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1->''"There is no such thing as 'fun for the whole family.'"''
2-->-- '''[[Series/{{Seinfeld}} Jerry Seinfeld]]'''
3
4Also known as "{{review}}er-speak", these are cliche phrases that media critics use to describe works. Coming up with original ways to describe multiple things within one same month/week/issue can be hard. On top of that, reviews need to be ''interesting'' in addition to informative. That's why critics of all types tend to have an arsenal full of stock terms they can pull out to summarize how they feel about the subject. These could range from pretty basic descriptors to flat out sensationalism. Either way, you can expect to see these phrases uttered more than a few times if you read enough reviews or entertainment-related news reports.
5
6Some examples of this are "[[ThisIsYourPremiseOnDrugs X on crack]]" ,"JustForFun/XMeetsY", "best X of the year", "fun for the whole family!" These cliches are often parodied.
7
8ReviewerStandardComparisons is a SubTrope. See also ReviewIronicEcho, when reviewers can't resist making an obvious {{Pun}} on the title or a line from the work to make fun of it.
9
10----
11!!Examples
12
13[[foldercontrol]]
14
15[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
16* Anime or manga that goes down the DarkerAndEdgier or {{Deconstruct|ion}}ive route of their genres might be called "the [[Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion Evangelion]]/[[Anime/RevolutionaryGirlUtena Utena]]/[[Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica Madoka]] of their genre" depending on how bleak it gets. If it's for a shonen audience, expect a few "Like ''Manga/HunterXHunter'', but X" quotes thrown in.
17** The phrase has a nastier inverse; LighterAndSofter works of any kind ({{Reconstruction}}s, parodies, more positive in general) are said to be lone idealistic beacons "in a post-[Relevant Dark Work in their Genre] world".
18* Much like its Western counterpart, 3D anime will usually either get complaints about trying to impose on "the last bastion of 2D", or compliments that "3D can coexist with 2D" if it mimics 2D style well.
19* Directors of anime films with lavish backgrounds, high-quality animation, and all-ages appeal will be labeled "the next [[Creator/HayaoMiyazaki Miyazaki]]" by reviews.
20* A {{Fanservice}} or HaremGenre series for girls that becomes a social phenomenon is always "not just for lonely otaku anymore".
21* "Anime of the Season" (due to contemporary anime's ''cour'' model) and the standard "Anime of the Year" get thrown around when discussing favorite anime.
22* "Cute Girls Doing [x]" is used for {{Iyashikei}} series or just about anything featuring a mostly-female or {{improbably female|Cast}} cast. The SpearCounterpart, "Cute Guys Doing [x]", tends to get used more for series with a CastFullOfPrettyBoys regardless of genre.
23* If a translation has a bad dub or {{Bowdlerize}}s content to be shown on kids' television, "like [[Creator/FourKidsEntertainment 4Kids]]" is the go-to insult for the studio that translated it.
24* {{Mecha Show}}s that make it {{Out of the|Ghetto}} ScifiGhetto are often lauded with "unlike most mecha series, this one focuses on the characters". This tends to frustrate mecha fans, who feel it paints the genre at large as mindless {{spectacle}}.
25[[/folder]]
26
27[[folder:Film]]
28* "Riveting". When was the last time you saw that word used outside of a movie review context? Apart from [[StealthPun metalwork class]], that is?
29** [[WebAnimation/NeuroticallyYours Foamy The Squirrel]] railed against this during one of his famous rants.
30** Creator/DaveBarry once claimed to have been [[LampshadeHanging "literally riveted to [his] seat, by literal rivets."]]
31* Action movies and books will usually be "Thrilling," "Suspenseful," "Gripping," and "High-Octane," among many others.
32* Expect any action-comedy review to feature the word "romp" at least once.
33* Every action movie has at some point been referred to as a "roller-coaster ride" or "thrill ride".
34* Directors are typically called "visionary" for reasons which are often unclear.
35* Family comedies will usually be "Fun for the whole family" or something to that effect.
36* Comedies in general will always be "hilarious" and "laugh-out-loud funny!"
37* Documentaries will often be "thought-provoking" or "controversial"
38* Film reviews of blockbusters often feature "This Year's X": "''Film/StarTrek2009'' is this year's ''Film/IronMan1''", for example. "The Next X" is similar, also for people who can't comprehend that something can stand on its own without being compared to something else.
