JoeBlank said:On reviews stating whether a product was a comp copies: I have nothing against the practice, but I do like for a reviewer to state whether they received the product for free. I wrote a few reviews for d20 Magazine Rack, and love the format there. When the reviewer lets me know how he got the product, I feel like he is being honest with me. When this info is left out of the review, I feel like the reviewer thinks he has something to hide.
On the practice of providing comp copies, I am all for it. If a reviewer states up front that he paid for the copy, that lends as much bias as getting it for free. The reviewer must have had some reason to buy the product, either familiarity and good past experiences with the publisher and/or writers, or at least with the subject matter. Of course, if the product turns out not to the reviewers liking, this could result in a more negative review, because expectations were higher. On the other hand, most people do not buy a product that they expect to dislike. (diaglo being the exception, whenever he buys a d20 product. When he tells me he liked something for d20, I know it must be exceptional.)
Isn't that a little like judging by first impressions? It's automatically calling the integrity of the reviewer into question without any proof to the point. Now, if a reader buys a product and calls a reviewer out on a poor review based on his own reading, then at least you'd have proof of a bad review. But reviews by their nature are personal opinion, and that to a certain extent includes bias. Bias to liking certain products and not others, for instance. I'm with Crothian on this one - I don't generally list if I got a product for free or not, because to me it makes no difference to the review (although after reading this thread I kind of feel like I'm forced to). I think it's unfair for readers to judge reviewers based on where they got a product because you're immediatly assuming that they're going to be biased based on something so superficial.
Pinotage