This year’s E3 Expo is about the future of videogames, as always. But it’s also about delaying the future for as long as possible: Instead of rolling out new gaming machines, the big players are adding flashy new tech to systems already on shelves in an attempt to extend existing consoles’ life cycles and attract new players.
E3, aka the Electronic Entertainment Expo, opens Tuesday in Los Angeles.
Microsoft’s E3 focus will be Project Natal, a camera-based device that lets Xbox 360 players control the onscreen action using body movements. (Microsoft introduced Natal at last year’s E3.) Sony will highlight PlayStation Move, its version of the Wii motion controller, and make a big move into 3-D stereoscopic gaming.
