It's game over for E3: Once the largest video game industry event is cancelled for good

Daniel Sims

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RIP: For the last two decades, the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) was the gaming industry's biggest event. However, after a pandemic shutdown and three aborted revival attempts, the organization behind the expo is calling it quits. Many will likely highlight E3's failure to evolve as other gaming showcases endure.

Entertainment Software Association (ESA) CEO Stanley Pierre-Louis has announced that the organization will no longer attempt to hold E3 events, ending efforts to revitalize what has been a pillar of the games industry since the 1990s. Pierre-Louis said the time was right, given the new methods of showcasing products to consumers.

Usually held every summer in Los Angeles, E3 had been on shaky ground since at least 2020, when the pandemic forced the event's first-ever cancellation. The ESA organized an online-only E3 in 2021 and unsuccessfully tried to hold hybrid expos in 2022 and 2023.

Upon canceling this year's expo in March, the ESA pledged to continue attempting to organize shows for unspecified future dates, but this week's announcement puts the final nail in E3's coffin.

A leading factor behind E3's collapse over the last few years is the loss of support from major game companies like Nintendo, Sony, Microsoft, EA, and Ubisoft. The expo typically revolved around press conferences from console manufacturers and other industry titans. However, the advent of online streaming eventually allowed them to host separate events with tighter control over marketing. Nintendo began the trend in 2013, followed by Sony, Microsoft, and other major publishers. The pandemic oriented online presentations provided the final push.

The first E3 was held in 1995 to provide a venue for game companies to show retailers their products after the industry outgrew its corner of CES. The expo gradually attracted attention from the media and grew into the most prominent annual showcase for upcoming gaming hardware and software.

Today, numerous events worldwide provide similar stages for game companies, including PAX, the Tokyo Game Show, Gamescom, and others. The fact that they survived the pandemic and eventually returned to in-person attendance suggests that perhaps E3 failed to pivot from its original focus on retailers amid the shift to digital distribution.

Journalist and gaming personality Geoff Keighley has attempted to fill the mid-summer void with the Summer Game Fest, which has held online presentations of upcoming titles since 2020. The next event begins on June 8, 2024.

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Well that'll never get crossed of my bucket list now, time to start looking into online Japanese language courses it seems.
 
This is the only thing that comes to mind...

e3-memes.png
 
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... R.I.P
 
It is very sad to realize that this age is over, where creative people could gather and share their creations.

The new age that it comes is surrounded by "*****s" with money that want more money.

We are done with the remakes and with the "milking the cow" attitude.

Even the indie developers started to see what is behind each new technology (think Unity).

And above all that you have AI which devours any new creativity that is published on the famous net.

What a shame.

I wish we could "undo" all that and add some "ethics" in the Computer Science.
 
During the pandemic I was predicting this. Once big companies learned they could successfully launch a product to the world without a exposition like E3, the end was nigh. Even before the pandemic expos where loosing importance, but covid was the bullet that killed them for good.
 
Because the event wasn't friendly to the rest of the Country and even back in 2018 people were letting ESA know that it should be held in Vegas, away from LA.

 
No, because unlike EVGA E3 was really only known for cringe, and did nothing else of note over the last decade.

The internet made E3 obsolete.

lol Good ol' E3. Can't say I'll miss it.

EVGA was primarily known for their GPUs pulling roughly 80% of their total revenue, while you could come pretty close to building an entire PC with their competitors' parts including GPU. No traction outside the US while only selling GPUs was confusing. They never showed their financials either. Just played the blame game.

EVGA made itself obsolete.
 
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