Skip to main content

Highlights from Ubisoft’s E3 2013 Press Conference: The Crew, The Division, and More

ubisoft at e3As the E3 Cavalcade of Press Conferences rolled along, Jerry Cantrell from Alice in Chains kicked things off at the Ubisoft Media Briefing with some pulse-pounding guitar licks. After which he queued up the Session Mode in Rocksmith 2014 via voice commands, changed up the house band, and brought in a synthesizer. Apparently this game will make you an instant rock god. It’s “The Fastest Way to Learn a Guitar,” after all. But all things considered, it was a pretty hypertastic way to start up a press conference. 

Aisha Tyler joined Jerry on stage, sporting a #girlwood t-shirt, and kept the ball rolling. Apparently she “Did a lot of dirty deeds” to Alice in Chains back in the day. Yowza. She promised us a “Straight Bonkers” list of games to be teased and announced. 

splinter_cell_blacklistTom Clancy’s Splinter Cell: Blacklist: This game will be coming out in late August, and there weren’t many surprises here. We know that Spies vs. Mercs multiplayer mode will be making a return; Tyler called it “The biggest Splinter Cell ever,” and the gameplay trailer and iconic whine of Sam’s night vision goggles powering up will definitely will get have your trigger finger and stealth pants itching. 

Rayman-LegendsRayman Legends: One of Ubisoft’s most recognizable and colorful platformers, Rayman continues the whimsy with Rayman Legends. While the trailer was all cutscenes and trailer moments, they followed that up with some actual gameplay. This followup to Rayman Origins looks like a lot of fun, and promises to be “the biggest Rayman ever.” Maybe Ubisoft just decided to supersize everything this year. Rayman Legends will be out September 3.

The-Mighty-Quest-for-Epic-LootThe Mighty Quest for Epic Loot: This game is all about building a castle and filling it full of traps so you can protect your treasure room. It’s a twist on the classic tower defense model. You can try to invade your friend’s castle, and if you are successful, you can leave a taunting message for them. You can sign up for the beta right now at www.themightyquest.com, and challenge the game’s developer LPPYeahYouKnowMe. 

South-Park-The-Stick-of-TruthSouth Park: The Stick of Truth: This game has been dangled in front of us like a carrot for awhile now, and we played it at last year’s E3! But now it’s finally coming out. And not with a whimper. In fact, the opening line of the video for the game was, “I’m going to teach you a fart called the Nagasaki.” It’s exactly what you would expect from South Park, and it will be out later this year.

The Crew: Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot took the stage to introduce a next-gen game from Reflections and Ivory Tower called The Crew. It’s a hyper-ballistic game along the lines of the Fast and Furious franchise, and unfortunately, everything we saw was a cutscene. Near the end of the sequence, the assembled team of cars combines to take down an armored truck, so we imagine this means some high-octane heists will be involved. It’s an open world game where you will be taking over a criminal organization one city at a time. 

The game is extremely open, and features dynamic backgrounds that you can actually drive to and experience. In one road race, we were in some hills above Las Vegas, and you could drive down to Vegas if you wanted and drag race on the strip. You can also call in friends to join your crew on the fly without having to drop into a lobby, and take part in multiplayer events. The customization is dynamic, allowing you to strip a car down to the chassis and build it up in an exploded view, and you can take that experience onto the iPad and customize from there as well. The game is coming early in 2014 for Next-gen systems and PC.

Watch-DogsWatch Dogs: Ubisoft is already touting this game as “The game that has come to define next-gen,” and it is definitely the most visible, upcoming title for next-gen systems. Ubisoft wowed the crowd with this game last year, and it still manages to look impressive. We were treated to some cutscenes that looked downright photo-realistic at times, following an individual through an upscale club where Japanese men ate sushi off of the body of a nude woman, and down into the guts of the basement where our protagonist disrupted all of the electronics before dispensing his vigilante justice. 

Just-Dance-2014Just Dance 2014: The game seems to indicate that Ubisoft is moving toward a year-based naming convention, rather than Just Dance 5. According to the video, Ubisoft seems to think that this game will go “straight bonkers” with the teen crowd and become the go-to party game of the year. It will be out this holiday season.

Rabbids-Invasion

Rabbids Invasion: This is a television show launching soon that adds an interactive function to entertainment. While the show plays, you can play mini-games over the actual show, clicking on objects, screaming along with the Rabbids, and so on. Just in case you need more reasons to get kids pumped up about watching cartoons, this is what you’ve been missing.

Assassins-CreedAssassin’s Creed: Returning to core gaming, Assassin’s Creed 4 Black Flag, launched a brand-new trailer that focuses on an altercation between Edward Kenway and a group of soldiers who picked the wrong bar. Then came a hail of cannonballs and some naval battle cutscenes showing the ship to ship battles, broadsides and boarding parties that will be featured in the game. Again, everything was a cutscene, backed by some emo music, and we’re eager to see more gameplay for this one. Especially those underwater diving moments, which look like they come from a completely separate game. We’ll see more on the floor, and the game will be out on October 29. 

