Games, more than movies, are biased based on people's preferences because of the level of involvement of the user. If you're style of games, and how you critique them, jives with the reviewer on many different types of games, then you can follow their recommendations wholeheartedly.
This reminds me of the review IGN did of the original Halo. They got absolutely blasted when they gave Halo an 8 out of 10 which was far lower than the industry average, which was about a 9.5 out of 10. That reviewer focused heavily on the single player aspects of the game commenting on things such as repetitive level design and a B-movie script. Now, if you play Halo for multiplayer, you'd be inclined to give the game a higher score, but if you play more single player, you'd probably agree with the review. Now, let's not talk too much of your opinion on Halo in this forum because I'm just trying to make a point.
Now with Skyrim, if you focused solely getting a riveting story and complex combat mechanics, then you'll likely side with the reviewer. Now if you're concentrating more on the RPG aspects and immersion, then you'll likely give it game of the year.
My point of this whole rant is that it really is pointless to get worked up over game reviews, regardless if it's from Forbes or IGN.