N'Gai Croal
|
Oct 20, 2008 06:56 PM
Update: Post a story, and all of a sudden, more sources
jump out of the woodwork, to say nothing of similar stories from
competing outlets. We've spoken with four additional sources since our
original post went live, and it appears that our original source's
statement that there would be an extra two days specifically set aside for the
public--Friday June 5th and Saturday June 6th--may have been incorrect.
We're working to pin that down, and as soon as we find out, we'll whip
up another post. Separately, we're also looking to gather information
about what criteria the ESA will use to admit a broader audience than
it has to the previous two E3s, and to find out--as one journalist
asked us privately and as many fanboys would like to know--whether the infamous booth babes of years past will make a comeback of their own. Stay tuned.
***
Level Up has just learned that after long, bruising and
politically difficult negotiations, the Entertainment Software
Association is preparing to announce tomorrow that E3 2009 will take
place at the Los Angeles Convention Center during the first week of
June--and that for the first time, E3 will officially open its doors to
the public at large. According to a source close to the process, the
convention floor and meeting rooms will open on Tuesday June 2nd to
media and industry professionals. On Friday June 5th and Saturday June
6th, however, the show floor will open up to the public. What about the
famous press conferences from Nintendo, Microsoft and Sony, along with
a handful of third party publishers? Our source told us to "expect a
boat load of press conferences on Monday during the day and on Tuesday
morning."
Internally, the ESA and its members are referring to
the event as a "prosumer show," a term our source found puzzling.
Presumably it refers to the ESA's intent to reach out to not
necessarily the world at large, but to media, industry professionals
and the most avid gamers. For while attendance is expected to rise
dramatically from the 2008 show, our source informed us that the ESA is
aiming to cap next year's attendance at 40,000. That's significantly
less than the record 70,000 people that attended E3 in 2005, and it's
also less than the nearly 60,000 people who attended this year's Penny
Arcade Expo in August in downtown Seattle.
Three years ago, when
the ESA decided to drastically scale back E3 in response to the annual
carping about the show's cost to its members, industry scuttlebutt
pegged the Four Horsemen most responsible for the original format's
demise as the three console manufacturers--Sony, Microsoft and
Nintendo--and leading third party publisher Electronic Arts. But as the
song goes, sometimes you don't know what you got 'til it's gone, and
two years of the new min-E3--first spread out over downtown Santa
Monica, then as a shell of its former self back at the L.A. Convention
Center--was pleasing no-one, to say nothing of publishers like
Activision Blizzard, which pulled out of E3 and the ESA entirely.
Clearly, something had to be done.
Still, it wasn't easy.To read the rest of our exclusive post on the new E3, click on the link below.
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