>
* * *
On the off chance you're unaware, June is the month where video game fans all
over the world come together to embrace long winded reels of trailers once
united under the banner of the Electronic Entertainment Expo, aka E3. E3,
maligned by pandemic and attendees alike, closed its doors back in 2023
(though the organization behind it has dressed up its corpse in "changing
directions"] make up), leaving a week-long trailer bonanza shaped hole in the
gaming sphere. And so, like a phoenix from the ashes, enter Jeff Knightly to
resurrect everyone's favorite press conference format from the grave of E3 in
the form of Summer Game Fest. If there was any doubt remaining, I am not a
fan.
I don't like what Jeff's done with not-E3, and I don't like what he's done
with his annual awards show, The Game Awards, either. But that's not _really_
what I'm interested in thinking about. There's ink to be spilled on all the
ways the overemphasis on singular announcement trailers and vertical slice
demos warp marketing and development work around big splashy one-off events,
or how the format's profit motive (<a href="https://kotaku.com/summer-game-
fest-sgf-prices-traile</description>
A social news and discussion community