E For All Expo Details Announced
Gamespot is reporting on the full details of the E For All event, the consumer-facing games show slated to debut this October. Along with additional details, the article offers up some basics on the show. First off, it "runs October 18-21 at the Los Angeles Convention Center, former home of the Electronic Entertainment Expo. Single-day passes for Thursday and Friday will cost gamers $50 each, while admission on Saturday or Sunday will run $75. A full pass for all four days will also be available for $110." Gamers will be able to try out almost all of the Holiday releases in a finished state, participate in tournaments, and buy games from retailers located in fabled Kentia Hall. It's also been announced that Nintendo will be headlining the event, though Expo officials try to reassure us that other publishers will be there as well. I have to ask: is anyone thinking about going to this thing? Now that the doors are open, are you as a gamer excited about the possibility of making it into E3?
If it's anything like Nintendo's Online offerings, everyone will be held in 6ft by 6ft cubicles, with doors between them that only open if you can remember a 16-digit code.
"Why did they cancel my favorite Sci-Fi show? I downloaded ALL the episodes!"
I'd like to play the new games early, but I don't think I'd want to pay $50 for the honor, especially with so many demos available through download services. IMO they should let the gamers in for free.
I'm supposed to pay fifty bucks to be advertised to? You can eat my shorts. Game developers and publishers should be happy to get a chance to go face to face with their market and actually interact with them.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
"try out almost all of the Holiday releases in a finished state"
Or you can wait a month and play almost all the Holiday releases at your local Gamestop.
Spell cheek you've failed me four the last thyme!
I'd be more inclined to go if they moved it back to Atlanta. I stopped going to E3 when they moved to LA.
Penny Arcade took care of this need a few years ago with PAX... Maybe if they tried sticking it on the East Coast there would be a demand...
I'll meet you at the intersection of "Should be" and "Reality"
http://www.digitallife.com/newyork/flash.html
I live just outside of New York City, I'm not spending $~300 USD on a plane ticket just fly across the country and play games that'll probably hit shelves less than a month later. And then theres food, hotel and on-the-ground transportation costs in addition to the admission ticket price. To hell with that, if they want me to fly out there, they better be giving away free HDTVs, PS3s, Xbox 360s and Wiis. Then I'd think about it.
I'll state this again because people just don't seem to understand that.
E3 is not a consumer show, it's not an open show. The fact that so many fans got into the show was a shame and part of the reason the show was closed (the other was the big 5 (EA, Activision and the 3 consoles) all were in a giant pissing match and then bitched every time they spent more on the show than last year.
E3 has it's issues but originally and primarily it's like GDC a show for the industry, the fact no one policed it isn't the issue, it was an insider show.
E for all, PAX, and every other show out there is a consumer show. There's a very difference flavor from an industry show to a consumer show and what you'll see is different. It's more oriented at the end user and you probably won't see as much early (alpha/beta) versions of games. But don't be fooled by the fake media hype. Btw E3 will continue to remain for the industry, this year it sounds like they are going toned down but the information that should come out of E3 will still be coming only from there.
This is just retailing. Something local to do on a boring afternoon. Like gun shows, boat shows, car shows, flea markets, etc. "Dolaher said the press conferences, keynote addresses, and big announcements that have marked previous E3s won't be present at E For All." The options on their web site are "I'm a a gamer" and "I'm an exhibitor". There's no option for people in the industry. And no reason to go there from further away than Long Beach.
If you're in the industry, you go to GDC or the Hollywood Games Summit.
This is all a terrible disappointment for me, actually. Back in the old days, when it was just regular E3, I used to dream of going. The trouble was, it was on the other side of the country, I wasn't old enough, and I wasn't allowed in. So I would plot complex plans and discuss dark pacts in an effort to overcome adversity and make it to gaming nirvana.
Now that I'm old enough and allowed in, all the danger is gone, replaced instead with the very boring task of trying to get across country and plan breaks in my schedule that won't end with critical repercussions for my future quality of living. No E3 for me.
Gamertag: WyleType
back in 2005 at the tokyo game show i've paid 1200 yen, around 10 dollars, inflation is going really bad uh?