E3 2022 studios: Home — Electronic Entertainment Experience

E3 2022: What to expect from the Xbox & Bethesda Games Showcase

(Image credit: Obsidian Entertainment)

This June, the games industry will stand in the big hole where E3 used to be and start firing off game announcements like nobody’s business. According to the «E3» Summer Games Fest calendar so far, most livestreams will be happening over the course of a single weekend: June 9-12. While it’s still not clear if some of the biggest publishers will have anything to show this year, Microsoft is coming out swinging with the Xbox & Bethesda Showcase.

As you’ve probably noticed, Microsoft has been on a spending streak lately. Earlier this year it began the process of buying the entirety of Activision Blizzard for $69 billion . That merger, plus ongoing projects at Bethesda and internal studios, tees up Microsoft for a potentially killer show. We already know that we won’t get to play Starfield or Redfall this year, but E3 is the perfect excuse to build buzz by showing off games that are still far off.

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Be it teasers, meaty gameplay demos, or a logo on a black background with the word «soon» under it, here’s what to expect from the Xbox & Bethesda Showcase 2022.

Probably

Starfield, baby

(Image credit: bethesda)

Last seen: 2021

This is the big one, right? Microsoft got the bad news out of the way early: Starfield has been delayed to 2023. That’s a bummer, but you know what’d turn my frown upside down? A nice long 15-minute Starfield gameplay demo that walks through its systems, introduces its open galaxy, and shows off some pretty spaceships.

The showcase will also be the ideal time for Microsoft to tell us exactly what Starfield is so fans can temper the sky-high expectations that tend to build around space exploration games. Before I can really get excited, I need to know where Starfield falls on the Destiny/No Man’s Sky spectrum. Does it have surprisingly few planets that are meticulously hand-made, or an algorithmically populated universe mostly full of places that aren’t worth visiting? If the showcase ends without answering that question, I’m gonna write Phil Spencer a strongly-worded tweet that he will definitely not see.

Redfall

Last seen: 2021

Another Bethesda joint pushed back to 2023. Redfall was announced last year with a fancy CG trailer that told us a few things: it’s a co-op shooter, it’s possibly open world, and it’s about killing vampires. That’s all well and good, but it’s time for some gameplay. A leak of an early test last year suggests that Redfall is very much a looter shooter with tiered loot and eccentric vampire-killing weapons. The leak is now removed, but the leaker said Redfall’s gameplay loop is «very similar to Borderlands.»

(Image credit: Undead Labs)

Last seen: 2020

While a recent report suggests all is not well at the Microsoft-owned Undead Labs, it’s about time for an update on State of Decay 3. We haven’t heard a peep about it since that snowy announcement trailer in 2020. The studio has reportedly doubled in size since Microsoft took the reins in 2018. To me, that indicates Undead Labs is swinging big with State of Decay 3. Expect bigger worlds, more community sim features, and hopefully better shooting.

Senua’s Saga: Hellblade 2

Last seen: 2021

Hellblade 2 is another sequel that we haven’t heard much about. We did get a brief gameplay trailer at the Game Awards last year, so is a release date next? If not, I’ll settle for another in-engine trailer that doesn’t tell us much more than «game is pretty.» Ninja Theory really seems to be taking its time with this one. Understandable, considering Hellblade was clearly a very personal project for the studio, and the first of its original games to hit big since 2010’s Enslaved: Odyssey to the West.

Forza Motorsport 8

Last seen: 2020

If Microsoft has a sexy new car game to show off at E3, you know it’s gonna do it. Next up on the Forza cycle is a trip back to simulation-heavy track racing in Forza Motorsport 8. At least, that’s what we assume it’ll be called. The next Motorsport was announced simply as «Forza Motorsport» back in 2020, promising all the bells and whistles of a game designed from the ground up for the Xbox Series X/S.

Then the project basically went dark while Microsoft was busy promoting and releasing Forza Horizon 5 throughout 2021. Now feels like the time for a proper debut.

Avowed

Last seen: 2020

Obsidian’s new RPG that sure looks like its take on a Skyrim-level open-world game has been MIA for two years now. I hate to sound like a broken record, but it sure seems like it’s been just long enough that we could get a proper debut trailer (or dare I dream, a gameplay demo) with Avowed in action.

That said, things have changed a bit since Avowed’s announcement. In the days before Microsoft gobbled up the entirety of Bethesda and became the new caretakers of The Elder Scrolls, Obsidian announcing its own fantasy RPG felt like a bigger deal. Now Microsoft has two studios that essentially make the same type of RPGs. It works out for Elder Scrolls fans, though; while Bethesda is vacationing in space, Obsidian will help fill the long way for Elder Scrolls 6. 

