
E3 is the best time of the year for many gamers but attending the actual event can be disappointing.

Skewed and Reviewed kick off 2024 with a look at the need for in-person game conventions with the End of E3 and compares the cost-cutting methods of Hollywood who still value in-person events.
so, this article didnt tell me why we NEED to have in-person shows like e3, other than the authors nostalgia and remembrance of covering one of these shows.
but it also doesnt mention everyone outside of america who have never had the chance to see it in person either haha
we had to watch the darn livestream, if they had it available, at 3am in the morning haha with lags amd crashes (not all the time)
while i think these shows are great and all, i dont really "need" to have them. people are busy, im busy. id rather watch a livestream than to book a flight, a hotel etc.
but theres still pax and all of that.
I'd rather publishers send out closed betas to garner gamer concern and interest like how we had demos back in the day.
I don't miss E3 as much as I loved it at one point but that era is long gone.
Sad to see it go. It was a great event for gamers and developers all around the world getting together and celebrate gaming as a community.
The announcements of new games/hardware, hype, surprises and seeing live audience reactions, it's something only events like E3 are able to bring. It will be missed...
if its going to be anything like the game awards where celebrities that dont even play games are there and its just full of fluff and commercial crap than no we dont need in person shows. we just end up watching the trailer montages the next day anyway.
To be honest E3 was one of my favorite times of the years when I was younger. I couldn't wait for all the big conferences and new announcements. It was hype even if nothing good was announced we had cringe moments to laugh at.
Rest in peace, E3. It may be easy to understand why you wasted away, but you will be missed.
E3 pre-2005 will be missed, everything after than ain't even close or worthy of mention to be missed. Late 90's E3's were phenominal, especially the after parties.
Those that scoff and hand-wave it away are kids that were never there. Peak E3 was peak gaming.
It already IS missed.

Pour one out for E3; it's finally deader than the dodo.
Pretty spot on. Is it just me or do those 4 dollar waters taste like the dollar ones? Anyway, yeah, it certainly seemed like the general consensus was the recently publicly made E3 isn't the greatest. Admittedly, I was kind of surprised to hear this from a few people, but then thinking about how many Youtubers there are I realized the nightmare. At the very least, though, you seemed to end the trip on a high note.
Overall, I felt this year's E3 was underwhelming too, from the massive leaks, the conference outlines, to focusing too much on next year rather than this year (seriously, did everyone get together and say January and February 2019?) resulting in pretty muted responses I might add.
There just wasn't enough excitement, nor was there any building of it, also in part due to all these early announcements or "announcements of announcements" the industry is becoming accustomed to doing in the past few years. We get a new trailer of a game we've known to be in development for a few years, or more, and still no release date.
So much has changed in the past decade with how we see the event that I can see either E3 going away, which I can't believe I can say, or the Expo evolving into just a preview event with no big stages - just games. I definitely can see a streaming event from a studio or pre-recorded announcements becoming more of a thing in the future, like Nintendo treats E3 with a Direct. This E3 felt like a industry in change with an outdated event. Maybe I'm overthinking this, but there's always next year.