essay, the further away from guideline and policy it gets. --GoneIn60 (talk) 11:44, 10 July 2022 (UTC)

Time to rethink Rotten Tomatoes prominence on Wikipedia?

[https://www.vulture.com/article/rotten-tomatoes-movie-rating.html A recent article in Vulture] describing both the manipulations of Rotten Tomatoes by film studies and the shifts in the review aggregation policies raises some serious questions about the prominence of Rotten Tomatoes in establishing or claiming critical success. Given how central these aggregators are to the "Critical Response" section of film wikipedia pages, is it time to rethink the idea that it is a reliable source? If so, what is an alternative? Infocidal (talk) 16:57, 6 September 2023 (UTC)

: MOS:FILMCRITICS Wikipedia project film already recommends that aggregators be used with caution, and that efforts be made to write out insights of relevant individual critics. Smaller articles often rely heavily on Rotten Tomatoes and not much else, but {{tl|Good article}}s and {{tl|Featured article}}s do eventually end up with better more detailed information. The intent is already there even if it is not always realized. -- 109.76.132.42 (talk) 19:31, 25 November 2023 (UTC)

[[:Template:Rotten Tomatoes prose]] has an [[WP:RFC|RfC]]

:Template:Rotten Tomatoes prose has an RfC for possible consensus. A discussion is taking place. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments on the discussion page. Thank you. - Favre1fan93 (talk) 19:58, 1 December 2023 (UTC)

What's the future of the Rotten Tomatoes average rating?

For more context: {{section link|Talk:Rotten Tomatoes#Average rating appears to be gone on Rotten Tomatoes}}

In short, Rotten Tomatoes has removed the average rating from its scoring system... sort of. While it is no longer visible on both film and television pages, the rating can still be accessed by opening the page's HTML (i.e. using "Inspect" or "Developer tools") and searching for "averagerating". There is no telling if or when the rating will be removed in its entirety from the HTML, or if it will be re-introduced to the website altogether. Despite the information still being available in the HTML (and continually updated, like it used to be), is a piece of cited info still considered valid if it is not readily visible on the page itself? What is the best way forward with the average rating? Snowshredder140 (talk) 02:38, 30 April 2025 (UTC)