The Outer Worlds 2

Last seen: 2021

But swords and magic isn’t all Obsidian is up to. Just like Bethesda circa 2006, Obsidian is double dipping into fantasy and sci-fi with The Outer Worlds 2. Even though this one was only announced a year ago, but presuming Obsidian is using the first game as a base and going for «more The Other Worlds,» it could already be further along than most of what’ll be at the Microsoft show.

A bunch of Game Pass games

(Image credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft loves to show box art for a bunch of cool older games we all love and then bring Phil Spencer out on stage to announce that every game mentioned is on Game Pass right now. The crowd oohs and ahhs. It’s a good time. 

Maybe

Is it finally Fable time?

(Image credit: Microsoft, Playground Games)

Last seen: 2020

As much as I want to believe this is the year Fable 4 becomes more than a 60-second trailer, I’m not convinced Microsoft is making it a priority in 2022. A new branch of Playground games was created just to make this game, and sometimes that means a longer development cycle. That said, five years is a long time and maybe 2022 is the year.

Project: Mara might get a real name

Last seen: 2021

In case you forgot as I did, Ninja Theory is also working on some sort of psychological horror game called Project: Mara . The whole game takes place in a single apartment based on a real life apartment that Ninja Theory has gone to great lengths to virtually recreate with 3D scans and photogrammetry. It sounds like a decidedly smaller undertaking than Ninja Theory’s grand Hellblade sequel, so we could see more of it this year.

Gears 6

(Image credit: Microsoft)

The Coalition didn’t set up a new Gears of War trilogy to leave things at Gears 5, so we should expect Microsoft to start gearing up for Gears 6 sometime soon. It’s been three years since Gears 5, which is conveniently the same amount of time that game took to make. The only thing that makes me apprehensive about its 2022 appearance is that, if it’s in the cards, I’m surprised we haven’t heard anything about it yet. Maybe it’ll be a genuine surprise!

An update on Perfect Dark

You know what else would be cool to see? An update on the Perfect Dark reboot that has appropriately gone dark since 2020. In similar fashion to Fable, Microsoft created a new studio called The Initiative to revive Perfect Dark. Last year, it announced that Crystal Dynamics, the folks behind Tomb Raider reboots and the Avengers game, would co-develop Perfect Dark with The Initiative.

Hopefully that arrangement can persist following the acquisition of Crystal Dynamics by Embracer Group. Perfect Dark also lost its game director just a few months ago, so it’d be great to see some sign of life in this FPS reboot.

Minecraft something something

(Image credit: Mojang)

Minecraft is a big enough deal that when Mojang has something to announce it’ll simply hold its own event, but we can’t rule out details on a big new update appearing at the Xbox Showcase.  

Some Activision stuff

(Image credit: Activision)

It’s unclear just how closely Microsoft will be working with Activision this year as the acquisition still has layers of approval to go, but we could at least see some collaboration with Activision’s upcoming games like Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, Overwatch 2, Diablo 4, or that mysterious Blizzard survival game. But again, Blizzard has its own events for that kind of stuff, so Call of Duty is the most I’d expect to see.

Morgan has been writing for PC Gamer since 2018, first as a freelancer and currently as a staff writer. He has also appeared on Polygon, Kotaku, Fanbyte, and PCGamesN. Before freelancing, he spent most of high school and all of college writing at small gaming sites that didn’t pay him. He’s very happy to have a real job now. Morgan is a beat writer following the latest and greatest shooters and the communities that play them. He also writes general news, reviews, features, the occasional guide, and bad jokes in Slack. Twist his arm, and he’ll even write about a boring strategy game. Please don’t, though.

Where to watch Summer Game Fest and Not-E3 2022 livestream news events

Just because E3 2022 isn’t happening officially doesn’t mean game developers and publishers are skipping out on a summer full of announcements. Microsoft, Capcom, Netflix, Devolver Digital, and many others have stepped in to fill the void, with the Geoff Keighley-led Summer Game Fest kicking off a week of livestreaming events showcasing hundreds of new and upcoming games.

A few major game publishers have already signaled that they won’t hold an E3-style showcase during this time. Electronic Arts and Ubisoft have already ruled out doing their respective events, EA Play and Ubisoft Forward, in June. Nintendo, as Nintendo does, is still a wild card. The company has not announced a Nintendo Direct for June … yet.

Here’s a breakdown of the colloquially known “Not-E3” schedule so far, and what to expect from each show.

