How soren.com produces gaming news from official sources — combining AI-assisted research with editorial judgment.
soren.com publishes gaming news drawn from a manually curated list of verified publisher and developer channels, official patch notes, and primary industry sources. No aggregators, no rumor mills, no clickbait outlets. The editorial system Jeff Sorrentino designed monitors those sources, surfaces what's genuinely new, and assembles the initial picture of breaking stories.
Hundreds of automated checks catch issues during the workflow; anything ambiguous is flagged for direct review by the editor. Final article copy is reviewed, edited, and contextualized before publication. Articles are written and edited in English; versions in other languages are produced by automated translation of the English originals. Every article links back to its primary sources so readers can verify any claim independently.
The source list is curated manually — only verified publisher and developer channels, official patch notes, and primary industry sources qualify. The editorial system then monitors that list at scale to catch what's genuinely new, using rate-limited and respectful crawling that won't burden source servers.
When something newsworthy surfaces, the system assembles the relevant source material into an initial draft against the editorial standards built into it: what was announced, where, what changed, and how it fits prior reporting. Sources are preserved at every step so they can be cited in the final article. Hundreds of automated checks run during this stage to catch factual conflicts and flag anything ambiguous for direct review.
Jeff Sorrentino, the site's editor, reviews each draft for accuracy, framing, and missing context. Claims are checked against the cited sources. Headlines are written to inform rather than bait. If something doesn't hold up, it doesn't get published.
Reviewed articles are published with every primary source linked in the article body, so readers can verify any claim themselves. After English publication, automated translation produces versions in 28 other languages — the editorial decisions made in English carry across all locales.
This page exists so the workflow behind soren.com isn't a black box. Automation is how we cover thousands of games at the speed gaming news moves; manual source curation, editorial review, and citation are how we make sure the output is worth reading. Jeff Sorrentino — the editor — can't write thousands of articles a day, but he can design a system that holds itself to the standards he would.
Readers deserve to know how the content they're reading was produced. We've chosen to describe the workflow openly rather than hide it. If you spot a factual error, an outdated article, or anything that doesn't match its cited source, the contact form is the fastest way to flag it.
If something on soren.com is wrong, missing context, or needs an update, let us know. Corrections happen quickly when they're flagged.