{"id":45418,"date":"2022-06-10T21:17:31","date_gmt":"2022-06-10T21:17:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/e3-2023-and-summer-game-fest-set-to-clash-both-in-person-and-online\/"},"modified":"2022-06-10T21:17:31","modified_gmt":"2022-06-10T21:17:31","slug":"e3-2023-and-summer-game-fest-set-to-clash-both-in-person-and-online","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/e3-2023-and-summer-game-fest-set-to-clash-both-in-person-and-online\/","title":{"rendered":"E3 2023 and Summer Game Fest set to clash, both in person and online"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
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At the end of yesterday’s Summer Game Fest stream, host and impresario Geoff Keighley announced that the show would return in June 2023 as both a digital and, for the first time, in-person event. (There is a small physical component to this year’s Summer Game Fest, but it’s media-only. Oh, and you could also pay to view it in an IMAX theater, if you really wanted to.)<\/p>\n

Keighley’s announcement came just days after the Entertainment Software Association confirmed that E3 would return in 2023, both in-person and online, to the Washington Post. ESA president and CEO Stan Pierre-Louis said that, after skipping 2022 entirely, E3 would be back, despite widespread predictions that the stalwart games industry trade show was dead for good after a difficult few years. It now seems the two events are set to clash directly, competing for exclusive reveals, partnerships, eyeballs, and visitors.<\/p>\n

This can only mean one thing: The chaos and disarray surrounding the game industry’s traditional June marketing jamboree is set to continue, for one more year at least.<\/p>\n

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