Watch the Nintendo E3 2019 live stream here
The show is soon to kick off, and game fans can tune in to Nintendo's E3 2019 live stream presentation right here.
Are you ready for some sizzling hot Nintendo news to explode out of this year's E3 2019 convention? E3 attendees are well aware Big N is effectively a fountain of fresh facts and fun features, and we're expecting loads of both in the upcoming E3 stream and Treehouse presentation. For your viewing pleasure, we've got the low-down on when and where to watch the Nintendo E3 2019 live stream, and fans can catch all the action in the stream embed featured below.
Nintendo E3 2019 live stream | Watch here
The Nintendo E3 2019 stream is slated to begin on Tuesday, June 11 (that's today, for what it's worth) at 9 a.m. Pacific or 12 p.m. Eastern time. This show follows hot on the heels of Nintendo's previous E3 stream and tournaments, the latter of which included the World Championship tournaments for Splatoon 2 and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate as well as the inaugural Super Mario Maker 2 Invitational 2019.
Wondering what to expect from Nintendo at E3 2019? It seems like the biggest draw will be Animal Crossing, of which Nintendo has provided unfortunately few details so far. Of course, we absolutely wouldn't be mad to hear about Metroid Prime 4, or even perhaps a new Legend of Zelda game. For now, we're just hoping, but these curiosities will be satiated when the stream finally kicks off later today.
Don't miss a single bit of Nintendo news: Tune in to Nintendo's E3 2019 live stream presentation right here, and watch the action unfold starting at 9 a.m. Pacific time. To stay fresh on the latest news, trailers, announcements, and video game reveals from this year's Electronic Entertainment, be sure to stop by Shacknews' E3 2019 home page.
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Kevin Tucker posted a new article, Watch the Nintendo E3 2019 live stream here
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It's big enough for SE to devote about 8 minutes to two DQ games in their presser yesterday.
Knowing the leaks for who is believed to be left to be revealed for Smash, two of the other DLC are very much Western figures with little popularity in Japan, so this all balances out. (That is, I'm talking Doom guy and Minecraft Steve)
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Luigi's Mansion 3 on deck!
In a hotel this time, sounds like a good way to expand the "size" of the game without splitting it up like the Dark of the Moon.
New moves, seems to be mostly about smashing things, and a weird version of a jump...
Gooigi? Walking slimer slime lol. Also coop? Gooigi doesn't do in water.
Local & Online coop :) Scare scraper is back!
Coming "this year" -
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Eh. It's a very good game (I got an english repro years ago), but I can think of more than 2 other games I'd rank higher visually.
Yoshi's Island used the SFX chip in new and creative ways to add sprite scaling and rotation along with stretch and squish animation to enemies and the environment, all paired with a delightful visual style.
R-Type 3: The Third Lightning isn't super well known, but it pulls off ridiculous effects one after the other for the whole game. Some are just to dazzle, but others impact gameplay.
SFZ2 has annoying load times, but is otherwise a pretty competent port of the arcade game with a surprising amount of the visual flair intact.
Just off the top of my head, and not really considering any of the 3D SFX games.
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It looked obvious the render res and texture res were dropped way down, and it still looked pretty framey.
I imagine draw distance, shadows quality and such are also way down. Probably need to wait for someone like Digital Foundry to get their hands on it for all the differences, although I could see CDPR doing a blog post on everything they had to do to get it running later.
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It's busy work the game, with persistence on a ticking clock to keep you coming back to check in daily. You have to maintain your shit. It sounds like it would be a chore but it can be some relaxing and stress free fun.
There are special calendar events, personalization and customization along the lines of The Sims but a lot lighter, talking to and making friends with the townsfolk, trading stuff with other players, etc.
The most gamey type stuff hunting and collecting fossils to add to a museum collection, earning enough scratch to pay for the home expansions and the custom elements, fishing and gathering fruit to grow / trade / sell. In the originals you could collect and play NES games, but I don't think that's in there anymore.
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I see what you did there Nintendo
https://i.imgur.com/WYOsp3i.png
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It's on right now. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0vcxeMUN18
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I'm the opposite. Nothing Nintendo is offering gets me really excited. Partly because the Switch doesn't fit well into how I game, partly because the games I get really excited for will be better experiences on other platforms, and partly because most of the others aren't games and franchises I'm especially enamored with.
Cap it off with sales on Switch games being pretty pathetic, and I'm left wondering why I even own a Switch.
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Pure joy: https://youtu.be/mtkTrRHyCV0
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Is on treehouse right now! Unfortunately I had to grab lunch and missed most of the creation aspects of it. Seems to pull rooms from dungeons you've cleared and then you can add enemies/traps/whatever. Also talking about the Toon Link amiibo for this game adding Shadow Link to dungeons, apparently amiibo will add things called "plus effects" similar to that. Other Zelda character amiibo will work here too.
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