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Activision, Vivendi end membership with ESA and ditches E3 plans

The Electronic Entertainment Expo, more commonly called E3, was once the biggest gaming event and conference in the world. Times have changed though, as E3 decided to downsize by cutting the glitter and glamour, turning it into a smaller event aimed at the press.

One would expect that games publishers would welcome the cost savings of bringing things down to a smaller scale, the upcoming E3 is steadily losing support from the biggest forces in gaming.

Activision Blizzard said that it will not participate at the E3 event this year, issuing a statement that read, “After careful consideration, Activision has decided not to renew its ESA membership for business reasons and will not be participating in any official E3 activities. We appreciate the work that the ESA has done over the years in promoting the interactive entertainment industry with state and federal governments and wish the ESA best of luck with the show.”

Instead, both Vivendi and Activision will display its upcoming games at a hotel in Santa Monica around the same time as E3. Several other publishers and developers, such as NC Soft, Her Interactive, Foundation 9 have also revealed that they do not intend on being a part of this year’s expo.

Some even figured that id Software, which one would presume would have a lot to show off with its next-generation Rage engine, won’t be a part of this year’s show.

Analysts are pointing at the change of leadership at the Entertainment Software Association as a reason behind the falling support of E3. The changeover from previous president Doug Lowenstein, regarded as an incredibly savvy and proactive figure, to now president Mike Gallagher is thought to be one not welcome by game makers.

“Lowenstein was a very savvy industry veteran who paid attention to the goings-on in the industry and cared what the community had to say,” Wedbush Morgan analyst Michael Pachter said in a Kotaku story. “The new person...is far less knowledgeable and sophisticated about this industry than Doug was and is going to make some rookie mistakes.”

E3 will take place this July 15 through 17 at the Los Angeles Convention Center.



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I knew it was coming...
By iFX on 5/5/2008 5:14:22 PM , Rating: 5
A few years ago when they banned the half nekkid chicks I knew it would be much longer until the event imploded.




RE: I knew it was coming...
By bryanW1995 on 5/5/2008 6:37:15 PM , Rating: 4
you should never EVER ban half-nekkid chicks from anything.


RE: I knew it was coming...
By InternetGeek on 5/6/2008 1:18:48 AM , Rating: 2
Funny how just asking for fully nekkid chicks will get you banned out of everywhere...


RE: I knew it was coming...
By aos007 on 5/6/2008 2:03:11 PM , Rating: 2
Hence, you are supposed to ask for HALF nekkid chicks.


Anyone else see this coming?
By mollick2 on 5/5/2008 4:47:40 PM , Rating: 4
Why bother displaying what you have coming up in the future to people from the same industry as you. Where does the logic lye in showing your products to competition and not the consumers. E3 has no point to it anymore now that it isn't a public affair. It won't suprise me at all if this is the last E3 and perhaps death of the ESA.




RE: Anyone else see this coming?
By xsilver on 5/5/2008 8:49:44 PM , Rating: 2
Exactly when its press only, why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?

Hold your own shindig at a hotel and skip the fees. The press will come anyways since they're only down the street.
Blizard did a smart thing.


RE: Anyone else see this coming?
By Gatt on 5/6/2008 12:15:46 AM , Rating: 2
IIRC isn't it Activision now? I thought Activision bought Blizzard.


RE: Anyone else see this coming?
By xStrom on 5/6/2008 1:56:25 AM , Rating: 2
Actually it's the other way around.


RE: Anyone else see this coming?
By mollick2 on 5/6/2008 3:30:11 PM , Rating: 2
Technically Vivendi Games bought Activision. Blizzard is just one of their developers. So far they've stayed independent though, reinforcing the idea that the merger was nothing more then for financial support.


Poor E3
By tedrodai on 5/5/2008 2:04:59 PM , Rating: 4
Well, when the industry's press (in general) reverts back to doing REAL un-biased reviews/previews instead of paid-advertisements that read and look like reviews/previews, I will care.

Now that it's press-only, I can only imagine the meetings: "Push features X, Y, and Z; give it 85-90% positive; and you'll get your share." In not so many words...It's just understood.




RE: Poor E3
By Polynikes on 5/5/2008 2:10:30 PM , Rating: 3
E3 being press-only is retarded. If I lived anywhere near I'd go check it out, and I know a lot of other people would. The ESA management has completely ruined E3.


RE: Poor E3
By someguy123 on 5/5/2008 8:30:02 PM , Rating: 2
indeed. i feel bad that E3 is dieing, but the management did it to themselves. what the hell were they thinking? the only thing good about E3 was that it was a huge spectacle that overly glorified everything in the future of gaming. Without the huge spectacles it had nothing else to really make it worth going to or releasing press about.


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