39* "Smart, sexy and..." fill-in-the-blank. "Cool," "fun," and "action-packed" work.
40* The "It's ''Film/DieHard'' [[DieHardOnAnX On An X]]" line that's popped up in reviews for the past 22 years.
41* ''Bright Lights Film Journal'''s "[[http://www.brightlightsfilm.com/banned.php Banned Words]]" picks apart a few of these, with special disdain for "meditation," as in, "It isn't violent, it's a ''meditation'' on violence."
42* Peter Travers, the film critic for ''Rolling Stone'', often peppers his reviews with cliche phrases like "crackerjack thrill ride," "enjoy the air conditioning," or "check your brain in at the door" to describe action movies that require little attention.
43* Few action film set-ups are as overworked and meaningless as the old one-two punch of the "unstoppable chain of events" that will have you "on the edge of your seat."
44* The posters for ''Film/DumbAndDumber'' parodied this with fictitious review quotes such as, [[CaptainObvious "It's a movie experience for anyone who goes to see it"]] and [[FridgeLogic "I laughed til I stopped."]]
45* Many reviewers have taken after Roger Ebert's 'two thumbs up' signature. Sometimes something else will be substituted depending on the movie, ie two paws for ''Film/CatsAndDogs'', or some such. Thankfully, the "two thumbs up" concept is copyrighted, so the current generation won't have to see terrible local critics use it themselves.
46* Expect sometimes-intentionally painful {{pun}}s and metaphors. For example, "''Earth'' is terra-ble" for ''Film/BattlefieldEarth'', "This Cradle rocks!" for ''Film/LaraCroftTombRaiderTheCradleOfLife'', "scales the heights of filmmaking" for ''[[Film/OneHundredAndTwentySevenHours 127 Hours]]'' and "will keep you at the edge of your seat" for ''Film/{{Edge of Darkness|2010}}''. That last one was used by three separate reviews.
47** Gene Shalit absolutely delights in these.
48*** "When it comes to oddball titles, ''Film/TheMenWhoStareAtGoats'' is certainly hard to ''bleat''."
49*** "It's a spectacle to see, and you need spectacles to see it...and there's pandemonium on Pandora" for "Film/{{Avatar}}''.
50*** "''Film/TheLovelyBones is lovely, and no bones about it!"
51*** "Here is Zeus! And by Jupiter, it looks like Creator/LiamNeeson!" for ''Film/{{Clash of the Titans|2010}}''.
52*** "Creator/TaylorLautner falls for Music/TaylorSwift (as Lautner's character trips over a hurdle)...haha, it's a ''taylor-made'' romance!" for ''Film/ValentinesDay''.
53** Dutch example: if a Franchise/JamesBond movie is coming out, expect to read "James maakt het bond."[[note]]"Het bon'''t''' maken" is a Dutch expression loosely meaning "To raise a ruckus".[[/note]]
54* Just about anytime an animated movie becomes critically and/or commercially successful, you'll find critics reminding us that [[AnimationAgeGhetto "animation is a medium that can be enjoyed by both adults and children."]] A statement so tired and overused that Roger Ebert, in his review of ''Ratatouille'', dismissed it as an annoying cliche.
55* Any film attempting a relatively realistic portrayal of space travel will be compared to ''Film/Apollo13'' or ''Film/TheRightStuff'' (this also often applies to nonfiction books about the early space program.)
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Literature]]
59* Literary critics in particular tend to use the phrase "tour de force", usually apropos of extremely pretentious or confusing works.
60* "Page-turner" comes up often.
61* Any book with sociopolitical themes is "incisive" and/or "provocative". If it takes a more philosophical route, it's "a meditation". If there's interpersonal drama, it's "volatile", and if the protag has a shitty life, it's "taut" or "haunting". Oh, and you can't just say it "has" those themes, it has to "explore" the themes.
62* The book is "both [adjective] and [antonym]", e.g. both warm and merciless. This seems used most frequently as a fragment at the start of a sentence ("Both sly and earnest, both frantic and serene, ''Book Name'' is a portrait of a town in crisis that illustrates the strength of humanity blah blah blah...")
63* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
64** ''Literature/TheTruth'', about the Disc's first newspaper, played with this trope. Albeit about news reporting, not reviews per se. For example, the words ''rumpus'' and ''fracas'' only appear in certain newspapers, the same way ''beverages'' only appear on certain menus.
