Monday, July 13, 2015
Video Game Pickups #5 - 22 Games + Awesome Retro Stuff - It's a Pixel THING - Ep.#57
Let's take a look at my new T-Shirt & the 22 video games, and other gaming related stuff, that I've added to my collection over the last three months! There's stuff for the PC, original XBOX, XBOX 360, PlayStation 2, Amiga, ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64 and the Amstrad CPC!
Enjoy!
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Monday, July 6, 2015
E3 Retrospective, Part 2: 2006-2015 - It's a Pixel THING - Ep.#56
Let's take a journey through time and watch the 2nd Part of Pixel THING's E3 retrospective. In this one I'll be covering years from 2006 to 2015.
On last week’s episode of It's a Pixel THING:
• A
silhouette on a window of a shaking cabin;
• Summer
arrived in style;
• The
War of the Worlds meets the Terminator;
• And
a guy shoots this dude for riding is skate.
2006
Xbox 360,
PlayStation 3 and the Nintendo Wii were the most coveted items of 2006’s E3.
By that
time, Microsoft’s console was the only one that was already available in stores
and its main weapon were the exclusives Fable 2, Halo 3 and Peter Moore’s
announcement that Grand Theft Auto IV would have exclusive future episodic
content through Xbox Live. Obviously, those were later also available for
PlayStation 3 and Windows PCs.
However,
all the attention was towards the Nintendo Wii. Huge lines, with up to four
hours of wait time, formed just to try out this revolutionary console. Even
Steven Spielberg wanted to test this motion sensitive controller that the Wii
is best known for! It was, without any doubt, the center of all game related
things at E3 that year. Wii Sports, a Wii adapted version of Legend of Zelda:
Twilight Princess, Super Mario Galaxy, Metroid Prime 3; these were Nintendo’s highlights.
They’ve also announced the Nintendo’s DS Lite availability in US territory,
never mentioning Wii’s price. This was reserved for later in the year, closer
to its launch.
Microsoft’s
press conference was all about games and, also, featured Bill Gates’
announcement of the Live Anywhere service that would bring closer together their
7th generation console and PCs via the upcoming Windows Vista
operating system.
As for
Sony, they’ve announced PS3 prices and revealed the SixAxis motion sensing
controller that was later dropped off and swapped by the version 3 of the good
old DualShock with vibration capabilities.
Besides all
games mentioned before, there were others that also deserve some recognition: God
of War II, Guitar Hero 2, Assassin’s Creed, Crysis, Battlefield 2142, Gears of
War, Red Steel, Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin and Ratchet & Clank: Size
Matters.
July of 2006
was also stage for two awfully sad announcements by the ESA, the Entertainment
Software Association: the transformation of the Electronic Entertainment Expo into
an invite-only event, to reduce crowd; and the banishing of booth babes.
2007
So, 2007’s
E3 moved to Santa Monica and was consequently labeled as Media and Business
Summit, dedicated to a restrict group of journalists. In consequence, after the
60 thousand visitors of the past year, 2007’s E3 had only 10 thousand people
walking through these corridors during those 3 days.
Events and
press conferences took place in various hotels in Santa Monica, rather than at
a specific central location, and small independent developers were hampered and
stifled by the big boys. This fact was highly criticized by Maxis’ co-founder
Will Wright.
Spite these
changes and controversy, E3 was stage of a few good video game announcements by
Sony and Microsoft: MotorStorm, that would come bundled with a new 80 GB PS3, Halo
3 and Halo Wars, Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune, Fallout 3, Silent Hill: Origins, Metal
Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots, Bioshock, Gran Turismo 5, Call of Duty 4: Modern
Warfare, Resident Evil 5 and Soul Calibur IV, to name a few.
On the
Nintendo side, there were some peripheral announcements for the Wii: the Wii
Wheel bundled with the brand new Mario Kart Wii, the Wii Balance Board and the
Wii Zapper. The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass and Metroid Prime 3:
Corruption were also demoed and deserve being mentioned.
2008
Second year
of the new E3 format that only had around 5000 attendees, 50% less than 2007’s
event.
Again in
LA, and apart from all that criticism, an exclusive Nintendo DS Grand Theft
Auto game was announced – Chinatown Wars – that is still considered the best
title for that handheld! It was later also available for the Sony PSP and other
portable devices, such as Apple’s iPhone and iPad, and Android based
smartphones and tablets.