Thursday, June 9

Summer Game Fest

11 a.m. PDT/2 p.m. EDT

The Game Awards host Geoff Keighley and friends promise a “cross-industry showcase of announcements and games” during Thursday’s stream. Confirmed to appear at the Summer Game Fest kickoff livestream are Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, Gotham Knights, Cuphead: The Delicious Last Course, and The Callisto Protocol. The show, which is expected to run between 90 minutes and two hours, will feature “a couple of new game announcements” and some surprises, Keighley said. But he cautioned that Summer Games Fest will primarily focus on “stuff that is announced,” so keep your lofty expectations in check.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Day of the Devs: SGF Edition Showcase

Immediately following the Summer Game Fest livestream will be a new showcase from iam8bit and Double Fine Productions, where the focus will be on new and announced indie games. The Day of the Devs showcase will reveal a new game from Monument Valley developer Ustwo games alongside new trailers, updates, and game announcements.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Devolver Direct 2022

3 p.m. PDT/6 p.m. EDT

Expect hijinks, game announcements, and probably a few gallons of fake blood during Devolver Digital’s annual … thing that they do. Here’s the official description: “A clueless team of Devolver Digital execs, scrambling to produce a presentation, accidentally trigger a reality-bending, industry-wide event that threatens the very fabric of video game time and space.” In reality, Devolver will likely show some cool game trailers.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Friday, June 10

IGN Expo

9 a.m. PDT/12 p.m. EDT

Details are still scant, but IGN’s livestream promises “new announcements, never-before-seen gameplay, and exclusive gaming reveals.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Netflix Geeked Week Games Showcase

10 a.m. PDT/1 p.m. EDT

Netflix is rolling out Geeked Week content all week, but Friday will highlight the streamer’s gaming-related content, including The Cuphead Show, Sonic Prime, Dota: Dragon’s Blood, and Tekken: Bloodline. It will also focus on Netflix’s games initiative, with “more than 10 Netflix Games titles,” including Lucky Luna, Poinpy, and La Casa de Papel (aka Money Heist). On Wednesday, June 8, Netflix will also offer some updates on Cyberpunk: Edgerunners and Arcane, as part of its focus on animation.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Saturday, June 11

Guerrilla Collective 3

8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT

For the third year running, the Guerrilla Collective will bring together publishers like 11 bit studios, Raw Fury, tinyBuild, Humble, Team 17, Thunderful, Versus Evil, Curve, Finji, Skybound, and Akupara Games for a showcase of smaller games still worthy of your attention. Confirmed for the show are Boundary, TMNT: Shredder’s Revenge, The Cub, WrestleQuest, and dozens more. This year’s showcase has been divided into two parts, with the second half streaming on Monday, June 13, at 1 p.m. PDT/4 p.m. EDT.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Wholesome Games Direct

9:30 a.m. PDT/12:30 p.m. EDT

The Wholesome Games Direct showcase will feature indie games that are less “small” than they are smol. A new collection of feel-good games that inspire “comfort, compassion, and coziness” will be presented in the community-driven showcase for 2022.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Future Games Show

12 p.m. PDT/3 p.m. EDT

GamesRadar’s digital games showcase returns for another year, highlighting great games — more than 40 titles across consoles and PC — with some great ear candy: The voices of The Witcher 3’s Geralt (Doug Cockle) and Yennefer (Denise Gough) will host this year’s Future Games Show.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Sunday, June 12

Xbox and Bethesda Games Showcase

10 a.m. PDT/1 p.m. EDT

This is as close to E3 as we’ll get, as Xbox Game Studios, Bethesda Softworks, and third-party partners will bring their Xbox and PC gaming content to the Xbox and Bethesda Games Showcase. Expect Bethesda Game Studios’ Starfield and Arkane Studios’ Redfall to make an appearance, as well as Game Pass updates and news from Xbox Game Studios, which has a long list of already announced (but undated) games in development.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

PC Gaming Show

12:30 p.m. PDT/3:30 p.m. EDT

PC Gamer will host its annual PC Gaming Show where, you guessed it, the focus will be on PC games. Definitely confirmed to appear are Arma 4, Sam Barlow’s Immortality, Warhammer 40K: Space Marine 2, and Victoria 3. Oh, and Sean “Day 9” Plott and Mica Burton return as the show’s hosts.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Monday, June 13

Guerrilla Collective 3.5

1 p.m. PDT/4 p.m. EDT

After hosting its first of two streams on Saturday, the Guerrilla Collective returns to continue its showcase of indie games, including Above Snakes, Coral Island, NecroSmith, Spookulele, and more.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Capcom Showcase

3 p.m. PDT/6 p.m. EDT

Capcom will dive deeper into “details and news on previously announced titles” at its aptly named Capcom Showcase on Monday. Previously announced titles from Capcom include Street Fighter 6, the Resident Evil 4 remake, Pragmata, and Exoprimal. Will we see all of those games in the 35-minute showcase? Probably not, but tune in to find out.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

Tuesday, June 14

Xbox Extended Games Showcase

10 a.m. PDT/1 p.m. EDT

If Sunday’s Xbox and Bethesda Games Showcase wasn’t enough content for you, a second, extended look at upcoming Xbox games is coming on Tuesday, June 14. The 90-minute showcase promises new trailers, “deeper looks at the news from the Xbox & Bethesda Games Showcase,” and discussions with game creators.

