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E3 1995

The Electronic Entertainment Expo 1995, commonly known as E3 1995, was the first Electronic Entertainment Expo held. The event took place at the Los Angeles Convention Center from May 11–13, 1995, with 50,000 total attendees.[1] Highlights of the 1995 show include Sony's announcement of the PlayStation's release date and pricing, Sega's surprise launch of the Sega Saturn, and Nintendo's showcase of the Virtual Boy console.[1][2]

Electronic Entertainment Expo 1995
GenreVideo games
Interactive entertainment
BeginsMay 11, 1995
EndsMay 13, 1995
VenueLos Angeles Convention Center
Location(s)Los Angeles, California
CountryUnited States
Next eventE3 1996
Attendance50,000
Organized byEntertainment Software Association
Filing statusNon-profit

Organization edit

Prior to 1995, the video game industry used the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) as their primary trade show venue. In the years leading up to 1995, the video game industry was usually delegated to an outdoor section of CES, which were not ideal conditions for promoting products. The International Digital Software Association (IDSA), later renamed to the Entertainment Software Association (ESA), approached CES and its head Gary J. Shapiro with their grievances about the conditions they had at CES. As CES did not consider video games as part of consumer electronics, they were unwilling to alter how they would involve video games. This led IDSA to consider starting their own show. Pat Ferrell of GamePro, a publication owned by International Data Group (IDG) with experience in running trade shows like MacWorld, began the process of organizing such a show.[3] Tom Kalinske, then the CEO of Sega of America, was a prime motivator in establishing a new show, believing CES did not have the video game industry's best interests at heart, and had found previously that running a Sega-only event was highly regarded by retailers and media alike.[3] IDSA also recognized that by holding its own trade show, it would have a means to finance its organization.[3] Ferrell came up with the show's name "Electronic Entertainment Expo" with the idea that it could be treated as "E cubed", however, in conversations with exhibitors, they felt this approach was unnecessary, and that the "E3" moniker was simple and just as effective.[3]

CES overheard these plans, and quickly proposed their own CES-branded video game-only trade show. IDSA and CES approached the larger video game companies to pitch their versions of the show. Many of the younger companies, like Electronic Arts, desired the approach offered by IDSA, including the potential to own part of the show by becoming members of the IDSA, over what the CES offered. The primary holdout to IDSA's plan was Nintendo, who believed their hardware should be treated as consumer electronics and thus should be part of CES.[3] During these negotiations, the CES reserved space in Philadelphia for the show during the month of May, which Ferrell stated was "prime time" for retailers to prepare for late-year/holiday sales.[3] The IDSA had yet reserved space, and quickly got in contact with the Los Angeles Convention Center (LACC), finding that the space was free for the same dates that CES has planned, effectively forcing potential exhibitors to pick one show or the other. They had chosen Los Angeles as it would be a single-flight travel for those companies coming from Japan, in contrast to Philadelphia.[3] Over the next several weeks, prior to either event having to put down their non-refundable reservation fees, IDSA made an aggressive push to get exhibitors for their show, securing more than 180 vendors. Of the major video game companies, only Nintendo and Microsoft had held out, still undecided which show to attend. Soon after this push, Shapiro contacted Ferrell and told him he "won"; CES dropped the plans for their Philadelphia event.[3] The same day, Nintendo and Microsoft reached out to Ferrell to discuss exhibition plans at his event.[3]

Event edit

External videos
  Footage of E3 1995 taken by Anthony Parisi, a retailer representative

At this point, most of the floor space at the LACC was taken up by the early exhibitors. Nintendo had desired space in the larger South Hall, but the early adopters like Sony and Sega had already claimed it. Ferrell made sure that Nintendo still had prime floor space in the West Hall, moving the registration areas to the West Hall so that attendees had to pass Nintendo's booth.[3] Ferrell also had to book extra floor space at a dozen different hotels near the convention center due to demand.[3]

Among elements of the first E3 that would continue into future events were large press conferences by the major companies Sony, Sega, and Nintendo showcasing their up-and-coming hardware and software. Notably, at point, both Sega and Sony were ready to introduce new hardware for Western releases, the Sega Saturn and the PlayStation, respectively. Sega's conference was first, and while Kalinske announced that the Saturn would be immediately available in stores, they were notified soon after that supplies were more limited than thought. During Sony's presentation, after covering many of the PlayStation's games, Steve Race, the lead for bringing the PlayStation to the United States, came on stage, said "two-ninety-nine" and then left, revealing that the price of the PlayStation was US$100 less than that of the Saturn.[3] The moment is considered one of the first proverbial mic drop moments in E3's history, and would continue a trend as each company would try to outdo others at these press events.[3]