Nintendo
also announced the Wii Speak and the Wii MotionPlus expansion device, for more
accurate movement. Also a Wii Music demo was presented, along with some other
goodies: Animal Crossing: City Folk, The Conduit and Wii Sports Resort.
Besides
announcements of big updates for Xbox Life and for the PlayStation Network,
news from Microsoft and Sony were basically in the form of sequels for their
greatest franchises: Resistance 2, Fallout 3, Fable 2, Ratchet & Clank (future): Quest for Booty, Gears of War
2, Resident Evil 5, Saints Row 2, Final Fantasy XIII and a tiny sneak peek of
God of War III.
2009
The old E3
is back! (Booth babes)
And, with
it, awesome game announcements: Assassin’s Creed 2, Forza MotorSports 3, Gran
Turismo and Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker for the PSP, teaser trailers for Crysis
2 and Halo: Reach, Super Mario Galaxy 2 and New Super Mario Bros Wii, Uncharted
2: Among Thieves, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, Heavy Rain, Castlevania:
Lords of Shadow, The Beatles: Rock Band, with the presence of Paul McCartney
and Ringo Starr themselves on the stage of Microsoft’s press conference, and
Red Dead Redemption.
It was also
the year for unveilings of motion sensor controllers: Project Natal from
Microsoft and Sony’s PlayStation Move. Sony also revealed their new PSP Go
handheld.
This year,
UbiSoft and Electronic Arts had also press conferences of their own and was the
first time we’ve had a glimpse to The Last Guardian, the spiritual sequel to
Shadow of the Colossus.
Now… where
were we? (booth babes)
2010
Two days
before the beginning of the actual 2010’s E3 event, Microsoft’s press
conference convinced the audience with its presentation of the Kinect, formerly
known as Project Natal, and various demos were presented live on stage: Dance
Central, Kinectimals, Your Shape: Fitness Evolved and Kinect Star Wars. If that
wasn’t enough, a new slimmer version of the Xbox 360 was also unveiled and the
upcoming Gears of War 3 was announced.
Nintendo
centered its conference on the new 3DS system and the re-release of classic
titles like Donkey Kong, not forgetting the usual announcement of a new Zelda game:
Skyward Sword for the Wii, but, due to wireless interferences, some technical issues
occurred.
After Gabe
Newell’s statement that it was “a waste of time” to develop games for the
PlayStation 3, he made an appearance at Sony’s press conference to announce
that PS3’s Portal 2 was the best console version! Another awesome moment was Kevin
Butler’s inspiring message to all gamers (video)…
There was
also time for Konami’s disastrous presentation. I’m not gonna comment this.
It’s so freaking stupid!
Let’s just
forget that this happened and watch some highlights of a few of the most
important video games present: Mafia 2, God of War: Ghost of Sparta, Call of
Duty: Black Ops, Test Drive Unlimited 2, The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings,
Fallout: New Vegas, MotorStorm: Apocalypse, Deus Ex: Human Revolution and the
reboot of Twisted Metal. As you can see, reboots and remakes came a long way.
2011
Another
year for portable systems from Nintendo and Sony, leaving Microsoft a step back
and completely loosing that year’s E3. But, spite weak Kinect demonstrations,
the brand unveiled Halo 4, Forza 4 and the final release date for Gears of War
3.
Sony’s brand
new handheld, the Vita, was announced and a partnership with AT&T was
received with laughs by the journalists present at the brand’s press
conference. However, this was probably the most impressive piece of technology
present at E3 that year.
As for Nintendo’s
Wii U, it was the first 8th generation console to be announced. It
was also Nintendo’s very first high-definition system that features this unique
gamepad with an embedded touchscreen that can, in supported games, be used
independently of the main display. Aside from a bunch of Wii U demonstrations
and the celebration of the 25th anniversary of The Legend of Zelda (trailer of Skyward Sword), the 3DS also
had their own spotlights: Super Mario 3D Land, Mario Kart 7 and Star Fox 64 3D.
This was a
year of other big video game announcements: remember Duke Nukem Forever? It was
finally released later that year! Battlefield 3, Mass Effect 3, Batman: Arkham
City, (The Elder Scrolls V) Skyrim,
the reboot of Tomb Raider, BioShock Infinite and Uncharted 3: Drake’s
Deception.
