We haven't
fully recovered from
E3 2007 just yet, but in the final stages (there's 12, naturally) of recovery, we're told it's only proper to hand out awards for the best (and sometimes the worst) of what we saw in Santa Monica.
The
nominations for this year's Game Critics Awards were given out on Monday and, next Monday, we'll learn who the final winners are in categories such as Best of Show and Best Original Game. For our first Joystiq E3 Awards, we've borrowed those two categories and made a bunch of our own.
So what did we like the most?
Assassin's Creed, Metroid Prime 3, My Word Coach? Those were all great, but one title stood above the rest. The answers you seek lie after the break.
Disclaimer: Any comments regarding
Harry Potter were made prior to the release of the book and therefore do not necessarily reflect what happens in the book.
Activision may be riding high right now on the success of
Guitar Hero, but we think Electronic Arts has more than a fighting chance of reclaiming the position of top third-party developer and former
GH developers Harmonix will help immensely with
Rock Band. It's incredibly fun, its got drums (huzzah!) and a microphone, and it's our pick for the best game at E3 2007.
Best in Show (that we couldn't play so we really can't tell): Call of Duty 4: Modern Combat
Unfortunately, developers Infinity Ward weren't letting us play their upcoming shooter, opting instead to keep the controllers for themselves. But the visuals were gorgeous, the audio was powerful (hey, we could even hear it on the show floor!), and from what we could tell it played well. Though we can't really be sure. Because we just couldn't play it. They said no. Repeatedly. Drat.
A four-player online co-op level designer? Our time with
LittleBigPlanet was incredibly fun, and watching designer Mark Healey create a working tank, amongst other gewgaws, in just seconds gives us an impression of all the fun we're going to have when the game comes out. Yet another highlight of the presentation included a working adding machine that uses marbles and cogs, thanks to some clever building and the game's physics engine.
Warren Spector is a legend in the games industry (
Thief, Deus Ex), and Disney Interactive's purchase of his Junction Point Studios is an important move for the company's fledgling games studio. It's big news, for sure, but it was overshadowed by pretty much all of the other major studios. It doesn't help much, either, that Spector had very little to show of his current secret project.
The Tim Schafer Award for Overlooked Greatness: Clive Barker's Jericho
You may know that Joystiq (more specifically Ross, Ludwig and any writers who have been subjected to their ruthless and clumsy lobotomies) has a soft spot for Tim Schafer, the man behind such gems as
Grim Fandango and
Psychonauts – games loved by the critics and, well, very few others. So it is with much chagrin that we unveil the first-ever Tim Schafer award for games that were great but we fear will likely be overlooked by the masses.
Our first winner of the backhanded compliment trophy is Clive Barker's
Jericho, a time-traveling, body-possessing, occult-warring tactical first-person shooter that we beseech you to pay attention to. Go on, read our
impressions of the game. It's best to keep informed on matters this urgent.
Honorable mention:
Zak & Wiki: Quest for Barbaros' Treasure
Best use of a license (by not making the game suck): The Simpsons
This is how a video game based on a license should be handled.
Always.
We kid because we love and there's a lot to love with this version of
Katmari Damacy, but the core mechanics and aesthetics remain the same. It's still a great game and we recommend it to anyone with a penchant for the bizarre, but you won't be faulted for thinking you played this exact game three years ago on the PlayStation 2.
Worst: The Title Award for Worst Game Title: Legendary: The Box
The Legendary Box.
Pandora. Or maybe even mix those two together and make
Pandora: The Legendary Box. There are quite a few different titles (and subsequent variations) that we could concoct for this game that are better than its current name,
Legendary: The Box. It's a fun game, but we cringe when trying to speak its name.
Boy, are they shiny. No matter how hard we tried, this piece of swag just never looked right when we wore it. It's a shame, really.
"Oh man, he paused it
again," cried the Joystiq writers (and most people within earshot) at Peter Moore's groove-stopping flub that occurred chronically during his
Rock Band performance at the Microsoft press conference. The phrase "pulling a Peter Moore" proliferated throughout the attendees and was heard at least once a day. Sources close to Joystiq say it's the
real reason he
left Microsoft for
Rock Band publisher Electronic Arts.
Best Non Sequitur: Jeff Bell: 'Harry Potter dies!'
Thursday night at the Microsoft party, VP of Global Marketing for the Interactive Entertainment Business Jeff Bell goes up to
Gamertag Radio while talking with our own Richard Mitchell of
X3F and, probably not realizing it was a live broadcast (and likely a bit inebriated), shouts "Harry Potter dies!" into the microphone. You can listen to it
here, but bear in mind a lot of the drama is lost when you don't get to see Bell's actions.
Too funny.
Most painful press conference: (TIE) Activision, Disney
You can read about the Activision press conference via our own
chronicles of the event (way to take one for the team, Chris!) and
watch the "lowlights" of host Jamie Kennedy's muddled performance. To sum up: it was bad.
As for Disney, our liveblogger met with an untimely death so we have no transcript, but the few writers who were within the vicinity of the press conference – via the press room that was separated by a life-saving black curtain (a video feed was also provided) – endured a squad of cheerleaders shouting highlights, an off-key performance advertising
High School Musical and a few
duh-rassic phrases. Both companies had above average showings and news at E3, but their stage performances provided ample counterbalance.
