Another E3 has come and gone, and the gaming expo has left us with a lot to chew on in the coming months.
By Nick Romano, Entertainment Weekly
Another E3 has come and gone, and the gaming expo has left us with a lot to chew on in the coming months. Titles that have been years in the making are now coming to fruition, while fledgling works seek to chart their own paths in a landscape flooded with veteran brands, sequels, and prestige games. We’ve seen glimpses of them all over the past few days at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Now it’s time to make sense of it all.
Here are the games coming out of E3 2018 to watch for:
The Last of Us Part II
The latest trailer for The Last of Us Part II
shows off the contradiction that made the first game in the franchise
so great: a beautiful, subtle bond taking root within a brutal and
unkind world. The relationship between Ellie and Dina,
to the extent that it’s been shown, is a sweet teenage love story, and
the extended gameplay footage proves that Ellie has matured to be
capable of the kind of rough and tumble, visceral combat Joel mostly
handled in TLOU. If the Paris Games Week trailer from 2017 left
some fans cold, this E3 footage was a solid recovery to get hype for
the game back on the right track. —Evan Lewis
FromSoftware fans had high hopes that the new game the studio teased at December’s Game Awards would be Bloodborne 2, but Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice has the potential to be even more exciting. Set in late 1500s Sengoku period Japan, the game takes the thrilling fights of a Souls
game airborne with light stealth mechanics, grappling hook mobility,
and an array of special gadgets housed within the player character’s
Shinobi prosthetic. Victory in close combat will come down to careful
tactics, judicious stealth executions, and a new timing-based system of
blocks and parries used to upset enemies’ posture to open up devastating
executions. —EL
Kingdom Hearts III
The “It’s been 84 years” Titanic meme comes close to the wait Kingdom Hearts
gamers have endured for the third installment. There’ve been multiple
delays since the news was first announced five years ago, but now we
actually have a specific release date of Jan. 29, 2019. We also have confirmation of worlds based on Frozen, Tangled, and Pirates of the Caribbean. Square Enix can’t delay it again, right? Right?! —NR
Wolfenstein: Youngblood
Just as it was refreshing to see a moment of LGBTQ inclusivity lead off a major E3 press briefing in The Last of Us Part II, it was also nice to hear the phrase “f— Nazis” uttered on an E3 stage with such enthusiasm during the reveal of Wolfenstein: Youngblood. Set in Nazi-occupied Paris in 1980, Youngblood allows
players to team up for two-player co-op as series star B.J.
Blazkowicz’s twin daughters. Because if there’s one thing better than a
Blazkowicz tearing up Nazis, it’s two Blazkowiczes tearing up Nazis. —EL
Marvel’s Spider-Man
Something sinister is going on in Marvel’s Spider-Man,
Sony’s upcoming romp with the comic book web-slinger. This Peter Parker
is a little further into his tenure as the friendly neighborhood
Spider-Man, which is good because the new trailer
revealed the Sinister Six (this rogues’ gallery featuring Vulture,
Rhino, Scorpion, Electro, Mister Negative, and a mystery figure) who
play a part in all of this. The developers also released 10 minutes of
gameplay, showing off this wall-crawler’s open world a la Grand Theft Auto and Infamous.
Virtually anything can be webbed and flung around as a weapon, or you
can go the sneakier route and slink through the shadows. —NR
Fallout 76
Fallout 76 will be the biggest game in the series, outsizing 2015’s Fallout 4 by a factor of four. Set in a wasteland-ified swath of West Virginia, 76
will be a multiplayer experience in which a few dozen players share the
same world, teaming up with or against other vault dwellers to brave
the great outdoors. There will even be nukes that players can launch at
other factions, if they can manage to collect a full launch code. Most
exciting of all is that 76 will have a thorough beta, so
hopefully all those Bethesda bugs Todd Howard joked about at the
briefing will get squashed before the final release. —EL
After CD Projekt Red finished the last of The Witcher 3’s
DLC, the company dropped the mic on the beloved franchise, ostensibly
for good, leaving fans to wonder how the long-gestating Cyberpunk 2077 could
be a worthy follow-up to one of the greatest fantasy RPGs ever made. At
the tail end of Microsoft’s E3 briefing, CD Projekt Red finally showed
off its vision for Cyberpunk, and it is a slick one. The gritty
neon-lit world and uncanny valley cyborgs have piqued our interest on
strength of stylistic vision alone. —EL
Anthem
Doom: Eternal
Not much was shown about Doom Eternal
at Bethesda’s conference, with id Software saving gameplay reveals for
QuakeCon in August, but just the fact that it exists is enough for now.
The breakneck gunplay and, well, neck-breaking of the 2016 reboot of Doom was one of that year’s great guilty pleasures, and creative director Hugo Martin promises Eternal will have twice as many demons to brutalize. The new game will also bring the action down from Mars to a Hell-infested Earth. —EL
Halo Infinite
“When
we started this project, the team’s vision for the game was ambitious —
so much so that we knew we had to build new tech to fully realize our
goals for Halo Infinite,” 343 Industries studio head Chris Lee wrote in a blog post.
“The E3 demo showcases some of the exciting potential of this
technology — everything you see is running in-engine.” The teaser
announcement for Halo Infinite, a follow-up to 2015’s Halo 5: Guardians with
a refocus on the Master Chief, wasn’t reflective of the game it’ll
eventually become. But the first details and the added tease from Lee
about “making changes to how we approach things” are tantalizing. —NR
Ghost of Tsushima
Assassin’s Creed Odyssey
Assassin’s Creed Odyssey
takes place during the Peloponnesian War, and you play as either
Alexios or Kassandra, Spartan mercenaries. There may not be traditional
assassins, but it’s the most RPG the franchise has ever been. Jonathan
Dumont, the game’s creative director, said it’s “full RPG,” including
multiple choice responses for dialogue, multiple endings depending on
your actions, and inclusive romancing options — no matter what gender
you choose. Between the same-sex kiss in The Last of Us Part II and LGBTQ representation in Odyssey, this is turning into a great Pride month for gamers. —NR
Devil May Cry 5
The story of the Devil May Cry series
— if it can be said to have one — is unabashed, stylish nonsense, but
nobody does mindless twitch hack-and-slash quite like Capcom’s
white-haired sword boys, Dante and Nero. Both are set to return in this
over-the-top sequel to 2008’s Devil May Cry 4 (not 2013’s Ninja Theory-developed reboot, DmC). —EL
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