2012
This was a
quiet year. People were expecting major console announcements from Sony and
from Microsoft. Nintendo, on the other hand, completely lost the opportunity to
really stand out and only showed a slightly improved version of their U
console, with some tweaks to its controller and main unit. However, three
titles did impress the crowd: New Super Mario Bros. U, Pikmin 3 and Rayman
Legends.
So, the
main attractions were the games! And, the one that made people’s eyes pop out
was Watch Dogs, with its unique style of gameplay in this beautifully designed
open world environment.
Besides
Ubisoft’s innovative game, other amazing products were revealed: Beyond: Two
Souls, Resident Evil 6, Forza Horizon, The Last of Us, Dance Central 3 – with a
special demonstration by Usher (Microsoft
Press Conference) –, Need for Speed: Most Wanted, Assassin’s Creed 3,
Crysis 3, God of War: Ascension, Ni no Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch and Far
Cry 3.
2013
Finally,
the 8th generation arrived in great style.. at least, for Sony!
2013’s E3
was one the most anticipated ever. But Microsoft’s recent announcement of DRM
implementation and always-online requirement for its new XBOX One console
automatically opened the doors to Sony’s PlayStation 4 ascent to victory, not
mentioning Xbox One’s 499 dollars starting price against PS4’s 399.
Nintendo
also had a bland E3 with few attractive moments. A new Pokémon (X and Y) for the 3DS and, for the Wii
U, The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker HD, Bayonetta 2, Super Smash Bros.,
Super Mario 3D World and Mario Kart 8.
Nonetheless,
Microsoft should be proud of their own Xbox One launch titles presented: Dead
Rising 3, Ryse: Son of Rome, a brand new Halo (5) game and the reboot of Killer Instinct as a free-to-play title
that has all game modes available but only one playable character. Its
presentation, however, was stained by an unfortunate comment made during the
on-stage demonstration.
Konami also
celebrated its 40th birthday and showed off some titles like, for
instance, Castlevania: Lords of Shadow 2 and Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom
Pain.
Other
amazing video games were announced: Need for Speed: Rivals, Assassin’s Creed 4:
Black Flag, Trials Fusion, Battlefield 4, Wolfenstein: The New Order, Infamous:
Second Son, Titanfall, The Crew, The Order: 1868, The Division, Gran Turismo 6,
The Wolf Among Us, the remake of Rise of the Triad and the highly anticipated
Grand Theft Auto 5.
2014
Last year’s
E3 was one of those that I really enjoy watching. So many games displayed, so
many game announcements and so many promises from the main players.
Gamers were
amazed by the quantity, but, mainly, by the quality of the titles that were
showcased. Microsoft and Sony pulled off interesting press conferences with
pretty solid announcements and video game unveilings. As for Nintendo and just
like in last year’s E3, they’ve opted for a pre-recorded presentation of their
novelties and made also some interesting announcements like: Hyrule Warriors,
Kirby and the Rainbow Curse, Xenoblade Chronicles X, the next Legend of Zelda
for Wii U, Mario Party 10 and Star Fox Wii U, not mentioning this fever called
Amiibo.
So, I’m
just gonna point out a few titles from a huge list of awesome games that were
announced and others that had a playable version available at the show floor: Call
of Duty: Advanced Warfare, Dragon Age: Inquisition, Batman: Arkham Knight, Assassin’s
Creed: Unity, Destiny, Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six: Siege, Bloodborne, The Evil
Within, Elite Dangerous, Middle-Earth: Shadow of Mordor, Driveclub, Halo 5:
Guardians, Mortal Kombat 10, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, The Sims 4, Far Cry 4 and
Alien: Isolation.
Also a
trailer for GTA V was shown, announcing that a polished version of the game
would later be available for PS4, Xbox One and PC.
Grand Theft
Auto 5 was initially launched in September of 2013 and sold, ‘til 6 of june of
2015, for all platforms altogether, more than 52 million copies. What a feat!
2015
And we’ve
reached 2015. And what a show it was, starting right off with Oculus VR hosting
a pre-E3 press conference unveiling the Rift’s final version and showing off
all its power through some on-stage demonstrations.
