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TheKingofAverage
TheKingofAverage

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The REALITY behind YouTube board game coverage.

An Introduction

I love what I do here on YouTube. My goal from the start was to be real. Yes even when all I did was paint miniatures my channel was founded on the concept of being honest. I wasn't going to be one of those YouTubers that cut out their mistakes. Instead I'd make it a point to show those mistakes every time, and talk over how it happened and how I got around it. And sometimes I wasn't able to.

That's actually an apt sentence for my channel as a whole. I'm not perfect and I've made mistakes. Sure some are small like not pronouncing a word right or getting a rule a bit mixed up, but others have been more profound. At times my entire intent on a video has been lost. At times I haven't communicated well at all and other times I've been sucked into hype more than I should have.

And then there was that one time I took money for a review. In fact this happened twice.

Now first if that shocks you then that's good. It means I've gotten better. So why did I do it then, when I never would now?

An Explanation

As you just read, I founded my channel on being honest. To being real without pretension of anything, especially as an authoritative figure. But that was it...just an idea. YouTube is a grind. With a full time job I have to put almost every moment of my spare time ensuring I can make 2 videos a week. As I said before I love what I do, but it keeps you busy. Every week I was down in the trenches grinding away without ever taking a step back.

Just recently I finally took a step back. I spent several weeks ensuring I took the time to really think about my purpose. All of you patrons know about this from my previous post where I laid out a charter for my channel. It's one thing to have a general idea or concept of something, but it's something entirely different to have a well thought out understanding of it.

The Facts

So those two videos that were sponsored, what's up with those? The first you might have seen, it's the only video I have that has that YouTube blurb on the bottom of the video at the beginning about it being sponsored. Of course I still had my principles. I didn't submit my review before posting and included negatives, but this was during the time when I didn't do reviews often and I felt that if I was to take the time away from my normal videos to film a review, I should be paid. This was before I got ad revenue from Youtube. Anyway I think the second time I accepted payment is much more interesting so I'll be using that as an example for much of this post.

I accepted payment to make a review for a game that ended up bombing on Kickstarter. It wasn't a game I was interested in, had never mentioned it on my channel, and never even played it or made the review video. In the end I got paid for nothing.

The game in question isn't all that important since nothing ever materialized. What is important is the price point. I listed triple (yes, 3x!) what I made in a month at the time and it was accepted quickly, without hesitation. I imagine most paid reviews go higher than this.

That's right, 1 sponsored video paid as much as 3 months of videos. More than ad revenue, more than Patreon, all of it. For just 1 video. It's important I think to realize the pull of this sort of lopsided money on channels for the rest of this post. In fact, I'm just going to come out and say it:

You have to be an idiot not to take the money.

Seriously, unless you are just doing this for fun, why not take the money? One quick sponsored video every so often could net you 5 times the money or more. That's the landscape of YouTube board game coverage in a nutshell. No one can compete with corporate money. Not Patreon. Not likes and subscribes. Not good intentions. Nothing. Money speaks and the people who have the most, and therefore the loudest voice are the companies themselves.

Before I get into my list of what to watch out for I want to list a few more things. Trust me, one of these will blow you away.

Of course it almost goes without saying that often times it's just free product. Or is it just free product? There are unspoken strings attached. If you get a product for free, and then dislike it and say as much, do you think that company is going to send you another product again? Of course not. Why would they? There is no "board game media" - it's all just a bunch of (mostly) dudes with cameras on YouTube. No one here is a journalist, or a even a real critic.

Here's a real doozey. In fact, I'm just going to put up the (edited) email for your entertainment.

In case you can't read that here is the text:

Title:  Advertisement
Body:  Hello, we are the founders on  <redacted>  and have made a game called  <redacted> , you can see our game on this link. 
<redacted>
We are interested in ads on you Youtube channel. We will send you videos of our game from above, so that it won't be visible who is playing and you to put a voice on it. What are you prices and different options please let me know,
Looking forward to hearing from you,
 <redacted> 

Yes you read that right. They want to send me a pre-filmed video that I would just add voice over to so I could pretend to play the game and are willing to hand me money to do it.

WOW.

Alright one more and then we'll get to my list.

Another benefit of getting free product is getting it early. I cannot stress enough how beneficial it is to be first. First to unbox a game? Yep that's a clear benefit. First to review a game? Same thing. You'll get more views and it makes sense. Not everyone wants to watch a board game unboxed a whole bunch of times. Not everyone is going to watch a review of something they watched a review for already months ago.

The List

Below is a list of what to watch out for, knowing what you know now. Don't rely on that little YouTube sponsored blurb, most people won't post it. Business favors (early copies and such) are just as profitable at times than actual money, and it allows people to avoid posting that.