High-Profile, Missing In Action: Spore, Too Human
If Will Wright had gotten on stage at the Electronic Arts press conference and only said "Hi, I'm working on
Spore," followed by
maybe a screenshot or two, we guarantee the game would have received numerous "Best of E3" awards, just as it has for the past two years. Given
Spore's profile at conferences over the last few years, even as recent as
SXSW in March, its absence here was very noticeable.
As for
Too Human, Silicon Knights' Denis Dyack
told GameDaily that the decision to go incognito during the show had been long planned and implied they would be showing it later this year. Of course, given the dearth of specifics, we're inclined to believe it might be longer. Besides, the developer probably has enough on their minds right now with that
lawsuit against Epic over the Unreal Engine.
FIN
(Page 1) Reader Comments
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For all the talk about the red rings of death, and despite the rejuvenated PS3 userbase and the tremendous success of the Wii console, it is the Xbox 360 that continues to have the best games in the industry -- for the second holiday season in a row. Pretty impressive for a console that so many people try their hardest to ignore or bury.
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You are totally clueless. What exactly are all these "360 shooters" you speak of? Halo3 and Bioshock. That's it. In addition, the 360 gets 3 big time RPG's (Mass Ef, Lost OD, Blue Dragon), PGR4 and fatal inertia for racing, AC6 for flying, Viva for teh kiddy, Two Worlds, etc.
How many rpg's and racing games is the PS3 getting this year? Oh wait, all the PS3 is getting are shooters and action games, with a 2D platformer with level editor for good measure.
This PS3 "game diversity" that you have invented is simply a memory of last gen where the xbox was shooters only and the PS2 had diversity. You are living in the past. Those things couldn't be further from the truth today.
Hell, the PS3 doesn't have one really hardcore game. Lair, Heaven, Drake, LBP...They are all semi-casual. Something the Madden fan could play. There is nothing heavy like Bioshock or Mass Effect except for the PS3's two timed exclusives, Haze and UT3, both shooters.
And those games are only timed because there is far less competition for games on the PS3 this fall. Game publishers, unlike fanboys, are not blind to which console has the most crowded holiday. Sony can hype all they want, but their 4 "big" games are small compared to at least 3 of the 360's offerings.
Just open your eyes.
One PS3 exclusive, one 360 exclusive, and one multiplatform.
Looks to me like both Sony and Microsoft acquitted themselves just fine. Obviously, Microsoft has the stronger lineup for holiday 2007.
Could you please elaborate how games like Resistance and Lair are not "hardcore".
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Shiggy trying to demonstrate the wiiboard was pretty lame.. he looked totally out of place, like of of those late night infomercials shilling the latest exercise gimmick.
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Konny! Congrats, man, you earned it
That and 'cuz it'll get me laid by fatties.
For all the talk about the red rings of death, and despite the rejuvenated PS3 userbase and the tremendous success of the Wii console, it is the Xbox 360 that continues to have the best games in the industry -- for the second holiday season in a row. Pretty impressive for a console that so many people try their hardest to ignore or bury."
I have to agree and disagree at the same every reporter and even G4tv said sony had the best over all show and I agree.The xbox360 will have its great exclusives like halo3,mass effect and fable2 (all of which i plan on getting) but thats it as far as there IP line up and like you said everything else is going from both systems.
Now you got sony with folklore,lair,heavenly sword,killzone2,little big planet,warhawk,socom,singstar,infamous,home(had to mention it because damn thats going to be cool) and 16 other exclusive and NEW ips that havent even been shown yet.In all honestly sony should let there software divison do the talk because they have the most new IP out of ANY of the new systems.
Sony surprise me because they were the last company i would have thought of to pump out so many new IPs...
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All the better since we know that Rare itself isn't working on that VP party game.
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The 2nd gen 360 lineup, the reinforced Sony fall release slate, and the Wii's innovative 1st party titles have once again put all three companies in the spotlight. This will be a VERY interesting fall season.
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The 360 does have a more diverse game library, but it should considering it's been out for longer and is easier to develop for. The game library on the PS3 will undoubtedly grow and the games are starting to look impressive for 2007, especially Lair and Heavenly Sword.
In my opinion, Microsoft really does have the best Holiday 2007 lineup (by far), but again, the consoles are a year apart. I think Holiday 2008 will be a more heated competition for sure.
On a final note, the Wii IS kind of coasting right now by releasing very few games, but come on, don't knock the Wii Fit thing until you see it. Nintendo is doing something different and new, and innovation is GOOD any way you look at it. If it brings in more gamers and gives more people the chance to be excited by games, then I think that is awesome. But, please Nintendo, a few more games for the slightly more hardcore?
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The thing is that people bash on Nintendo's E3 conference as if all they showed was Wii Fit, which is bugging me.
I'm probably not gonna buy Wii Fit, but I might buy the Wii Fit Board, because I know some 3rd party developer might utilize it.
But on the other hand, the entire video game industry will crash once Brawl comes out, because there will be no point in buying other games ever again. Oh, except StarCraft 2.
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-i wanted to know the whereabouts of NMH, MH2, and D:DOC from their publishers or at least being mentioned by nintendo.
-it seemed like MS was the most prepared but still lacked the right amount of attention to highly anticipated titles.
-and i wanted something from 3Drealms like info on earth no more cuz i know DNF will never see the light of day.
-yeah i had no actual argument, just lingering thoughts.
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