Bethesda
also hosted its very first E3 press conference and ended up blowing everyone away
with this DOOM trailer and the official announcement of the release date of
Fallout 4.
But two of
the biggest highlights of the show were Microsoft’s announcement of Xbox One
backward compatibility and Microsoft HoloLens that was also nicely received by
Minecraft fans, in which I’m not included. My thing is more towards this nice
Rare compilation of old gems from the past (Rare
Replay).
Then the
Electronic Arts conference came along and I simply had to grab my nuts from the
ground after this mind-blowing demo of Battlefront. Apart from this, I just
can’t quite remember what really happened in EA’s conference... I remember Pelé
being there trying to say something to the audience, and… that’s pretty much
it!
I really
hope that Electronic Arts had learned something from this year’s Ubisoft
presentation. That was one hell of a press conference, with awesome and
confident hosting from Miss Aisha Tyler that took us all through this journey
of awesome titles: For Honor, (Tom
Clancy’s) Ghost Recon Wildlands and Assassin’s Creed Syndicate, besides
others.
Now, as for
Sony, it just set the whole place on fire: The Last Guardian haven’t died spite
all the difficulties that the development team had while working on it for the
PS3. It seems that Gabe Newell’s previous statement, back in 2010, was real!
Then, the place completely exploded when Shenmue 3 was announced! And that
wasn’t the end of it: Final Fantasy 7 HD Remake was unveiled! Looks like Sony
had been listening to fans! And, to conclude this astonishing press conference,
a rolling demo of Uncharted 4 was revealed. What a ride!
Oh! I
almost forgot about Nintendo! What can I say about that pre-recorded video?
Hummm… it was bad. Nintendo was completely unrecognizable this year. Practically
passed unnoticed ‘cause Sony’s press conference was still in everyone’s minds!
That was probably the biggest problem for Nintendo, from where I’m standing.
Moving on,
other titles must be, as well, highlighted: Forza 6, Dark Souls 3, The
Division, Rise of the Tomb Raider, Gears of War 4, Need for Speed, Plants vs
Zombies: Garden Warfare 2, The Crew: Wild Run, Horizon: Zero Dawn, Deus Ex:
Mankind Divided, Battlefield Hardline, Mirror’s Edge: Catalyst, Mass
Effect: Andromeda and King’s Quest.
And this wraps up my 20-year Retrospective of E3.
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Thursday, June 25, 2015
E3 Retrospective, Part 1: 1995-2005 - It's a Pixel THING - Ep.#55
Let's take a journey through time and watch the announcements and birth of many of today's greatest video games and systems since the very first year of the Electronic Entertainment Expo.
This is Part 1 of 2 of Pixel THING's E3 retrospective.
Since its
1995 debut, there have been many awkward and surprising moments. In this two
part video I’ll be pointing out some of those and, as well, the biggest and
awesome game announcements that eventually saw the light of day.. and others
that didn’t!
Prior to
E3, video game novelties were presented at other trade shows like CES and ECTS
in some dark and obscure spaces within the fair itself and, to get to those, we
had most likely to walk past all the porn vendors.
1995
The 16 bit
Era had already faded out and 1995’s E3 was when players were struck by the
announcement that the Sega Saturn was, at that precise moment, available in
stores and not only by fall of that year.
Then,
Sony’s press conference came along and the announcement that the Sony
Playstation would be available in September in North America and Europe for
just 299 dollars, a full 100 dollars cheaper than Sega’s brand new machine and
would have more than 50 games by the end of the year.
Nintendo
unveiled its Virtual Boy that turned out being a huge commercial flop, and also
announced the Ultra 64 as their next console to be launched in the summer of
1996.
SNK’s home
system would be the Neo Geo CD; 3DO showed off their M2 console that was never
released; and Atari Jaguar VR was announced, complete with Virtual Reality
headset unit and controller, and, also, the Jaguar CD add-on.
As for the
games, the main stars were: Sega’s Vectorman; Sony’s Battle Arena Toshinden,
Ridge Racer and Twisted Metal; and Williams’ Mortal Kombat 3.
1996
1996 was a
year where many of the greatest gaming franchises ever were born: Resident
Evil, Tomb Raider and Crash Bandicoot.