The End

Okay so let's wrap this up. Most of what I listed, under the right circumstances can be okay. Remember the beginning of this post - no one is perfect, myself included. It's why I made my charter public. Who knows, perhaps someday one of you will have to send me a PM and ask for a clarification, or point out how I might be breaking it. Hopefully that never happens but I believe it makes a good point: It's the effort that counts. If a reviewer is making an honest effort to...well...be honest - I say give them a shot. It can be hard, especially for new channels. There's a lot of money and perks tempting them away from honesty but hopefully more YouTubers show up with the right mindset to push back on all of those temptations.

With that in mind I'd like to respond to anything I've done that's on that list, for greater transparency:

And that's it! That's all I think I really wanted to say. So what do you think? Did you bother to even read the whole thing? Could I improve on this in some way to explain what it is I'm trying to explain here? My point with the post is two A) try and shine a light on some business practices consumers might not be aware of and B) to provide some tips on what to look out for so you can better judge videos in the future.

As always guys, thanks for being here! You all rock and you REALLY do help make this channel more self sufficient. I wouldn't be able to do what I do without you.

The REALITY behind YouTube board game coverage.

Comments

Glad to hear it! A better informed backer is just plain better for everyone I think :)

The King of Average

Thanks for this, fortunately, I have been quite decerning when it comes to YouTube board game reviewers. I really appreciated your honesty, it is one of the reasons I decided to become a Patreon supporter.

Fair warning, that's how I started too - slippery slope! First I just naturally critiqued miniatures as I painted them, then as I unboxed them, and then within a whole game review lol :D

The King of Average

Ah yeah good point! I should really out that some are more open about it than others. Wile I haven't watched Rhado in a very long time, and not enough to really understand his intentions, I believe that by default, anyone that's taking sponsores inherently cannot ruffle too many feathers within the industry and therefore even the "non sponsored" reviews are tainted. This is exactly why many Video Game reviewers, and even websites will often only take sponsorship from outside the industry they are reviewing. The famous Jeff Gertsman getting fired for his Kane and Lynch 2 review on Gamespot comes instantly to mind (they were paying for ad space on Gamespot and pulled the ad when the review was negative). Really glad to hear that I provide enough info to be helpful and still not name names outright :) That was my big worry haha

The King of Average

Very interesting! I've seen that a lot as well, and kind of dives into when I spoke about how people will defend their expensive hobby purchases. Do you happen to have a few links handy to some actual media/journalists covering the board game industry (not the pop media ones that cover big board games once in a blue moon like The Verge or Kotaku). I'd really like to speak with some of them if they are out there :D Sadly even if there is some actual journalism, it's not part of any large media instance that can push back against bad practices in an efficient manner :( Also, this reminds me that I should add more to that sentence you quoted. My whole point there is that I myself don't claim to be impartial. I'm quite opinionated in what I like and don't like and try to stop the pretense many have when viewing a review video that I'm trying to think about "the target audience" or something like that. I'm just talking about me :) Dice Tower, SUSD and all the rest (that I've seen) are no different.

The King of Average

Saying "No one here is a journalist, or a even a real critic" is a bit of an extreme. I would agree that there is certainly a cottage industry of YouTubers and podcasters (and even some writers) who solely just do paid previews for Kickstarters. But there are actual journalists and critics out there writing about tabletop games, they just aren't as popular because they don't have the same level of visibility, likely because they are more critical of the games they play and review. I actually started a blog/website a year or so ago and wrote a couple reviews on it, and one thing I also discovered is that boardgaming audience as a whole doesn't actually want negative reviews, they just want validation that the $300 they sunk into a Kickstarter will pay off. I also found that writing reviews and articles was a lot of work and time, and investing what little free time I had into something that ultimately wasn't that fun to write, and/or nobody would actually read, just wasn't worth my time. My time's better spent playing board games than writing about them, I found :)

TJ Jackson

Nicely stated. Kind of glad I haven't dealt with any of that yet 😄I just buy everything, haven't really done any reviews yet (Though there are a few things I meant to review at one point but still haven't) Mostly those will be on things other than board games though because let's be real - you gotta actually play board games to have a real opinion on them haha (more than I do anyway) HOWEVER - if we were talking about busts or minis or ya know - art material stuff then that's a whole other story. BRING IT ON

Bandaru

Okay. Read it over in depth. Very interesting, and as you are pointing issues out - I go... Of course, that makes sense, it's not an innocent hobby. This is big, big business. You could use this post and it into a miniseries of 3 videos focusing on the practices of the boardgame business and YouTube community. There would be no need to call out anyone, because it quite easy to figure out from you blueprint, who does what. You have just provided the Why and the How. It's very helpful. In full fairness you could point out that some reviewers are upfront when they are promoting sponsored content. Rhado does this. (one I could think of) And its commendable.

Thanks Allen! I put some real time into this as I want to be both thorough and we'll worded. This is my second draft (first want just bullet points and notes) so I'm sure there is still room for improvement :)

The King of Average

This is great! I just skimmed it now, and because it's a long and well thought through post. I need to read it in depth before responding in detail. Interesting read!


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