With mere days to go until the Electronic Entertainment Expo opens its doors on June 4th, the biggest video game event of the year is officially upon us. Time to start getting incredibly excited, absurdly optimistic and irrationally terrified. OK, scratch that last part, but this thing is gigantic and packed with thousands of awesome video games. Get ready!
IGN will be in Los Angeles covering every second of it, playing every secret demo behind closed doors, kidnapping developers for exclusive intel and attending every event and industry party. And through the magic of the internet, you'll be right there with us and probably wearing your pajamas. Lucky you! So what can we expect to blow the roof off the L.A. Convention Center this year?
Exclusives are nice, but let's be honest: The best games every year come out on a bunch of different platforms. Your Call of Duties, your Resident Evils, your Pac-Mans, all of this wonderful stuff is available for everyone. E3 2012 is bringing some titles that'll knock millions of pants and/or socks off. Keep a sharp eye out for these multiplatform monstrosities.
Tomb Raider
Microsoft's press conference is bound to bring up entertainment, social, and Kinect, but this is also a huge year for some of the Xbox 360's most important exclusives. First-party developers are cranking away on huge stuff, but the third party studios could bring some excellent stuff as well.
Halo 4
After months of trickled information and minimalist reveals, Halo 4 will finally get some spotlight at the press conference. Expect to learn more about the campaign, especially the new threat, and the more personal story of Master Chief. In addition, we’re expecting to finally play Spartan Ops co-op stories, as well as the new competitive multiplayer mode, Infinity. Microsoft won’t pull any punches – 2012 will absolutely be the year of Halo, and getting 343’s efforts in front of everyone in a grand fashion will be priority one.
Fable The Journey
Peter Molyneux's final project with Lionhead Studios is the nuttiest yet, scrapping action/adventure for a more serene experience on Kinect. The Journey isn't just about the titular quest, though, as there's enough enemy encounters and combat variables to keep it interesting. Whether or not Fable ultimately works as a first-person Kinect action game is TBD, but we're likely to learn more about its true goal -- rather than just its broad ambition -- at E3.
It's been a curious buildup to E3 for the PlayStation brand. With about a month to go, the company blew the lid off of God of War: Ascension, PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale, LittleBigPlanet Karting and The Last of Us. Why? Our reasoning: it's time to announce some cool stuff for the PlayStation Vita.
The handheld debuted in February around the world (except for Japan, which had it in December), and since then, poor sales figures have stolen the headlines. Sony needs to come out at E3 and pimp the PlayStation 3 exclusives and at the same time show you why you should believe in this handheld. So what do we think takes the press conference stage and knocks your socks off? Well, smart money's on...
The Last of Us
Call of Duty Vita
Here's what we know about Call of Duty Vita -- it is coming. That's it, and that sucks. With Resistance: Burning Skies about to become the first true dual stick shooter to arrive on a handheld, expect Activision to roll out this follow-up at E3. Will it be Black Ops 2? Will it be an original game? Will it nail everything BobbyA1984 put in his COD wishlist? We bet we find out next week.
Assassin's Creed Vita
Again -- we know that there's an Assassin's Creed game in the works for the PlayStation Vita, but that's all we know. If you missed the memo, Assassin's Creed III looks awesome and is going to blow the doors off of E3. Seems like Ubisoft would be silly not to show what the Vita developers have been toiling away on. Is it a tie-in to AC3? Is it a port of AC3? Is it a brand new tale? Let us know!
God of War: Ascension
Quantic Dream's Next Game
New Exclusives
Well, it's our website and we can be as general as we want. The fact of the matter is PlayStation has the most impressive stable of first-party developers in the industry, and a lot of them have been quietly chipping away at projects. What are the Killzone devs up to? What does 2012 look like for Vita releases? Chances are we're going to have one hell of a roadmap when the PlayStation conference is said and done.
Nintendo has a lot riding on this year’s E3. It’s where the company plans to fully unveil its next generation of home console, Wii U. It’s also the Big N’s big chance to convince hardcore and casual gamers alike that its tablet controller truly is the future of gaming. We expect tons of new info about what this new system can do, and at least some vague idea of what kind of software we’ll see once it launches. We also expect updates on a few 3DS titles the company has kept mum about, like Luigi’s Mansion 2, Paper Mario 3DS and Animal Crossing 3DS, as well as the recently announced New Super Mario Bros. 2. If things work out, we’re also hoping to get some new game announcements, and perhaps some global release dates for some of those awesome Japan-only games we’ve been missing out on (we’re looking at you Fire Emblem: Awakening, Project X Zone and Professor Layton and the Mask of Miracle).
New Super Mario Bros. 2
Hitting store shelves this August, Mario’s New side-scrolling adventure will see the return of some beloved staples from Super Mario Bros. 3 - particularly a more traditional Raccoon Suit, the P-Wing and the power meter.
New Super Mario Bros. Mii
It seems our first real taste of HD Mario will be based on the New Super Mario Bros. Mii tech demo from E3 2011. As such, expect it to be a 2D side-scroller with multiplayer support and, most likely, the incorporation of Mii characters.
Pikmin 3
The game that’s been about five years in the making, this year we’ll finally get to see the third entry in Shigeru Miyamoto’s Pikmin franchise. Now that it’s on Wii U, expect it to make clever use of the Wii U tablet and continue the story of Olimar and his little Pikmin slaves/buddies.
Years ago, back when Bill Gates would walk on stage and Live Anywhere was a new and exciting thing, Microsoft’s E3 press conference usually had some interesting news for PC gamers. That’s no longer the case these days, and that’s just fine. To some degree the PC gaming community seems to have moved on from this particular event. Blizzard no longer attends, Valve isn’t doing anything for E3 this year, and many interesting PC games like Firefall and Guild Wars 2 won’t be there. E3 in 2012 is more about new console hardware hysteria and what the big three are doing to ensure their next big steps into the increasingly decentralized, rapidly changing future of video games are smart ones. In many ways, these companies will be trying to capitalize on what’s happening in the PC gaming scene right now, where payment models, distribution strategies and game design experimentation are as wild and exciting as they’ve ever been.
Electronic Arts
E3s MMOs
Cross-Platform Overload
The trickiest part of covering mobile games is how incredibly fast the platform moves. Unlike consoles, where members of the press and the public know about a game for months or years in advance, iOS and Android games are revealed for the very first time one week and then released the next.
This means it’s impossible to predict all the iOS hotness that will be at the show. With that in mind, two games stand out as titles all gamers should keep their eyes on:
Infinity Blade Dungeons
The Act
The Act is one of the most intriguing mobile games I’ve ever seen, and I’ve seen hundreds. The game’s hand-drawn 2D animation immediately catches everyone’s attention, but their first question is always the same: “It looks great, but how does it play?”
It’s a fair question – older gamers will remember Dragon’s Lair and other barely-playable interactive movies. So far The Act seems much more like the real deal. Gamers control protagonist Edward via a variety of touch-controlled swiping gestures, making The Act more of a true interactive, playable cartoon. Hopefully at E3 all of the questions surrounding The Act will be put to rest.
As you can see, E3 is going to be a totally fantastic, insane week for gamers. What are you looking forward to most? Which company do you think will have the best show? Sound off in the comments below, and keep it locked to IGN between now and E3 as we continue to dominate E3 2012 coverage.
Source : http://www.ign.com
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