A critic isn't someone who's telling you that "you'll love this [movie/book/game]", it's someone who's telling you, "this [movie/book/game] have this and that", then let you decide by yourself if this mean that you can possibly enjoy it.
I disagree. The numerical score inherently can't tell you what a piece of media has or has not. Notice that this thread is about numerical scores first and foremost.
"10 out of 10". Go on, tell me what does that mean?
The in-depth review, yes, ideally should talk about the contents of the piece, but the rating isn't that. It's broadly a measure of how good you think a product is. Furthermore, the whole point of reviews, ratings, discussions is to help people find enjoyable media, you stated that yourself. Reviews don't exist for the sake of having reviews. Reviews and critics exist to serve the audience. Their sole purpose is to help end user pick or forgo a piece of media; if a critic is good enough to predict "you'll love this [movie/book/game]" then they are a good critic. They fulfill their purpose. Obviously for a non-personalized review that won't work very well, hence the approach you described. But it's a generalist fallback. A kludge.
And if a critic rates the piece wildly different from the general audience, then it casts doubts that his reasoning is in line with the way the audience thinks. You can't rate some trash 10/10 and be correct about the inner workings of the piece.
"game looks promising" if not also accompanied by an actual game review isn't valid because it violates rule 3
No?
Rule 3: The review should only be about the game, not the developer (pricing, update times, etc). "Game looks promising" says nothing about the dev, it talks about the game. You could argue that it violates rule 1, but it's "
Try to be objective", not "
Be objective". They tried, they failed, rule not broken. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
To be clear, I agree that the rules should prohibit this type of reviews, but I don't see how the current wording does that unambiguously. But I do not think it's fair to blame people for not reporting posts when they don't clearly violate the letter of the law.