65** ''Literature/EqualRites'' had a foreword reading "This book is not wacky. Only [[Series/ILoveLucy dumb redheads in Fifties sitcoms]] are wacky. It isn't zany, either."
66* If the novel accurately captures a teen's voice, expect the phrase "like [[Literature/TheCatcherInTheRye Holden Caulfield]]" to pop up somewhere.
67* Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart's books mock this consistently. Some highlights (paraphrased).
68-->"Best book ever. Or maybe I'm dead and Colbert's taking advantage of this fact by signing my name to this review. Either way, you got to admit, he's got guts." -J D Salinger.
69-->"A must-read! I laughed, I cried, I lost ten pounds!" -''Stephen Colbert''
70* If it's aimed at young adults and has even the slightest element of fantasy, it'll be perfect for ''Literature/HarryPotter'' fans, regardless of any actual similarities.
71** Even if it isn't, it's still open to comparison these days. See certain editions of ''Literature/DragonridersOfPern'' books, and how for a while every ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' book had "...as another wizard named Harry" on the front or back (or both). Not as painful since [[DarkerAndEdgier later books]] came out, but it still leads to [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids misunderstandings]].
72** In the same vein, if it has anthropomorphic woodland creatures, especially if they're mice, it'll be "perfect for fans of ''Literature/{{Redwall}}''." This appears to be why later installments in the ''Literature/WarriorCats'' series don't even have reviews on the back covers.
73* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' has also had the same ''Entertainment Weekly'' quote on every book in the series, dating back to the very first:
74-->"Think ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' starring Literature/PhilipMarlowe."
75* If it resembles a better-known work in the same genre, you might see "invites comparison to..." This can [[ComplimentBackfire backfire]]. ("Invites comparison to ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings''. ''Lord Of The Rings'' was great. This is crap.")
76* Some variant of "I couldn't put it down" often turns up in positive reviews, although this at least MEANS something. As literary types, critics are naturally uncomfortable using wacky and zany {{neologism}}s like "unputdownable".
77** Almost as common is the tongue-in-cheek review of a {{Doorstopper}} that says "I couldn't pick it up..."
78* ''The Cynic's Dictionary'' by Russell Ash had a whole chapter devoted to these. One was "'''Enthralling''': Literally, enslaving. If you want to be a book's slave..."
79* If any non-fiction book discusses psychopaths or "evil people" in general, expect the adjective "chilling" to be abused ceaselessly, though it is questionable whether any of these books have ever lowered someone's body temperature. (This doesn't apply only to non-fiction, of course. Apparently every single mystery novel ever is "chilling" as well.)
80* When Creator/MontyPython was asked to review ''Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy1'', Creator/JohnCleese decided to go with stock phrases; naturally, the others [[LampshadeHanging pointed it out]]:
81-->''Really entertaining and fun.'' -- '''John Cleese'''\
82''I know for a fact that John Cleese hasn't read it.'' -- '''Graham Chapman'''\
83''Really entertaining and fun.'' -- '''Creator/MichaelPalin'''
84* [[http://www.goodreads.com Goodreads.com]]
85** As a book aggregate site, plays this trope straight in its user reviews, except it adopts an entirely different and unique set of cliches due to its web-based format and Millennial-dominated userbase. These show up most often in the negative reviews, and/or reviews for YoungAdult (YA) books. The most [[JustForFun/{{egregious}} egre]][[HypocriticalHumor gious]]? ''"I wanted to like this book. '''[[BlatantLies I really did!]]''' But..."''
86** Filling reviews with Website/{{Tumblr}} gifs.
87** "I don't normally read (Genre X) but I'm glad I did!"
88* If it's fantasy, horror, or science fiction, [[SciFiGhetto but the reviewer liked it]], then it "transcends the boundaries of its genre."
89* Name-dropping authors or philosophers to establish literary cred. Derrida is a popular one, as is Nabokov. For extra points, turn the name into an adjective (i.e., "a rollicking Nabokovian delight").
90* Books about wilderness expeditions and/or survival will often be compared to ''Into Thin Air''.
91* If a LightNovel has any hint of a TrappedInAnotherWorld plot, the reviews will talk about how the story is "a typical WishFulfillment ''isekai'' power fantasy" if they hated it or how it "starts like your typical ''isekai'' until..." if they liked it.
