Tbh if I’m making a quick purchase that doesn’t matter much to me, I just get the one with the highest purchase number or whatever is cheapest. If I’m purchasing something pricey or that I care about… I’m looking for actual reviews elsewhere before buying anyways.
It’s still worth a glance at some reviews, as I’m finding the popular well-rated products sometimes have reviews for different products entirely. Like they took over a genuinely good listing and replaced the item with a different one.
Sellers are able to entirely replace the product page with a completely different product. Give the reviews a once over to avoid getting something you think is good quality.
Yup, and that’s essentially what I’m looking for. I read critical reviews, positive reviews that don’t seem like shilling, and maybe a few recent reviews.
It would be even better if Amazon got their act together and penalized companies that introduce significant changes to the same product listing. For example, Wi-Fi dongles sometimes change the Wi-Fi chip, which changes the performance and compatibility. I’ve read reviews on exactly that type of product and chosen a different one because the replacement was worse than the original.
I just don’t trust Amazon listings, and it has saved me enough times that taking the extra effort is worthwhile.
Tbh if I’m making a quick purchase that doesn’t matter much to me, I just get the one with the highest purchase number or whatever is cheapest. If I’m purchasing something pricey or that I care about… I’m looking for actual reviews elsewhere before buying anyways.
It’s still worth a glance at some reviews, as I’m finding the popular well-rated products sometimes have reviews for different products entirely. Like they took over a genuinely good listing and replaced the item with a different one.
This.
Sellers are able to entirely replace the product page with a completely different product. Give the reviews a once over to avoid getting something you think is good quality.
Yup, and that’s essentially what I’m looking for. I read critical reviews, positive reviews that don’t seem like shilling, and maybe a few recent reviews.
It would be even better if Amazon got their act together and penalized companies that introduce significant changes to the same product listing. For example, Wi-Fi dongles sometimes change the Wi-Fi chip, which changes the performance and compatibility. I’ve read reviews on exactly that type of product and chosen a different one because the replacement was worse than the original.
I just don’t trust Amazon listings, and it has saved me enough times that taking the extra effort is worthwhile.