While official attendance numbers were at 55,000, Ferrell estimated that an additional 10,000 people were able to get in; the event was meant to be limited to professionals in the industry, retailers, and press, but believes that many got in with showing a seemingly-relevant business card.[3]

Exhibitions edit

Nintendo edit

The Virtual Boy, Nintendo's intermediary console released between the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and the Nintendo 64, was showcased prominently.[2] The Nintendo 64, then known as the Ultra 64, was presented in a near-final state of development.[4] Games on display included Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, EarthBound, and Killer Instinct.[5]

Sega edit

Prior to E3 1995, the Sega Saturn had already released in Japan, and was slated for a September 2, 1995, American release.[6] On the first day of E3 1995, Sega CEO Tom Kalinske gave a keynote presentation in which he revealed the Saturn's release price of US$399, and described the features of the console. Kalinske also revealed that, due to "high consumer demand",[7] Sega had already shipped 30,000 Saturns to Toys "R" Us, Babbage's, Electronics Boutique, and Software Etc. for immediate release.[8]

Sony edit

Sony announced the price and release date for the then-upcoming PlayStation.[9] Prior to Sony's keynote conference, Sega announced the US$399 retail price for the newly-released Sega Saturn; capitalizing on the opportunity, SCEA President Steve Race made a single, brief statement at Sony's conference: "$299". The audience cheered as Race walked away from the lectern.[10]

List of notable exhibitors edit

This is a list of major video game exhibitors who made appearances at E3 1995:[5]

List of featured games edit

This is a list of notable titles that appeared by their developers or publishers at E3 1995:[11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]

