It's a shell of its former self.
http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/rfn/57394/episode-725-e3-and-the-ten-minutes-in-prime-time
This week we all realized that E3 is basically happening right now, insofar as its happening at all this year. James is registered to "attend" but has literally no idea what that even means. The good news is we now know when Nintendo will be presenting their line-up for 2021, but it's happening on the last day of this black box masquerading as E3. This means they'll likely not be doing much at their "virtual booth," which again, is a nothing phrase.
After a break, Jon continues to tell us about ordering a PS5 and Haze in the year 2021.
Turns out it's coming in from Panama City, Panama (it just cleared customs in Miami, no joke)
— Jon Lindemann (@MrDiamondJ) June 3, 2021
So there's that.
Gui is playing R-Type Final 2. I would give more context but the title alone is enough of a punchline. Lastly we end the show with memories of our favorite E3 presentations.
You can visit our virtual booth by sending an email.
Gradius 3 Arcade seemed less like "amping up the difficulty" and more like rushed, badly tested design. It's full of bugs, insanely hard and the Japanese version doesn't even have continues! It's full of slowdown too, the reason the SNES version is easier is that they redesigned a lot of the garbage parts. Like the infamous cube rush, which just throws 100 homing cubes at you that may home in so quickly that you cannot possibly dodge them so you have to guide them into forming a wall that will catch further cubes but if you're unlucky a cube may just decide to clip through the wall and kill you anyway. Even pro players will give up entirely if they lose a life in certain areas because recovery from the checkpoint is impossible. Yet the longer you stay alive the harder it gets so strategic deaths are a part of playing the game too.
Gradius 4 continues the trend by being made in an even shorter time frame and being even glitchier.