92* Popular science books will often feature quotes comparing the book to the work of famous science writers in that field, whether or not the structure of the book’s text and/or the author’s style really resembles their famous colleague’s-- books about space are “in the tradition of Creator/CarlSagan”, for oceanography, Creator/JacquesCousteau, Jane Goodall for wildlife biology, and so forth.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
96* One episode of ''Series/SpinCity'' had Paul assigned to write a review of the Mayor's book. Paul's review ends up consisting entirely of stock phrases he stole from movie reviews, calling the book "a fast-paced thrill ride" and "a spectacle the whole family can enjoy", as well as the line "Stallone is pure adrenaline".
97* ''Series/ThirtyRock'':
98** One episode has Pete use the stock acting description to say that Tracy Morgan is phoning it in. Then clarifies that this is NotHyperbole, he's doing the scene over the phone from his dressing room.
99** In other episodes, Jack provides a quote for the back of Lemon's book: "Lemon numbers among my employees." Liz is also pleased when a magazine describes TGS as "still on."
100* ''Series/TheWire'' was so often praised for its "[[Creator/CharlesDickens dickensian]]" storytelling that by the fifth season, they were lampshading it in dialogue among [[GoingForTheBigScoop clueless]] [[TakeThatCritics journalists]].
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Music]]
104* "For fans of (list three bands, one or two of those whose names are thrown around too much in their genre, and one that seems a bit out of left field)."
105* Any band that has singable melodies and happens to be English will be hailed as ''the new Music/TheBeatles''.
106* Any critic will at one point paraphrase Jon Landau's epic sentence ''I've seen the future of rock 'n' roll and his name is Music/BruceSpringsteen'', but replace it with a different artist.
107* "Sophomoric" has become a cliché phrase within music reviews. As has the infamous "SophomoreSlump" that critics use to describe [[FollowUpFailure disappointing follow-up records]].
108* Have you ever heard "whiskey-soaked" to describe anything but blues, classic rock, or Music/TomWaits's voice?
109* Bill Anschell's humor piece "How to Be a Jazz Critic" is structured as a list of stock phrases and snowclones, with the variable words multiple-choiced or omitted.
110* It seems that every rock single that gets released these days is an "anthem" of some kind. "An indie-rock anthem," "an anthem for today's generation," etc.
111* Any variant on "Their old stuff was better" will do.
112* "Pretentious", "self-indulgent" or "dinosaur", especially where 1970s rock not amounting to ThreeChordsAndTheTruth or TotallyRadical is concerned.
113* Anything recorded between 1976 and 1982 will have to answer to punk or new wave, Similarly, anything recorded between 1988 and 1997 will have to answer to AlternativeRock or grunge. In short, if there's a subversive musical movement {{caustic critic}}s champion as cutting edge or the future of music, especially if the album or artist is seen as "irrelevant" to that new movement, then expect that subject to be brought up in each review, regardless of the reviewed album's style, demographic or artistic intent. Certainly don't expect that review to take (or to understand) a non-"relevant" artist or style on its own merits.\
114Here's a game for you to play: Every time you see a music mag use the word "relevant" as a replacement for "good" - take a shot. ([[DontTryThisAtHome On second thought, don't.]])
115* "Raucous."
116* Any given artist capable of making catchy songs has "pop sensibilities", even when their style has nothing to do with pop music.
117* A member of Music/SonicYouth once said during an interview that every album they release is invariably called either "A return to focus," "more song-oriented," or both.
118* "Virtuosic" is almost always used for jazz, tech metal, and progressive rock artists. Also, "chops" seems to be the standard euphemism for any kind of musical talent.
119* Guitar solos are always "blisteringly fast," or played with "lightning speed", or "searing," or "blazing."
120* When reading any review for a guitar, amp, or effects pedal, expect any of these terms: Crunchy, gritty, bluesy, blistering, searing, fat, chunky, wide, smooth, biting, nasty, squeals, scooped, tinny, rich, warm, hollow, tubey and sings. And in a video review, no matter what they're reviewing, if they're playing a guitar they will make their O-face the whole time.