The 3DO Company

Acclaim Entertainment

Activision

Atari Corporation

Capcom

Crystal Dynamics

Cyberdreams

Electronic Arts

Interplay Entertainment

Nintendo

Sega

Sony Computer Entertainment

SNK

Square

Williams Electronics

References edit

  1. ^ a b Patterson, Patrick (May 12, 2012). . syfygames.com. Archived from the original on December 25, 2015. Retrieved June 18, 2019.
  2. ^ a b Plante, Chris (October 13, 2010). "Remembering Virtual Boy 15 Years Later". ugo.com. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Campbell, Colin (June 7, 2019). "The story of the first E3". Polygon. Retrieved June 7, 2019.
  4. ^ "E3 1995". Video Gaming Central. May 15, 1995. Retrieved June 11, 2017 – via gamebits.net.
  5. ^ a b "Game Zero E3 Coverage". gamezero.com. 1995. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  6. ^ . Business Wire. March 9, 1995. Archived from the original on March 15, 2016. Retrieved June 11, 2017 – via the Free Library.
  7. ^ Cifaldi, Frank (May 11, 2010). "This Day in History: Sega Announces Surprise Saturn Launch". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on June 29, 2013. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  8. ^ Kent 2001, p. 516.
  9. ^ Severino, Anthony (June 9, 2013). "Sony's Biggest E3 Announcements Ever". playstationlifestyle.net. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  10. ^ Stuart, Keith (May 14, 2015). "Sega Saturn: how one decision destroyed PlayStation's greatest rival". theguardian.com. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  11. ^ "AEO Jaguar Edition #3 - Surfing the Jagged Edge". Atari Explorer Online. Subspace Publishers. May 20, 1995. from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2020.
  12. ^ François, Tommy; Msika, David (June 1995). "Reportage - E3". CD Consoles. No. 8. Pressimage. pp. 29–63.
  13. ^ "E3 News". Edge. No. 23. Future Publishing. August 1995. pp. 6–11.
  14. ^ Semrad, Ed (July 1995). "The Best Of The Electronic Entertainment Expo - E3 1995". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 72. Sendai Publishing. pp. 58–72.
  15. ^ "E-3 The Biggest And Best Electronic Entertainment Show Ever!". GameFan. Vol. 3, no. 7. DieHard Gamers Club. July 1995. pp. 17–41.
  16. ^ "The Electronic Entertainment Expo!". GamePro. No. 71. IDG. June 1995. pp. 37–48.
  17. ^ "Special Report: Electronic Entertainment Expo". GamePro. No. 73. IDG. August 1995. pp. 28–42.
  18. ^ Herranz, Sonia (June 1995). "Reportaje - Electronic Entertainment Expo - Y Al E3er Día Resucitó". Hobby Consolas. No. 45. Hobby Press. pp. 32–35.
  19. ^ Gómez, Amalio (July 1995). "Electronic Entertainment Expo - E3 - Y por tres días, la Meca del Cine se convirtió en la Meca del Videojuego". Hobby Consolas. No. 46. Hobby Press. pp. 46–55.
  20. ^ Clarke, Stuart (July 1995). "Hype It Up - E3 - The Los Angeles Electronic Entertainment Expo". Hyper. No. 20. Next Publishing Pty Ltd. pp. 6–8.
  21. ^ "Aktuelles - Electronic Entertainment Expo". MAN!AC. No. 21. Cybermedia. July 1995. pp. 12–31.
  22. ^ "Special - E3 Messe". Mega Fun. No. 34. CT Computec Verlag GmbH & Co. KG. July 1995. pp. 8–23.
  23. ^ "Reportaje Especial: Tres días sin control en Los Angeles - Completo dossier sobre el show que revolucionará el videojuego". Nintendo Acción (in Spanish). No. 32. Hobby Press. July 1995. pp. 20–23.
  24. ^ "News - E3 - The Future Is Here!". Mean Machines Sega. No. 34. EMAP. August 1995. pp. 8–18.
  25. ^ "PSX y Saturn, una tarta que todos quieren probar - E3 Los Angeles - ¡¡Esto sí que es Hollywood!!". Micromanía (in Spanish). Vol. 3, no. 6. HobbyPress. July 1995. pp. 99–108.
  26. ^ "E3 - The Greatest Show On Earth". Next Generation. No. 7. Imagine Media. July 1995. pp. 16–22.
  27. ^ "Dossier - Salon E3 - Le Choc!". Player One. No. 54. Média Système Édition. June 1995. pp. 43–69.
  28. ^ "Special - E3-Los Angeles - Welcome To The Next Level!". Sega Magazin. No. 20. Computec Media Group. July 1995. pp. 74–87.
  29. ^ García, Marcos; Martín, Fernando (June 1995). "Reportaje - Electronic Entertainment Expo: Una Feria Elevada Al Cubo". Superjuegos (in Spanish). No. 38. Grupo Zeta. pp. 14–23.
  30. ^ Gore, Chris (July 1995). "Special E3 Previews". VideoGames - The Ultimate Gaming Magazine. No. 78. L.F.P., Inc. pp. 40–45.
  31. ^ "News - E3 - Die Übermesse in Los Angeles". Video Games. No. 44. Future-Verlag. July 1995. pp. 8–33.
  32. ^ NAVGTR (June 21, 2007). E3 1995. YouTube. Retrieved August 25, 2020.
  33. ^ Anthony Parisi (January 29, 2017). E3 1995. YouTube. Retrieved August 25, 2020.
  34. ^ Hans Reutter (July 11, 2020). Atari Jaguar @ E3 1995 - Atari Explorer Online. YouTube. Retrieved August 25, 2020.

