E3 2017: Frustration and Fatigue Both Before and At the Show
Photos courtesy of Getty Images
Assistant games editor Holly Green is at the annual E3 videogame trade show in Los Angeles this week. She’ll be filing daily dispatches from the press conferences and show floor, and here’s the first.
Sunday June 11
2:22 PM
I arrive at the convention center, having taken a cab directly after my flight. It’s lonely, but satisfyingly quiet in the lobby. I’ve never seen it this dark before. Having missed the window to pick up my wristband for the Bethesda event later in the evening, I trek up to the media registration office, 70 lbs of luggage in tow. The ground is covered with an odd sheet of plastic, probably to help wheel in the many pieces of equipment needed on the show floor. Lucky for me, it works for suitcases too.
Microsoft employees are flitting about, while Twitch guys lurk nearby. Aware of how odd it looks for a five foot one woman to be dragging a tower of luggage as tall as she is through the convention center, I hurry and make my way outside to catch another cab.
3:58 PM
I’ve arrived at my Airbnb and have unpacked and settled in. Surprise, I’m sharing the loft with my host, which she did not specify on the listing. She also forgot her keys. I wait for several minutes as she fumbles in her purse, and finally she pulls out…a credit card. “My neighbor is Russian…and he showed me this trick when I got locked out time.” Apparently this has happened before.
The accommodations are an adjustment, but that’s okay. I’m too old to need privacy anymore. I have my own bathroom, for my 50 metric fucktons of makeup and hair products, and a separate alcove where I can write all night, and that’s good enough for me.
As I remove each article of clothing, one by one, placing them in their temporary home, I wonder what the show floor will be like. This year’s E3 (my eighth consecutive) marks the ESA’s opening of the event to the public, a gesture that seems almost token at this point. In the past only a small amount of general admission tickets were sold, and for prices too steep for the general gaming fan. A lot of folks worked around this by maintaining a blog, and hundreds, if not thousands, of each year’s attendees are fans who run a site solely for one sole purpose: to get into E3.
Paying a $250 admission fee is admittedly a lot less work than becoming a writer, so I imagine the E3 crowd this year won’t be much different from the seven I’ve experienced before. Maybe a little bit more hallway blocking and swag collecting, but we’ll see.
7:30 PM
I am standing in the line leading into the Bethesda event, pondering all the poor choices in my life that have led to this moment. Why didn’t I leave the airport sooner, why did I have to stop and have a smoke break, why did I linger before heading over to the convention center to pick up my badge? If I’d made it just 15 minutes sooner I could have had a wristband and instant access. But instead I have to wait at least 45 minutes to get into an event that will end an hour after I get in.
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