Trials Fusion: Taking ridiculous motorcycle stunts into the future, this game brings sci-fi aesthetics to next-gen systems, and Trials Frontier will be coming out exclusively for mobile devices. The two versions work together, and will allow you to access previous runs, leader boards, and more. 

In what is becoming an increasingly popular “one last thing” moment at E3 press conferences, Yves Guillemot  took to the stage to introduce a brand-new shooter game about bioterror called The Division. In the future, an event called Dark Winter has decimated some of humanity, and we have complex systems that we don’t even understand anymore. Combining the fact that Americans are huge shoppers, spending up to 90 billion dollars in one day with the note that the flu virus can survive for up to 17 days on a bank note … it looks like greed and avarice will be our downfall. Directive 51 is the government’s secret plan to deal with an outbreak like this if it ever happens. 

In the game, of course, this actually does happen. Set in a world three weeks after NYC was decimated on Black Friday, you patrol through eerily empty city streets with weaponry and a wrist-mounted computer. It’s a shooter, combined with a lot of future tech, and it looks beautiful. There’s a squad element here, with drop-in and drop-out gameplay, and the team of players we were following eventually met up with another squad and went seamlessly into PvP. The game asks “What will it take to save what remains?” With the Watch Dogs introduction last year, and The Division reveal this year, Ubisoft has us pretty excited about some games are both still yet to come on systems that aren’t even out yet. 

And that’s a wrap! The Division was a definite surprise, sand while we would have liked to see more gameplay footage from everything on this list, we know we’ll be catching at least some of that from the show floor during E3. Now, onwards to Sony!

Topics
Kevin Kelly
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kevin Kelly is a writer and pop culture junkie with a fixation on video games, movies, and board games. His writing has been…
Here’s what E3 2023 could look like without Sony, Nintendo, and Microsoft
Playstation character wall at E3 2018

Let's start with the good news: E3 2023 will be held in its in-person format once again after three long years of digital events necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic, this time with ReedPop at the helm. The bad news is that Sony, Xbox, and Nintendo -- gaming's "Big 3" -- may not show up at the industry’s biggest convention this summer.

This is according to a report from IGN citing multiple sources, who claimed the companies won’t be a part of the show or make appearances on the floor at the Los Angeles Convention Center in any way. Their absence from this year’s E3, especially Nintendo’s, may come as a shock to the gaming community, but it's not such a surprise when looking at the past few iterations of E3. Even before the pandemic locked everyone down in 2020, Sony and Xbox had been hosting their own E3-style livestreams, so it was more likely they would do it again this year anyway. Nintendo, on the other hand, managed to show off its upcoming games via Nintendo Direct streams and at its booth, console kiosks and all.

Read more
Summer Game Fest returns just before E3 2023 next June
The official artwork confirming Summer Game Fest's return on June 8, 2023.

Geoff Keighley has confirmed when Summer Game Fest will return in June 2023. It will begin with a live kickoff show on June 8, 2023, placing Keighley's game announcement alternative less than a week before E3's grand (intended) 2023 return.
Unlike past years, Summer Game Fest Live Kickoff 2023 will feature a live audience, like Geoff Keighley's The Game Awards. It will take place in the YouTube Theater at Hollywood Park, with tickets going on sale in early 2023. It will still be livestreamed across platforms like YouTube and Twitch, though. It's currently unknown who's participating, how long Summer Game Fest will run afterward, or if it will feature a Summer Game Fest Play Days-like element for fans. Still, Keighley says all of that info will be revealed ahead of the event next year, teasing what people can expect. 
"In keeping with tradition, we'll have tons of exciting announcements from the developers that are pushing the games industry forward, and will once again highlight other publisher digital events, demos, and more surprises to be announced in the coming months," Keighley says in a press release. 
That June 8 start date, and the other Summer Game Fest events likely to follow, put Keighley's show just ahead of E3 2023. The ESA and ReedPop plan to bring E3 back between June 13 and June 16, 2023. With five days of lead time on E3, Summer Game Fest can coexist with the long-running gaming conference and encompass the plethora of publisher showcases that tend to precede E3.
Geoff Keighley made it clear that he wants Summer Game Fest and E3 to coexist for a while. "We've had extensive conversations with ReedPop about E3," he said in an interview with Epic Games Store. "I think it'll kind of fit together and flow kind of from what we're doing into what they're doing and stuff. E3, to me, is this kind of master brand that represents gaming news in June."
With the start date of Summer Game Fest confirmed, the coexistence of these two summer gaming events is a reality. Summer Game Fest returns on June 8, 2023.

Read more
E3 2023 returns in June with separate business and consumer days
The logo for E3 2023.

E3 2023 will return as an in-person event from June 13 to June 16, 2023, as announced by ReedPop today.

The Entertainment Software Association (ESA) already revealed that E3 will return in 2023, but now we know exactly when the event will take place, along with several other key details. E3 will once again take place at the Los Angeles Convention Center after a four-year hiatus, but will incorporate separate days for industry professionals and general consumers.

Read more