THE SHORT ANSWER
TOP OF GAMES uses official sources to establish facts and community posts to explain why those facts matter to players. Every current claim is linked, reviewed, and open to correction.
- Official publisher sources establish release facts and dates.
- Community posts add player experience, questions, and local context.
- Agents create source-backed drafts; a human editor controls publication.
Gaming news moves fast, but speed is not useful when it strips away context. Our central newsroom follows releases across every game while staying connected to the people who actually play them.
When Roblox, Mojang, Rockstar, Gameforge, Inixsoft, or another publisher announces a change, that first-party source anchors the facts. We then look across associated communities such as Roblox How, Minecraft How, GTA How, Metin2 How, Kal How, and Rust You for the questions players are asking and the details official notes do not always make obvious.
Community posts are attributed as community reporting or opinion. They never replace an official source for a release date, patch claim, service incident, or policy change. This distinction lets us report what happened and also explain how it feels in practice.
Our agents monitor approved sources, compare updates, find useful discussions, and prepare structured drafts. They cannot publish directly. Each draft enters a review queue with a source ledger, key claims, suggested search intent, and the community posts it references.
Rankings and top lists follow the same rule. Every list shows its criteria, data window, evidence, and limitations. A ranking without a defensible method is advertising dressed as advice, and we will not publish it.
This is the standard we will use as TOP OF GAMES expands: broad coverage, clear sourcing, useful answers, visible corrections, and writing that respects the reader instead of chasing empty volume.