oldtaku said:
Showing extended gameplay sequences is only entertaining when the person playing them has entertaining commentary (not an E3 thing)
Some of us don't even like THAT. I HATE having people commentating over a game I'm trying to watch.
HAAAAAAAATE it. I just want to see a game being played. I want to sit down and watch a 15 minute session of people behaving the way people do when they play any game in question. That's the only measuring stick I really have of whether I like something before I get my own hands on it.
Sanunes said:
The thing is though, that E3 is basically an advertising floor. What really gets me about E3 is that devs/pubs show off games with the thin disclaimer that "content is subject to change". For the more cynical of us, that basically means all of E3 is worthless, because we've been shown something but are in an extended limbo of not being able to know that the game will even resemble what we saw (*cough* Overstrike/Fuse *cough*) and it removes all confidence or excitement in the game's development.
And if this misleading is due to them advertising games months or years in advance,
maybe they shouldn't. We're all tired of this comparison between different mediums, but Films don't get advertised while they're still in filming (Well, actually, the new Starwars trilogy might be, I don't follow the movies), you see posters and TV ads when the movie is about to go to theaters and then later when it's going for boxed release. They wait until they have a finished, provable product before stepping into advertising.
About the only 2 games I got excited at were SW:Battlefront 3 and No Man's Sky. New IP and long-awaited IP, both had (somewhat) choreographed trailers, but they were gameplay trailers at least, and nice long ones that showed off a lot of mechanics. That being said, I'm still stuck in the cynic's hole, worried that the end products are going to differ drastically.