Bibliography edit

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The Electronic Entertainment Expo 1995 commonly known as E3 1995 was the first Electronic Entertainment Expo held The event took place at the Los Angeles Convention Center from May 11 13 1995 with 50 000 total attendees 1 Highlights of the 1995 show include Sony s announcement of the PlayStation s release date and pricing Sega s surprise launch of the Sega Saturn and Nintendo s showcase of the Virtual Boy console 1 2 Electronic Entertainment Expo 1995GenreVideo gamesInteractive entertainmentBeginsMay 11 1995EndsMay 13 1995VenueLos Angeles Convention CenterLocation s Los Angeles CaliforniaCountryUnited StatesNext eventE3 1996Attendance50 000Organized byEntertainment Software AssociationFiling statusNon profit Contents 1 Organization 2 Event 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Nintendo 3 2 Sega 3 3 Sony 4 List of notable exhibitors 5 List of featured games 6 References 7 BibliographyOrganization editPrior to 1995 the video game industry used the Consumer Electronics Show CES as their primary trade show venue In the years leading up to 1995 the video game industry was usually delegated to an outdoor section of CES which were not ideal conditions for promoting products The International Digital Software Association IDSA later renamed to the Entertainment Software Association ESA approached CES and its head Gary J Shapiro with their grievances about the conditions they had at CES As CES did not consider video games as part of consumer electronics they were unwilling to alter how they would involve video games This led IDSA to consider starting their own show Pat Ferrell of GamePro a publication owned by International Data Group IDG with experience in running trade shows like MacWorld began the process of organizing such a show 3 Tom Kalinske then the CEO of Sega of America was a prime motivator in establishing a new show believing CES did not have the video game industry s best interests at heart and had found previously that running a Sega only event was highly regarded by retailers and media alike 3 IDSA also recognized that by holding its own trade show it would have a means to finance its organization 3 Ferrell came up with the show s name Electronic Entertainment Expo with the idea that it could be treated as E cubed however in conversations with exhibitors they felt this approach was unnecessary and that the E3 moniker was simple and just as effective 3 CES overheard these plans and quickly proposed their own CES branded video game only trade show IDSA and CES approached the larger video game companies to pitch their versions of the show Many of the younger companies like Electronic Arts desired the approach offered by IDSA including the potential to own part of the show by becoming members of the IDSA over what the CES offered The primary holdout to IDSA s plan was Nintendo who believed their hardware should be treated as consumer electronics and thus should be part of CES 3 During these negotiations the CES reserved space in Philadelphia for the show during the month of May which Ferrell stated was prime time for retailers to prepare for late year holiday sales 3 The IDSA had yet reserved space and quickly got in contact with the Los Angeles Convention Center LACC finding that the space was free for the same dates that CES has planned effectively forcing potential exhibitors to pick one show or the other They had chosen Los Angeles as it would be a single flight travel for those companies coming from Japan in contrast to Philadelphia 3 Over the next several weeks prior to either event having to put down their non refundable reservation fees IDSA made an aggressive push to get exhibitors for their show securing more than 180 vendors Of the major video game companies only Nintendo and Microsoft had held out still undecided which show to attend Soon after this push Shapiro contacted Ferrell and told him he won CES dropped the plans for their Philadelphia event 3 The same day Nintendo and Microsoft reached out to Ferrell to discuss exhibition plans at his event 3 Event editExternal videos nbsp Footage of E3 1995 taken by Anthony Parisi a retailer representative At this point most of the floor space at the LACC was taken up by the early exhibitors Nintendo had desired space in the larger South Hall but the early adopters like Sony and Sega had already claimed it Ferrell made sure that Nintendo still had prime floor space in the West Hall moving the registration areas to the West Hall so that attendees had to pass Nintendo s booth 3 Ferrell also had to book extra floor space at a dozen different hotels near the convention center due to demand 3 Among elements of the first E3 that would continue into future events were large press conferences by the major companies Sony Sega and Nintendo showcasing their up and coming hardware and software Notably at point both Sega and Sony were ready