121* Music/DavidBowie:
122** Historians/biographers, and even the man himself, have noticed that starting with 1993's ''Music/BlackTieWhiteNoise'', his first solo album of TheNineties, critics love to use some variant on the phrase "his best album since ''Music/ScaryMonstersAndSuperCreeps''" when reviewing his newest release. The follow-up to ''Scary Monsters'', ''Music/LetsDance'', was a massive commercial success but a huge ContestedSequel, the [[Music/{{Tonight}} two]] [[Music/NeverLetMeDown albums]] after it were also successful but are widely considered Bowie's worst albums [[CreatorBacklash (even by Bowie himself)]], and the two albums he made with Tin Machine are very divisive. Consequently, ''Scary Monsters'' was held up as Bowie's last great album for many years.
123** Every article or review about David Bowie will use the word "chameleon" in one of the very first sentences.
124* Similarly, ''every'' Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}} album will be called "their best album since ''Music/TattooYou''" or "their best album since ''Music/SomeGirls''". The next step on the ladder is "their best album since ''Music/ExileOnMainSt.''" but although the phrase has been uttered occasionally, consensus is that only ''Music/SomeGirls'' itself deserves it. The problem is that, your logical and mathematical mind might deduce that Rolling Stones' albums since the one after ''Music/TattooYou'' are better and better each time, but the review usually manages to imply that the album before the one under review was their worst ever. Which, when given careful thought, ''makes absolutely no sense''.
125* For Music/BobDylan, it's "best since ''Music/BloodOnTheTracks.''"
126* The word "noodling" tends to follow so-called "{{jam band}}s" known for lengthy soloing, like Music/{{Phish}} and Music/TheGratefulDead.
127* "Sensitive singer-songwriter". The word "bedsit" somehow will be found not in many reviews of "sensitive singer-songwriters".
128* According to many music critics, every band and singer has some sort of "audience" in mind. Usually, it has something to do with age: a louder and more upbeat band is for a teenage and "young adult" (meaning [[ManChild immature college kid]]) audience, a light country band is for an "adult" (ie. [[JadedWashout middle-aged stick in the mud]]) audience, etc. If it isn't age, it's gender: The latest pop sensation specifically designs her music to appeal to [[GenkiGirl genki girls]], the latest heavy metal sensation is designed to appeal to [[RatedMForManly manly men]], etc. The possibility that a musician simply writes whatever music he/she likes (without a specific audience in mind) and that most people like a wide variety of musical genres/moods apparently eludes them.
129* It was apparently a national law that any review of Music/WarrenZevon must include the word 'mordant' and a reference to ''Werewolves of London''.
130* Music/TheyMightBeGiants has long been cursed by music writers who can't resist calling them "quirky".
131* "Inoffensive", for music the reviewer doesn't consider edgy enough. In other words (as critic Chuck Eddy once pointed out), they were offended by it.
132* "Tasty slab". As in (taken from a random music blog found in a quick Google search) "It's a tasty slab of bass-heavy, window-shaking pop euphoria."
133* [[PsychedelicRock "Psychedelic"]], "trippy", "druggy" or, if you really want to show off your word power, "lysergic". [[note]]The full name of LSD is lysergic acid diethylamide, but "lysergic" by itself just means "derived from dissolved ergot fungus."[[/note]]
134* The book ''The Rock Snob's Dictionary'' has entries for "coruscating", "plangent" and "seminal".
135* Any band or musician that is somewhat edgy or rebellious is "guaranteed to shock your parents." Even though today's parents grew up with everything from GangstaRap to Music/BritneySpears.
136* "Aging rockers" for anyone in rock music older than 35. Oddly enough, the surviving ''pioneers'' of rock and roll, many of them in their ''eighties'', seem to escape this term.
137* Any mention of Music/TheGratefulDead requires a mention of their [[Music/AmericanBeauty "Long, Strange Trip."]]
138* The word "shambolic" is used to describe Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}, bands that sound like the Stones, and nothing else in the universe.
139* Starting with ''Recovery'', every Music/{{Eminem}} album that is well-received is often hailed by critics and fans alike as "his best since ''Music/TheEminemShow''," his last album before an AudienceAlienatingEra that spanned several years.
140[[/folder]]
141
142[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
143* ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' mocks this when Dogbert starts a film reviewing business, providing the review the filmmaker wants for a price. One man asks what the price is for "Best movie so far this year" for a film coming out in January.
