Rein in your snark- bias has nothing to do with it. 4Ed got the same shake as any other system I've purchased. Actually, even better- I don't usually purchase a game before checking out its mechanics and fluff.
And in 30+ years of gaming (as I've said, covering many systems & doing actual playtests), 4Ed stands as one of only 2 game revisions of a game I enjoyed that I didn't like.
I preordered it. I read some of the prerelease leaks. I read the game when it finally got into my hands. While I found some things in the game to be meritorious, as a whole, it had eliminated too many elements of previous editions I enjoyed- things I felt helped set D&D apart from other FRPGs- while having too many new elements that I disliked.
In fact, it was such a different game that the designers themselves suggested that you start new campaigns rather than try to convert extant ones, which for someone like myself was another strike against it.
I handed it off to others in my main game group, most of whom are avid computer gamers, a few of whom are professional computer game designers. THEIR main complaint (not mine) was that it introduced certain aspects of computer games that they had no wish to experience in a tabletop RPG.
I then shelved it.
No snark intended. You got a first impression of the game and you decided that it was not worth your time. And even if that first impression was wrong (possible, though maybe not likely), it would take you way too much effort to overcome it. You decided not to invest that time as you don't need a new gaming system. I would consider that a rational decision.