to introduce new hardware for Western releases the Sega Saturn and the PlayStation respectively Sega s conference was first and while Kalinske announced that the Saturn would be immediately available in stores they were notified soon after that supplies were more limited than thought During Sony s presentation after covering many of the PlayStation s games Steve Race the lead for bringing the PlayStation to the United States came on stage said two ninety nine and then left revealing that the price of the PlayStation was US 100 less than that of the Saturn 3 The moment is considered one of the first proverbial mic drop moments in E3 s history and would continue a trend as each company would try to outdo others at these press events 3 While official attendance numbers were at 55 000 Ferrell estimated that an additional 10 000 people were able to get in the event was meant to be limited to professionals in the industry retailers and press but believes that many got in with showing a seemingly relevant business card 3 Exhibitions editNintendo edit The Virtual Boy Nintendo s intermediary console released between the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and the Nintendo 64 was showcased prominently 2 The Nintendo 64 then known as the Ultra 64 was presented in a near final state of development 4 Games on display included Donkey Kong Country 2 Diddy s Kong Quest EarthBound and Killer Instinct 5 Sega edit Prior to E3 1995 the Sega Saturn had already released in Japan and was slated for a September 2 1995 American release 6 On the first day of E3 1995 Sega CEO Tom Kalinske gave a keynote presentation in which he revealed the Saturn s release price of US 399 and described the features of the console Kalinske also revealed that due to high consumer demand 7 Sega had already shipped 30 000 Saturns to Toys R Us Babbage s Electronics Boutique and Software Etc for immediate release 8 Sony edit Sony announced the price and release date for the then upcoming PlayStation 9 Prior to Sony s keynote conference Sega announced the US 399 retail price for the newly released Sega Saturn capitalizing on the opportunity SCEA President Steve Race made a single brief statement at Sony s conference 299 The audience cheered as Race walked away from the lectern 10 List of notable exhibitors editThis is a list of major video game exhibitors who made appearances at E3 1995 5 The 3DO Company Acclaim Entertainment Activision Atari Corporation Capcom Crystal Dynamics Electronic Arts LucasArts Microsoft Namco Nintendo Sega Sony Computer Entertainment SNK Williams ElectronicsList of featured games editThis is a list of notable titles that appeared by their developers or publishers at E3 1995 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 The 3DO Company BattleSport 3DO Captain Quazar 3DO Killing Time 3DO Primal Rage 3DO Acclaim Entertainment Batman Forever Genesis SNES Cutthroat Island Genesis SNES D 3DO Foreman For Real Genesis SNES Frank Thomas Big Hurt Baseball Genesis SNES Judge Dredd Genesis SNES Justice League Task Force Genesis SNES Myst Saturn NFL Quarterback Club 96 Genesis Saturn SNES Revolution X Genesis Saturn SNES Robotica Saturn Stargate Genesis SNES Turok Dinosaur Hunter N64 True Lies Genesis SNES Venom Spider Man Separation Anxiety Genesis SNES Warlock Genesis SNES WWF Raw 32X Genesis SNES Activision MechWarrior 3050 SNES Pitfall The Mayan Adventure 32X Atari Corporation Battlemorph Jaguar CD BattleSphere Jaguar Blue Lightning Jaguar CD Brett Hull NHL Hockey Jaguar Jaguar CD Caves of Fear Jaguar CD Creature Shock Jaguar CD Deathwatch Jaguar Defender 2000 Jaguar Fight for Life Jaguar FlipOut Jaguar Highlander The Last of the MacLeods Jaguar CD Hyper Force Jaguar Missile Command 3D Jaguar Phase Zero Jaguar Primal Rage Jaguar CD Power Drive Rally Jaguar Rayman Jaguar PS1 Saturn Ruiner Pinball Jaguar Soulstar Jaguar CD Super Burnout Jaguar Thea Realm Fighters Jaguar Ultra Vortek Jaguar Vid Grid Jaguar CD Virtual Light Machine Jaguar CD White Men Can t Jump Jaguar Capcom Breath of Fire II SNES Darkstalkers The Night Warriors PS1 Mega Man X3 SNES Night Warriors Darkstalkers Revenge Arcade Saturn Resident Evil PS1 Street Fighter The Movie PlayStation Saturn X Men Children of the Atom Arcade Saturn Crystal Dynamics 3D Baseball PS1 Saturn Blazing Dragons PS1 Saturn Blood Omen Legacy of Kain PS1 Gex PS1 Saturn The Horde Saturn Off World Interceptor PS1 Saturn Solar Eclipse PS1 Saturn Cyberdreams Dark Seed II PC I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream PC Electronic Arts FIFA Soccer 96 PS1 Saturn Foes of Ali 3DO PGA Tour 96 PS1 Saturn Psychic Detective 3DO PC PS1 Shockwave Assault PS1 Viewpoint PS1 Wing Commander III Heart of the Tiger 3DO PS1 Interplay Entertainment Cyberia PC Saturn Descent PC Nintendo Donkey Kong Country 2 Diddy s Kong Quest SNES Donkey Kong Land Game Boy EarthBound SNES Killer Instinct SNES Street Fighter II The World Warrior Game Boy Sega