Filip Miucin wrote many game reviews, but it took until last week for the rampant plagiarism in his work to be identified by a victim.
The gaming site IGN is working to remove all of the posts written by former editor Filip Miucin, who was fired last week for plagiarism, after internet sleuths found that dozens of his articles and videos copied or rephrased from other websites without attribution.
What's odd this time around? How hard it is to find words by him that aren't found elsewhere.
"We've seen enough now, both from the thread and our own searches, that we're taking down pretty much everything he did," IGN reviews editor Dan Stapleton wrote on Twitter last night, referring to a thread on the gaming forum ResetEra cataloging the allegations. For days, people had pointed out more similarities between Miucin's work and various other articles and message board posts.
I don't think I've ever seen someone so dedicated to plagiarism as a daily grind, rather than as a shortcut around the content requirements of a speaking career, book deal or some other more illustrious publishing objective. Reheated is everything from forum posts at NeoGAF to blog comments, which might bolster Miucin's claim that the plagiarism was unconscious.
"The bottom line is that what happened with the Dead Cells review was not at all intentional," he said. "So, with that said, I just want to apologize to everybody at IGN for all of the undeserved criticisms and doubt that may have been sparked in their credibility as a respected source for games media." On Tuesday night, a small YouTuber named Boomstick Gaming published a video with the title "IGN Copied my Dead Cells Review: What do I do?" In it, he laid out a compelling case that the official IGN review of Dead Cells, written by Miucin, was a rewritten version of his own review, which had been published several days earlier. On Wednesday, IGN investigated, and the outlet fired Miucin that evening.
Videos—with spoken material—is an interesting device for generating written content. Swiping YouTubers made it much less likely anyone would notice in the first place, but much more likely that justice would be swift and nasty once they did.
Mugshot from IGN via Michael Leri.