But
Nintendo was the main attraction of the fair mainly because of all the hype
behind their new home console. The Nintendo 64 was revealed to the public and,
as well, the new Mario 64 that is considered one of the best video games ever
made. The brand also unveiled its Game Boy Pocket.
Besides all
this Nintendo hype, there were other great announcements that year. A trailer
of Final Fantasy VII for the PlayStation was showed, Virtual Fighter 3 by Sega
and, also from Sega, an internet browser for the Saturn was revealed that
turned out to be another commercial failure.
Sony did it
again in 1996: dropped PlayStation’s price to 199 dollars. One day after Sony’s
announcement, Sega followed with a similar Saturn price drop.
A few more
games also needs some recognition: Pilotwings 64 and Wave Race 64, obviously
from Nintendo; and Nights into Dreams and Sonic X-treme (canceled) for the
Saturn.
1997
E3 had a
huge exponential growth that a new bigger place, with the size of 35 football
fields, was announced for the 1997 event, and, gladly, that was a year without
the traditional new systems and consoles overdose. So, 1997 was a year
exclusively for games, about fifteen hundred to be more precise, and mostly for
the PlayStation!
The PC
gained an extra boost for games with a new Pentium II processor, and Half-Life
and Unreal were the main attractions for that platform, followed by other great
first person shooters like Sin, Daikatana, Quake II, Star Wars Jedi Knight Dark
Forces II and Prey (only released in 2006).
On the
console’s panorama, Metal Gear Solid was revealed for the PlayStation, but
probably the main star of the show was 007 GoldenEye, for the Nintendo 64. Besides
having this huge attraction, the Nintendo 64 also had on display one of the
worst video games ever released: Superman.
It was also
the year for 3DFX. Practically every single PC game on display was “powered by
3DFX” and that made me instinctively buy one of those “magical” boards for my
PC in the summer of ‘97!
Other
titles were, as well, showed off: Tomb Raider II, the very first Grand Theft
Auto, Fallout, Panzer Dragoon Saga, Banjo-Kazooie, F-Zero 64 (later renamed to
F-Zero X), Final Fantasy VII, Oddworld, Resident Evil 2, Star Fox 64 and Time
Crisis, but the most iconic, for its consequent delays, was Duke Nukem Forever.
1998
Another
year dedicated to the most important stuff: games! It was the year for the very
first Gran Turismo, Pokémon series had its debut, Silent Hill and Final Fantasy
8 were presented for the PlayStation and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
for the Nintendo 64 was probably the main player of the fair.
The highly
anticipated Half-Life had a near final version displayed and a Duke Nukem
Forever first video was shown. As you all know, the game was only released more
than a decade later.
Also in
1998, and surrounded by mist, Sega and Microsoft revealed for the press, and
for the press only, its 128 bit marvel named Dreamcast. So, the Saturn was, at
this point, pronounced dead.
Besides all
these goodies, other great titles were announced that year: Diablo II, Need for
Speed III: Hot Pursuit, Tomb Raider III, Heart of Darkness, Indiana Jones and
the Infernal Machine, Age of Empires II, Tekken 3, Perfect Dark and Homeworld.
1999
Back in LA,
1999’s E3 was, once again, the stage for new console announcements, but the
only one, and the very first 6th generation console available, and
just released in Japan, was brought by Sega: the Dreamcast.
Gamers were
blown away by its graphical quality and American players could only get their
hands on one of those by September 9th (9/9/99). In Europe, the
Dreamcast would only be available later that year, in October the 14th.
Nintendo
also announced its next generation console: the Dolphin, later renamed
GameCube, and Sony unveiled what would be the next PlayStation with a dedicated
spot showing off some graphics demonstrations of what was coming. A Neo Geo
handheld was also presented to the public, the Pocket Color, but revealed as a
commercial failure.
1999 wasn’t
just about the next generation of consoles. There were also some pretty good
games announced: Donkey Kong 64, Soul Calibur, Unreal Tournament, Tony Hawk’s
Pro Skater, Crash Team Racing, Dino Crisis, Ape Escape and System Shock 2.
2000
Spite
Sega’s Dreamcast having the hottest booth and the most generous offer in terms
of video game titles available for testing, the year was for the PlayStation 2
with Sony promising a 299 dollars price tag and about 51 games for Christmas.
From
Microsoft came the announcement of their own video game system: the Xbox. Also,
a 3rd person PC game named Halo: Combat Evolved was revealed.
