Montreal Escorts

Do bad reviews stop you from seeing a service provider, or are you still willing to give them a chance?

Do bad reviews stop you from seeing a service provider, or are you still willing to give them a chan

  • I don’t pay much attention to reviews

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    8

Obvio-0bvio

"Bond. James Bond" Obvio007
Jan 3, 2023
1,619
3,359
113
A lot of members may be missing out on good experiences because of a few negative reviews. Sometimes bad reviews come down to poor communication, bad chemistry, or mismatched expectations rather than the provider being genuinely bad. In fact, some of my best experiences have been with providers who had mixed reviews.

Reviews should help give you an idea of what to expect and whether the provider matches what you’re looking for, but the overall experience also depends on how the customer approaches the interaction. Respect, communication, and patience can make a huge difference.
 

CLOUD 500

Well-Known Member
Jan 10, 2005
8,377
6,214
113
I skip if they got poor reviews because I am not a regular user of escorts and with the pricing these days it matters more. An escort with consistently bad reviews it means there is a valid reason for that at close to $300 and then if you got to pay for a room then another $80 no thanks. However if I was a regular user of escorts like seeing weekly then I would be much more likely to book her. I spend most of my time at stripclubs.
 
  • Like
Reactions: DetectiveDavidMills

LeDodo

The hopeless romantic introvert and metrosexual
Jun 8, 2025
2,524
3,037
113
I would say it depends of the bad review.

And why? I'm going to take the example of Google reviews on restaurants.

Lot of times when checking if a restaurant is good to go we are going to check the overall star rating and ultimately the reviews that make it. And the photos of course.

You may find most of the reviews are like 4-5 stars. Sometimes there are succinct comments, lengthy comments or no comments.

But then in the mix you will see 1 star reviews or less than 4-5 stars.
Then you begin to read those "bad" reviews. Sometimes there are no comments at all. Sometimes there are long text. Then you need to read them in details or behind the lines. Because most of the time (if not all), there is something that was off like delay in receiving the dish, no accommodation for a specific request, a waiter who somehow rude. But if you take a step back the reviewer experience wasn't all bad but that bad thing that happened or he didn't like make it sound terrible.
I now can quickly identify the "false" bad reviews where the client just wanted to tarnish the place's reputation for something that didn't go their way.
Sometime the restaurant might match the client testimonial and shed my details that were "omitted".

I think that this falls into the category of "poor communication, bad chemistry, or mismatched expectations rather than the provider being genuinely bad".

And I think that if you replace some words in my example above you can quickly relate to some bad reviews here.

I'm not saying that all bad reviews are bad. Just we need to have to read beyond the text itself.

Also one thing that I noticed as well are the people who are not clients who just fantasize on scenarios and lot of "if" for pages which give a negative feeling on the review thread.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Wildstar

Wildstar

Well-Known Member
Jul 11, 2025
87
316
53
It depends.

Some bad reviews are basically not very informative--"I had high expectations but they weren't met", or "I didn't feel chemistry"--OK. That information is not a very good predictor of service quality in my experience as they can be idiosyncratic to the reviewer.

Repeated, detailed reports on gaffe and/or listless service or hygiene issues, or a few trust or safety issues from credible sources--then I would be far less likely to book.

The overall mix of reviews matters as well--a few dissatisfied clients among many satisfied ones = less weight than the converse.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: LeDodo
Ashley Madison