144[[/folder]]
145
146[[folder:Video Games]]
147* This is, perhaps, the oldest stock phrase in the book: "Fans of X will love Y. Everybody else...." It's been a staple of game reviews ever since their inception and, to this day, is frequently seen in reviews (mostly for SoOkayItsAverage [[TheProblemWithLicensedGames licensed games]]). IGN, as far back as 2000, ridiculed this cliche in [[http://www.ign.com/articles/2000/03/28/pd-ultraman-battle-collection-64-import their review]] for a horrible Japan-only Nintendo 64 game based on the ''Series/{{Ultraman}}'' universe.
148* The two most common ones for the FirstPersonShooter genre follow.
149** If the game has traditional cutscenes and a strong multiplayer element, then expect comparisons to ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty''. This is often an insult.
150** If the game is lower octane with a focus on campaign, then expect comparisons to ''VideoGame/HalfLife2''. This is often a compliment.
151** Of course, thanks to GIFT, and the remarkable tendency of stupid people on the internet to express their opinions, on sites like Metacritic, EVERY single {{FPS}} will at some point get a ludicrously negative review for no other reason than being "like Call of Duty" simply by the virtue of it having one or more of the following elements: A: first-person perspective. B: Shooting. C: Linearity.
152* Games Radar has a [[http://www.gamesradar.com/f/the-100-lamest-game-industry-clichs/a-20080722111130434045 database]] of Reviewer stock phrases, with 100 entries.
153* The [=GamersWithJobs=] Conference Call, a weekly video game podcast, has a self-imposed and largely unsuccessful ban on the words "visceral" and "compelling," among others.
154** [[WebVideo/LoadingReadyRun ENN]] had a segment about a robotic game reviewer that judged everything "compelling", which later became a tagline for the show.
155* [[TemptingFate "The X Killer"]]. Remember ''VideoGame/{{Killzone}}'', which everyone said would be a "''Franchise/{{Halo}}'' killer"? [[AppealToObscurity No, of course not.]]
156* KillerApp: a game so good it's a system seller: ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros1'', ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'', ''VideoGame/{{Tetris}}'', ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'', et al.
157* [[FollowTheLeader X Clone]]: a game that uses a successful game's style in a good or bad way. Double points if the "X" is extremely old and part of a genre that has changed a lot over time (like ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' for a FirstPersonShooter) or NewerThanTheyThink and not what the game is really inspired by: ''(VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}}'' was named a ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'' clone instead of ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry'', [[SignatureStyle with which it shares a director]]). Triple points if it's kind of accurate - see ''VideoGame/SaintsRow'' after ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto'' or ''VideoGame/UFOAfterBlank'' for ''{{VideoGame/XCOM}}''.
158** ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' developers Riot Games invented the term Multiplayer Online Battle Arena (MOBA) to describe their game because they were sick and tired of everyone referring to the genre as a [=DotA=] Clone.
159** You can tell how much a reviewer likes a game with elements from an earlier, more famous game by vocabulary alone: they'll use "loving sendup/homage" if they liked it, "clone" if neutral or belligerent, or "ripoff" if they ''really'' hated it.
160* [[DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment "If this is the sort of game you'll like, then this is the sort of game you'll like."]]
161* Before the whole push towards being obsessed with RetroGaming, it was common to see any post-1999 2D game being described as having "SNES graphics" in a bad way. Now people are starting to learn what SNES graphics ''really'' were. This stock phrase was replaced by the equally generic sounding "This game has graphics that look as if they were on the N64".
162* Now that RetroGaming is more popular, games that pull it off well are "a love letter to [old console old PC model old gaming genre] fans".
163* "Innovative," which gets dragged out whenever a game or peripheral uses an unconventional gimmick. They beat this horse particularly hard when the Platform/{{Wii}} and Platform/{{DS}} came out, but they learned their lesson when competing {{Waggle}}-devices were released.
164* "Almost as fun to watch as it is to play."
165* ''WebVideo/{{Chrontendo}}'', wary of the phrases chronogamers use all too often, made [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-67BV7mJ5LI this video]], in which [[StylisticSuck he is playing those clichés for laughs]].
166* "Game Of The Year" is used so frequently that it practically loses meaning.