As for
Nintendo, it continued to give support for its Nintendo 64 gaming console and
showed a few more details for the upcoming next gen GameCube. Also a new
portable was unveiled, the Game Boy Advance.
But the title
that really stood out from the crowd was this nine minute trailer from Metal
Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty. This tiny sneak peak presented on the show was
just mind boggling and left everyone drooling!
A few more
titles presented on the fair deserve being mentioned: Marvel vs Capcom 2: New
Age of Heroes and Seaman for Dreamcast, Conker’s Bad Fur Day for Nintendo 64,
Max Payne and Rune for PC. Also, the Unreal Engine 2 was revealed that would
bring new tools for PC gaming development.
There were
also protests outside the show because of the Columbine High School shootings.
The boys who committed the crime were known Doom enthusiasts.
2001
2001 was
the year that everyone were looking forward for more info about Metal Gear
Solid 2. However, there was this little gem that no one seemed to have noticed:
Grand Theft Auto 3.
There was
also two other PlayStation 2 titles that grabbed a chunk of the audience’s
attention: Devil May Cry and Gran Turismo 3.
But 2001
was a year that everyone was eager for a new Nintendo home system. Everybody
wanted to talk about hardware. That year, besides Nintendo’s GameCube and the
Game Boy Advance, there was also this amazing novelty: Microsoft’s own gaming
console, the Xbox. With it came three great franchises: Medal of Honor Allied
Assault, Halo Combat Evolved and Project Gotham Racing.
As for
Nintendo, at its press conference, Miyamoto carried the wavebird wireless
controller and told the audience that he could play games from halfway across
the auditorium. The crowd went nuts! He also brought a few titles to
demonstrate the power of his newest console, like Luigi’s Mansion, Pikmin and
Super Mario Sunshine.
This was
also the year where the PC was seen as a dying gaming platform by developers,
and when Sega pulled the plug on their console development and started focusing
on software for other console manufacturers. From this moment on, Sega became a
third-party software publisher.
2002
2002 was
the year of DOOM 3 (trailer). PC gaming wasn’t dead, after all! No one had ever
seen these kind of graphics on a video game! This one was a much slower-paced
game, nearly like a survival-horror type of thing! Really scary stuff!
This was,
once again, an E3 filled with games, gladly, and online gaming was making its
first steps. Microsoft took advantage by launching the Xbox Live service, along
with Splinter Cell, Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance and the exclusives Unreal
Championship, Dead or Alive: Xtreme Beach Volleyball and Halo 2 (trailer).
For 2002
Nintendo had on display Metroid Prime and The Legend of Zelda The Wind Waker that
grabbed the crowd’s attention.
But other
multiplatform titles were also applauded: Red Faction 2, Time Splitters 2 and
Turok Evolution.
Military
games were becoming hugely popular in video gaming, and Ubisoft stunned the
audience with its Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six 3: Raven Shield. But no one expected
that even the United States Army would ever get a game of their own! So, in
2002, the Army unveiled a new recruitment tool called America’s Army that gamers
could download and play for free.
Also, from
Electronic Arts, came Battlefield 1942 that stunned everyone who tried it and
became another huge success for the PC also as an online gaming platform.
2002 was
also a year of some promising announcements: Tecmo’s Ninja Gaiden exclusively
for Xbox and the release of Grand Theft Auto Vice City firstly for the
PlayStation 2, followed by the PC and, only a full year later for the Xbox. As
for Sega, now a third-party developer, announced Shinobi as a PS2 exclusive and
Panzer Dragoon Orta exclusively for the Xbox.
Sony also
announced the EyeToy camera, an adapter for online gaming and a brand new
exclusive Contra game: Shattered Soldier; besides other titles from awesome
franchises: Colin McRae Rally 3, Ratchet & Clank and Red Dead Revolver
being, this last one, the older brother of the amazing 2009 Red Dead Redemption.
2003
Once again,
PC games were the main stars of the show: The Sims 2, the very beginning of the
Call of Duty franchise and the amazing Half Life 2 that had the most incredible
physics engine the world had ever seen.
But Half
Life 2 was just one of the many big sequels revealed that year. Microsoft’s
press conference ended blowing the audience with a Halo 2 movie; and people
attending Sony’s event went completely wild with a trailer of Gran Turismo 4.