Where to watch: YouTube | Twitch | Twitter | Facebook

E3 2022 finally canceled | GameMAG

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This year the biggest gaming exhibition E3 will not return . Hosting Entertainment Software Association ESA , canceled the traditional physical show back in January , decided not to conduct digital either. Information about this is contained in the official press release distributed through the media.

The organizers noted that they are focusing on plans to reboot the show, and hope to fully return in 2023, with the support of key partners.

However, players who are waiting for E3 for trailers and demonstrations of new games, in fact, have nothing to be upset about, since event 9 will again provide them with a portion of announcements0024 Summer Game Fest with Kickoff Live! Producer The Game Awards Geoff Keighley . He has already confirmed that he will hold his event in June . Separately, performances by large companies are expected, such as Microsoft and Nintendo .

According to analyst Mike Futter , as early as mid-November 2021, ESA relinquished its reserved seats at the Los Angeles Convention Center for the exhibition.

In January, it was officially announced that the physical E3 2022 was canceled due to the spread of omicron and the desire to protect participants from the coronavirus, but experts say that the interest of publishers in the traditional exhibition has fallen corny, since digital events have proven themselves and are not needed spending too much.

On the digital front, E3 faces competition from Kaylie’s shows and the big producers’ own presentations. ESA is trying to come up with its own new unique format, but so far it has not been successful.

See also : Hurry up to add to your library: Sony warned PS Plus subscribers to remove Persona 5 from PS Plus Collection .

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about studio purchases, game-services, cloud gaming and E3 — Gambling

Jack Tretton , former head of the US division of PlayStation , shared his opinion on various trends in the modern gaming industry, including studio purchases, E3 game services and not only.

Tretton called 2022 «the most amazing year for acquisitions» he has ever seen. He believes the positives in studio buying situations «far outweigh» the negatives.

“The upside is that it draws attention to an industry that is already valued at $200 billion and growing. These figures are twice the size of the box office of films and the music industry combined. But I still think you’ll find a lot of people who don’t realize how big, complex and… popular entertainment gaming is.»

Speaking of the recent major acquisitions of Microsoft and Sony , Tretton doesn’t agree that the companies are competing with each other in acquisitions. In the past, there was certainly competition, but now both Microsoft and Sony have grown significantly, so they pursue their own goals through the implementation of personal strategies.

«We were trying to compete with Microsoft and it was very much like winning through competition — hitting back, blocking what they’re doing, but I think the business has gotten so big that it’s not like that anymore. »

Tretton noted that Microsoft and Sony can be attributed to the same business mindset, but Nintendo has always played by its own rules, so it certainly cannot be accused of imitating.

As for the exclusivity that can come with acquisitions, Tretton doesn’t believe in that. He noted that now the desire to keep their IPs in one place has changed to the desire to do what «makes the most sense and helps to increase profits.»

Tretton left his position at a time when game-services began to truly take over the industry. He admitted that it is important for him that such projects can give an excellent gaming experience for users.

«If it’s extortion or an attempt to resell old content, then they (such games) won’t succeed.»

Users also rely on how much entertainment they get for every dollar spent. Therefore, console manufacturers must keep their controller in the hands of the consumer, demonstrating to them the attractiveness of game-services. Tretton is sure that in such a relationship both parties must be happy, otherwise nothing will work out.

As far as cloud gaming is concerned, Tretton admitted that he always saw the potential in it, but did not expect such a rapid development. At that time, Sony decided to acquire the Gaikai service, while Microsoft took the position of an observer.

“Sony has invested quite heavily to get into this business and take advantage of being a pioneer. Microsoft’s stance has been more of a wait-and-see approach, and I think the big question is, has Pioneer status really helped Sony? Has it hurt Microsoft? I think the reality of the situation is that it definitely didn’t hurt Microsoft.»

Tretton says today is a «pretty good time» for cloud gaming. He also praised the development of the Nintendo service.

With great fondness, the former head of the US division of PlayStation remembers E3. Tretton said that in 1995, the event felt like a real «coronation for the industry. » For ten years it has been a celebration with colorful parties, performances by big rock bands and a lot of press from all over the world.

Then everything changed, and companies felt that a lot of money was being spent on PR and a press event. Tretton admitted that he was very disappointed.

After some time, E3 became a big event again with press conferences from major publishers, important announcements and other news.

“If you had a good performance at E3, then you had a good year, and if you had a bad performance at E3, it was a tough year. There was a lot of pressure, but I really enjoyed it.»

Now Tretton doesn’t see E3 as valuable and necessary as it used to be. However, games still need their own landmark event — like a Grammy for music or an Oscar for cinema.

Tretton believes that the complete end of E3 will mean «a loss to the industry and a loss of the opportunity to really celebrate and trumpet all the innovation and great things that come with it.