The Adventures of Batman amp Robin Genesis Sega CD Clockwork Knight Saturn Comix Zone Genesis Daytona USA Saturn Ecco Jr Genesis Garfield Caught in the Act Genesis Nightmare Circus Genesis Panzer Dragoon Saturn Vectorman Genesis Virtua Cop Arcade Virtua Fighter Arcade Saturn Sony Computer Entertainment Battle Arena Toshinden PS1 Ridge Racer PS1 Twisted Metal PS1 Warhawk PS1 SNK Baseball Stars 2 Neo Geo CD Fatal Fury Special Neo Geo CD The King of Fighters 94 Neo Geo CD Samurai Shodown Neo Geo CD Samurai Shodown II Neo Geo CD Super Sidekicks 3 Neo Geo CD Square Chrono Trigger SNES Secret of Evermore SNES Williams Electronics Doom SNES Mortal Kombat 3 Genesis PS1 References edit a b Patterson Patrick May 12 2012 This Week in Gaming History How E3 1995 changed gaming forever syfygames com Archived from the original on December 25 2015 Retrieved June 18 2019 a b Plante Chris October 13 2010 Remembering Virtual Boy 15 Years Later ugo com Retrieved June 11 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Campbell Colin June 7 2019 The story of the first E3 Polygon Retrieved June 7 2019 E3 1995 Video Gaming Central May 15 1995 Retrieved June 11 2017 via gamebits net a b Game Zero E3 Coverage gamezero com 1995 Retrieved June 9 2017 Let the games begin Sega Saturn hits retail shelves across the nation Sept 2 Japanese sales already put Sega on top of the charts Business Wire March 9 1995 Archived from the original on March 15 2016 Retrieved June 11 2017 via the Free Library Cifaldi Frank May 11 2010 This Day in History Sega Announces Surprise Saturn Launch 1UP com Archived from the original on June 29 2013 Retrieved June 11 2017 Kent 2001 p 516 Severino Anthony June 9 2013 Sony s Biggest E3 Announcements Ever playstationlifestyle net Retrieved June 11 2017 Stuart Keith May 14 2015 Sega Saturn how one decision destroyed PlayStation s greatest rival theguardian com Retrieved June 11 2017 AEO Jaguar Edition 3 Surfing the Jagged Edge Atari Explorer Online Subspace Publishers May 20 1995 Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved August 25 2020 Francois Tommy Msika David June 1995 Reportage E3 CD Consoles No 8 Pressimage pp 29 63 E3 News Edge No 23 Future Publishing August 1995 pp 6 11 Semrad Ed July 1995 The Best Of The Electronic Entertainment Expo E3 1995 Electronic Gaming Monthly No 72 Sendai Publishing pp 58 72 E 3 The Biggest And Best Electronic Entertainment Show Ever GameFan Vol 3 no 7 DieHard Gamers Club July 1995 pp 17 41 The Electronic Entertainment Expo GamePro No 71 IDG June 1995 pp 37 48 Special Report Electronic Entertainment Expo GamePro No 73 IDG August 1995 pp 28 42 Herranz Sonia June 1995 Reportaje Electronic Entertainment Expo Y Al E3er Dia Resucito Hobby Consolas No 45 Hobby Press pp 32 35 Gomez Amalio July 1995 Electronic Entertainment Expo E3 Y por tres dias la Meca del Cine se convirtio en la Meca del Videojuego Hobby Consolas No 46 Hobby Press pp 46 55 Clarke Stuart July 1995 Hype It Up E3 The Los Angeles Electronic Entertainment Expo Hyper No 20 Next Publishing Pty Ltd pp 6 8 Aktuelles Electronic Entertainment Expo MAN AC No 21 Cybermedia July 1995 pp 12 31 Special E3 Messe Mega Fun No 34 CT Computec Verlag GmbH amp Co KG July 1995 pp 8 23 Reportaje Especial Tres dias sin control en Los Angeles Completo dossier sobre el show que revolucionara el videojuego Nintendo Accion in Spanish No 32 Hobby Press July 1995 pp 20 23 News E3 The Future Is Here Mean Machines Sega No 34 EMAP August 1995 pp 8 18 PSX y Saturn una tarta que todos quieren probar E3 Los Angeles Esto si que es Hollywood Micromania in Spanish Vol 3 no 6 HobbyPress July 1995 pp 99 108 E3 The Greatest Show On Earth Next Generation No 7 Imagine Media July 1995 pp 16 22 Dossier Salon E3 Le Choc Player One No 54 Media Systeme Edition June 1995 pp 43 69 Special E3 Los Angeles Welcome To The Next Level Sega Magazin No 20 Computec Media Group July 1995 pp 74 87 Garcia Marcos Martin Fernando June 1995 Reportaje Electronic Entertainment Expo Una Feria Elevada Al Cubo Superjuegos in Spanish No 38 Grupo Zeta pp 14 23 Gore Chris July 1995 Special E3 Previews VideoGames The Ultimate Gaming Magazine No 78 L F P Inc pp 40 45 News E3 Die Ubermesse in Los Angeles Video Games No 44 Future Verlag July 1995 pp 8 33 NAVGTR June 21 2007 E3 1995 YouTube Retrieved August 25 2020 Anthony Parisi January 29 2017 E3 1995 YouTube Retrieved August 25 2020 Hans Reutter July 11 2020 Atari Jaguar E3 1995 Atari Explorer Online YouTube Retrieved August 25 2020 Bibliography editKent Steven L 2001 The Ultimate History of Video Games The Story Behind the Craze that Touched our Lives and Changed the World Roseville California Prima Publishing ISBN 0 7615 3643 4 Portals nbsp 1990s nbsp Los Angeles nbsp United States nbsp Video games Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title E3 1995 amp oldid 1202325931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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