167* During the VideoGame3DLeap, a popular graphics descriptor was "photo-realistic." In theory, this meant that the graphics looked realistic enough for somebody to possibly mistake them for real life. In practice, it simply meant that the graphics... "somewhat" resembled real life (mostly just with the art style). By the time MediaNotes/TheSixthGenerationOfConsoleVideoGames was in full swing and people realized that video game graphics still had a long way to go before they could accurately mimic real life, the term "photo-realistic" was quickly phased out of video game vernacular.
168* ''Extremely'' common contemporarily, any game which features either [[NintendoHard high difficulty]] or {{permadeath}} is now bandied about as a "{{Roguelike}}" or "Rogueli''t''e", even if it has absolutely nothing (else) in common with roleplaying games, the roguelike genre, or the original ''{{VideoGame/Rogue}}'' game.
169* "The X of Y" or "Like X, but Y", or any variation thereof. Used to describe a game that is sort of like a clone of another game or has taken elements from a game to use as inspiration. "Like ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' of X" is a popular phrase to describe a game that's outright NintendoHard.
170* The game ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' itself has been used so often that bringing it up as a comparison ''at all'' is considered a cliche. If a game has a facet of difficulty through learning, backtracking, a dark and [[BodyHorror disgusting]] atmosphere, being just plain hard, or any other element from ''Dark Souls'', it will elicit this comparison, followed quickly by groans in the audience. ''Especially'' if it's just because of the difficulty: the phrase truly started hitting DiscreditedMeme status after IGN compared the ''VideoGame/CrashBandicootNSaneTrilogy'', of all things, to ''Dark Souls'' solely for being challenging.
171* If the reviewers find out a bad/average game was backed by Website/{{Kickstarter}} or any other similar crowdfunding sites, the game is now "a Kickstarter disaster" regardless of what was going on behind the scenes.
172* "Quirky RPG" is a phrase often found in the company of ''VideoGame/{{Mother}}'' inspired games, usually either referring to an outlandish way of handling RPGElements or equally as outlandish characters.
173* The ''Franchise/BatmanArkhamSeries'' was rather infamous for having almost every single review of the games talk about how they "make you feel like Batman". And then, when ''VideoGame/SpiderManPS4'' (essentially the Marvel response to the Arkham games) came out, reviewers immediately broke out the ''exact same'' wording again to talk about it, to everyone's hilarity.
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176[[folder:Western Animation]]
177* "It's like ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' in/on/with X" was and still is very popular to describe any very "mature" bit of [[AnimatedShockComedy western animation that includes loads of swearing or adult situations]]. It used to be that any very "mature" show that was VulgarHumor or RefugeInAudacity was compared to ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', but this has been phased out with the advent of much more outrageous cartoon shows.
178** Adding onto this, any adult cartoon without gratuitous swearing, sex, or violence will be lauded as a breath of fresh air.
179* Gross-out and outrageous comedy cartoons featuring two protagonists after 1991 were usually compared (sometimes unfavorably) to ''WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow.''
180* It is very common to call SadistShow and KafkaComedy cartoons, or cartoons with {{Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist}}s "mean-spirited."
181* Shows/episodes with ButtMonkey characters (such as [[WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants Squidward]]) are called "[[YouKeepUsingThatWord torture porns]]."
182* If a cartoon made after 2005 features a HeelFaceTurn, be prepared for comparisons to [[WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender Zuko]]'s redemption arc.
183* Pick a cartoon made after 2012 with supernatural and/or mystery elements. Now see how many reviews of that cartoon compare it to ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls''.
184* Cartoons that utilize ThinLineAnimation are derisively called "[=CalArts=] style." This can even extend to cartoons whose creators didn't even go to that university.
185* Many cartoon reviews complain about [[KarmaHoudini characters that don't get punished for their actions]].
186* AnimatedShockComedy sitcoms centered around a family can and will receive comparisons to ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy''.
187* Many cartoon reviewers call animators and writers "lazy."
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190[[folder:Other]]
191* Whenever an [[VideoReviewShow internet-based critic]] reviews something bad, expect [[VulgarHumor a lot of]] fecal and/or sexual metaphors and swears.
192* "Pedestrian" sees a lot of use among the more pretentious media critics. On the flip side, the word "pretentious" itself sees a lot of use in criticisms for media that get too high-concept (Double for "edgy", triple if the phrase ends with "trash").
