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So, you want to know what you're grade meant? You're crying like a baby because your game got a measly 6.0? You're not? Well... right now you are, okay? Look, don't argue with me! If you do, I've got nothing to start with, okay? Good. So, you want to know what you're grade meant, eh? Well, let's take a look at the charts. Lets start from the top. 10.0: Flawless. The rarest of all grades. The one game that gets everything so incredibly right, to do anything to it would spoil it. If you got this grade, you're set with this game. A must have. 9.0: Outstanding. A great game. One that has only a few glaring flaws. Just needs a bit of improvement to be one of the greats. Definately worth a look. 8.0: Great. Some flaws bring it down. Might take some work to fix. Worthy of your time. 7.0: Good. Struggles a bit in a few categories. May take a lot of work, but it is curable. Still a good game to have. 6.0: Pretty good. A far cry from perfect, but still fixable. Worth a look-see. 5.0: Average. Doesn't do anything well, but doesn't do anything badly. May just be plain vanilla. Like any other game. 4.0: Not too good. Doesn't acomplish anything very well. This is the grade where things start to get bad. May get it out of curiosity. 3.0: Poor. Think of this as a "D" game. Fails to accomplish much. You probably don't want it. 2.0: Bad. No real hope of revival. You were warned. 1.0: Abysmal. Fails to acomplish much more than taking up space. I wouldn't touch it if I were you. Well, there you have it. The grading scale. What? What about all the ".5"'s? Well... just use your imagination. This is how I think all our reviews should be written from now on. Okay, you can stop crying now. |
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Operation: OHR is owned and maintained by Kevin W. (Aethereal) |