>>28804 (OP)Eventually you learn to ignore everything that is being marketed. Oblivion was quite bad when it first released, there's 0 reason to buy a remaster of it when so many better games exist.
People will happily go along with one of the two-three options being marketed via social media (many will say they are "cultured" for choosing the "obscure" option.) You can join in if you want, but you can also ignore it all.
Plugging in to a social media campaign, believing that something is good and then praising it, these make people feel as if they are discerning customers and people. Even "keyed" individuals do this. This is why the situation in general is worse than it seems to some. There is no grand mass solution, it will take a new establishment of an apparatus of judgement to begin leading this, or any other, audience forward in large part. That apparatus is not being developed, and generally takes great stimulus to first set in place. It then takes decades/centuries to bear fruit in the audience.