193* As Creator/GeorgeCarlin hilariously mocked, you can always expect "zesty," "tangy," or some other meaningless but novel word from bad food critics.
194** There's also the Creator/FoodNetwork favorite, "nutty"
195** "Succulent", beloved by hacky restaurant critics and hacky restaurant ad copywriters alike, which is especially grating if the food in question isn't even particularly moist or juicy.
196* This is a major component of SommelierSpeak. "Fruity," "dry," or "aged to perfection" are guaranteed from any wine review.
197* No one ever '''drinks''' in wine reviews or "bar scene" columns in newspapers - they "tipple," "imbibe," or "libate." Similarly, bars are never just called '''bars''' - they're "watering holes," "dives," or "haunts". Very similar to SaidBookism.
198* The term "dark." It's very old, tracing back to the Biblical days or further, and one of the most overused descriptors in the history of media. Any show that's violent, negative, or set in a CrapsackWorld is [[DarkerAndEdgier "dark."]] Any band that makes ominous, [[TrueArtIsAngsty angsty]], or sad music will inevitably be called "dark." Characters always have "[[DarkAndTroubledPast dark pasts]]" and "dark secrets" that will one day lead them to TheDarkSide. (Not to mention that a "[[ItWasADarkAndStormyNight Dark and stormy night"]] is never a good thing.) Thankfully, [[DarkIsNotEvil this often not the case.]]
199** The Encyclopedia Metallum lampshaded this one: when listing a band's genre, it is expressly forbidden to describe them as "dark metal", their reasoning being that this description could literally mean absolutely anything.
200** ''Fanfic/ThoseLackingSpines'' lampoons the word in literature, in which for about two paragraphs, every incidence of where the word "dark" would be was replaced with outrageous colors, such as "crimson", "sunshine yellow", and "chartreuse".
201* Many upcoming artists (in all mediums) are often called "[Place]'s answer to [Similar, but much more famous person or band.]" For example, "Paris, Texas's answer to Music/{{Metallica}}."
202* ''Literature/{{Freakonomics}}'' suggests that real estate agents do this; for example, describing a house as "fantastic" is strongly correlated with it being overpriced and/or a bit of a lemon, because they only have to resort to the generic adjectives when there's nothing particularly good about it.
203* "I laughed. I cried. It was better than ''Theatre/{{Cats}}''!" Fun fact: This is a MemeticMutation paraphrased from a 1980s ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' skit, in which a hypnotist entranced his audience to recommend his show to others.
204* Car magazines, British ones in particular, are fond of praising models with particularly good space utilization by comparing them to the [[Series/DoctorWho TARDIS]].
205** The phrase "fuel-sipping" must always appear somewhere in a write-up of a hybrid or efficient model.
206* The word ''chic'' in fashion, can be applied to anything the reviewer likes, the word having no actual meaning unto itself.
207** Ritz, glitz, chic, freak(y), geek, trashy, and in. All entirely meaningless nowadays.
208* On Website/ThisVeryWiki, it used to be common to find examples that are the "poster child" or "patron saint" of the trope in question.
209** Similarly, "X! Just X!' or "X, full stop." It's gotten so bad that these are considered Administrivia/ZeroContextExamples, and one is encouraged to replace them with something informative.
210** {{Deconstruction}} at one point was wicked for any series that so much as slightly shifted short of center of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVsCynicism. The site itself eventually had to point out what was considered Administrivia/NotADeconstruction to cut down on misidentifications.
211* "Hack", "fraud", and the like, originally used to denote someone of low quality, are just as overused for creators the reviewer just plain doesn't like as any other insult.
212* If a Japanese QuirkyWork isn't being called "aggressively Japanese", it's "too anime" (as if either an entire country or its animation is quirky by nature).
213* During political elections, "electability" gets thrown out a lot in conjunction with different candidates. It's rarely defined, especially given that the term is regularly used regardless of what a particular candidate's history of winning or losing elections.
214** Similarly, in the US some presidential candidates are criticized for not being "presidential" enough. Sometimes this is used to describe sitting presidents looking for reelection (e.g., Barack Obama running for his second term) which makes one wonder how a person could be [[OxymoronicBeing "unpresidential" despite being the president]].
215* A work that is "life-affirming" is a massive TearJerker.
216* "Emotional weight" for whatever seems to [[EmotionalTorque aim for strong reactions]].
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