But, even so,
people were asking for Doom 3 and no one seemed to have an answer to that
question.
Apart from
that, Ubisoft resurrected the Prince of Persia franchise, with an incredible
new look and storytelling, Tecmo’s exclusive Xbox game Ninja Gaiden was also on
display and Sony left everyone speechless with its announcement of a brand new
handheld system: the PSP. When I say “everyone” I really mean everyone! Even
Nintendo that didn’t saw it coming!
Nokia also
entered the game with its N-Gage, but their press conference went incredibly wrong.
I believe that it was the worst press conference to this date! Everything just
didn’t work well or didn’t work at all! This was probably the only scene that
saved the show (photo of babe with 299).
Another
down side came from Blizzard that was planning to release StarCarft: Ghost, but
it was eventually, and unfortunately, canceled.
Other
significant future releases were showcased: Stalker, FarCry, Guild Wars and
Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater.
2004
2004 was
the year when everyone was already focusing towards the 7th
generation of consoles. However two handhelds were featured on that year’s E3:
Sony’s PSP and Nintendo’s DS. Everyone was just intrigued about the DS and its
Dual Screen display and the presence of Miyamoto himself tried to convince the
crowd.
Sony, on
the other hand, announced that was already working on the PlayStation 3,
driving the audience completely insane and Microsoft’s Halo 2 was also grabbing
huge attention.
During this
4 day show, one question regarding the launch date of Doom 3, Half Life 2 and
Gran Turismo 4 remained unanswered.
However,
the title that got the most incredible reaction from the public was The Legend
of Zelda: Twilight Princess for the GameCube. That background music just reminded me of the 1982 movie Conan, the
Barbarian starring Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Other
titles were also applauded by the public: Metal Gear Solid 3, God of War, the
announcement of a brand new Grand Theft Auto game - San Andreas -, F.E.A.R.,
the rise of the Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game (MMORPG) genre
with World of Warcraft and The Sims 2.
2005
By this
time, Doom 3, Half Life 2 and Gran Turismo 4 were released! YEYY!!!! And,
obviously, major commercial successes. To this present date, Doom 3 sold more
than 3.5 million copies, Gran Turismo 4 11.73 million and Half Life 2 more than
12 million copies.
The 2005 E3
was the first ever to be televised and was packed with fans eager to know more
about the upcoming next generation consoles that would be revealed soon. So,
that year, was all about the hardware with Microsoft demonstrating their Xbox
360, with Alan Wake being the title to get the biggest hype from the crowd, and
Sony showing some pre-rendered 1080p videos of future titles leaving everyone
impressed but, at the same time, suspicious (Motorstorm?).
Probably
the biggest surprise came, once again, from Nintendo with its presentation of
the so called Revolution console, later re-named Wii. Its controllers, however,
remained in secrecy ‘til the end of that same year. If that wasn’t enough,
Nintendo also unveiled a new handheld: the Game Boy Micro.
Spite all
this hardware mayhem, a few good software titles were presented that also got
some attention: Battlefield 2, Call of Duty 2, Age of Empires 3, Unreal
Tournament 2007, Star Wars: Empire at War, Quake 4, Hitman: Blood Money,
Company of Heroes, Civilization 4, The Witcher and The Elder Scrolls: Oblivion,
that made Ivan Cordeiro spend all is
money building a brand new PC just to run it.. Poorly!
Stay tuned
for part 2 of Pixel THING’s E3 retrospective.
Support the show on Patreon:
http://www.patreon.com/PixelTHING
If you're into retro - or not so retro - stuff, please subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/user/ThePixelTHING
and visit:
http://www.facebook.com/PixelThing
and http://twitter.com/Pixel_THING
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Monday, June 22, 2015
My Wishes for Next Year's E3 - It's a Pixel THING - Ep.#54
Remakes and reboots are so fashionable these days, aren’t they? So, here's a couple of remakes or reboots or both that I would really like to see and play in the future!
Support the show on Patreon:
http://www.patreon.com/PixelTHING
If you're into retro - or not so retro - stuff, please subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/user/ThePixelTHING
and visit:
http://www.facebook.com/PixelThing
&
http://twitter.com/Pixel_THING
Labels:
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toki,
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x-wing vs tie fighter
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