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Electronic Entertainment Expo 2010

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Nintendo looks to extend its reach into 3D

The console maker’s ability to think outside the box manifested itself physically at the E3 video game show, as it unveiled a new form of gaming through its 3D handheld device

OnLive launches ‘cloud gaming’ service

A potentially revolutionary online gaming service, has been launched at the annual E3 video game trade show in Los Angeles, to cautious industry support

3D games debut at E3 showcase

Sony and Nintendo showed off games with and without the need for special glasses as the Japanese console makers emphasised features their US rival Microsoft lacked

Game sales stats misrepresent industry

Tech Blog: Michael Gallagher, president of the Entertainment Software Association, says there is a ‘disconnect’ between gloomy sales statistics and an industry in rude health

Microsoft reveals restyled Xbox

Microsoft stole a march on its game console rivals, unveiling the first big redesign for its Xbox 360 in five years and saying it would ship immediately

Related content and features

Interactive

Slideshow: Day two of E3 Expo trade show

Motion sensor technology continues to dominate the E3 Expo trade show in the Los Angeles Convention Center

Slideshow: Sony and Nintendo showcase 3D

Sony and Nintendo show off games in 3D at E3 Expo

Comment & analysis

E3 - Big Game Hunting

Slideshow: E3, the biggest video game trade show, was back with a bang in 2009 as game console makers have been riding out of the recession better than most

Valley View: Video game makers excited by new audience

Video game publishers are excited by the new audiences attracted to gaming by platforms such as the Nintendo Wii, with its motion controller, but they have yet to work out what makes these non-core gamers tick

E3 to provide glitz amid the gloom

After two years of restricting attendance to top executives, analysts and press, the Electronic Entertainment Expo was opened up to the wider industry in 2009

Valley View: There’ll be no escaping the home entertainment revolution

You can seal up the letterbox and lock all the doors, but it won’t help you resist the next digital revolution invading your home.

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