E3 2015: Sony and Microsoft’s Best Moments
E3 might just seem like a procession of underdressed men talking on comically large stages in front of walls of explosions, but sometimes it’s important to actually listen to what those men are saying. (Or at least important for people who care about videogames—nobody’s curing cancer out here.) Various companies held press conferences yesterday, the day before E3 officially starts, including Microsoft and Sony and third-parties like EA and Ubisoft. They deployed the same buzzwords heard every year at these things, and verbally high-fived everybody who likes videogames because those are the people whose purchases wind up paying for these comically large stages and explosion walls, but they also plugged some legitimately interesting videogames and announced a few true surprises.
Between the sci-fi machine gunning blurts of a new Halo and Gears of War, Microsoft let a handful of “indie” developers amble on stage to briefly mention their wares. So there stood Chad and Jared Moldenhauer, the brothers behind the beautiful game Cuphead, which looks like a 1930s cartoon twisted into a Mega Man tribute. Steve Gaynor of Fullbright appeared to briefly plug Tacoma, their abandoned space station follow-up to Gone Home. It might have been a token slot, a momentary blip to counter the notion that Sony is somehow a better fit for independent developers working on artier games, but at least it gave game fans looking for something beyond the next Master Chief adventure a few moments to feel catered towards.
Microsoft also devoted a lot of time to their upcoming Hololens 3D smart glasses. During the press conference a Minecraft designer popped on the glasses and seemingly saw his game world appear as three-dimensional structures on a table in front of him. You should always be skeptical of any kind of tech demo at these things—remember how the original Kinect was revealed—and there’s no reason to think Hololens will actually work as well as or in the way that it appeared to yesterday. If it does, though, maybe one day you’ll be able to replace that cumbersome chess set with far more expensive technology.
Microsoft also announced backwards compatibility for the Xbox One, meaning you’ll be able to play Xbox 360 games on it. At least some Xbox 360 games. The initial list is limited, but more games will be added in time. The Xbox One won’t play the games direct off your old 360 disc—when you put the disc into the new console it’ll download a digital version of the game. The Xbox Live Arcade games you played on your 360 will also gradually become available for your Xbox One. Despite the limitations, this both a surprising and welcome move by Microsoft. This will be available for all Xbox One owners at some point in the future.