I didn't realize the sites you listed were "pseudo tech sites." Are you sure you don't classify them as such because they do indeed use iPhones and therefore you see them as "pseudo" because of this?
As much as I assume you respect Anandtech, I hope you know that many times their reviews of Apple products end with the recommendation to buy them over competitors, if money is not an issue. They always laud Apple products for battery life, design, build quality, etc. It should be no surprise to anyone that reads these blogs that some of the editors own Apple products, be it MacBooks, iPads, iPhones, whatever.
The Verge and Engadget are Topolsky's sites, most of the times he has no idea what he's doing. These two along with Gizmodo don't do professional reviews. The typical review on these sites is basically reviewer's opinion. They don't even run serious tests. That's why they are pseudo-tech sites. They offer their opinions, they are popular gadget sites, focused on social gadgets and their coolness factor, not their value and performance in various aspects (they aren't even measuring that). They are journalists aiming at miximizing the amount of readers, they don't always understand what they're doing and they don't have to because most people who read those sites can't tell, they are not geeks focusing on finding the best hardware. They are usually people who don't want to know what's inside, they want a new, cooler phone.
If you read an average review on these sites it's like "the battery life is good, it lasted me the whole day", "The camera is good, I liked the colors" and also it was the great trio bashing the Nexus 4 and deeming it unworthy for lack of LTE.
It's night and day compared to real deal tech sites. If you want to compare, read an average review on Anandtech or GSMArena, these are totally different kinds of sites.
I saw a test or two being in favor of Apple's products on Anandtech, I respect that. There are certain things that Apple products do better than most of their competition. If I looked at the tests and they were in favor of Apple most of the times heck, I'd start liking Apple. That's not the case, however. But yeah, Apple scores pretty well in some aspects.
As long as a testing is in-depth and the review is not full of personal opinions I do respect that site. That's what GSMArena and Anandtech have always been in my opinion. On Anandtech some reviewers might disguise some tests with a little too many personal opinions. The HTC One review is the first controversial review I've come across on Anandtech though. That's mostly because some tests show something else than the Brian guy describes.
Still, there are numerous very good and detailed tests there, so I can just see those without reading the conclusions and I know how good the device is without relying on reviewer's competence.