E3 starts in less than four weeks, which means itās prime season for ridiculous rumors about all the games that will show up this year. (Final Fantasy XV! The Last Guardian! Halo 5!)
Seeing crazy rumors float around the web can be fun, but it always sucks to get SUPER EXCITED for, say, a Fallout 4 appearance at E3, only to find out that youāre just being fooled by some teenager with Photoshop and way too much time on his hands.
Donāt worry. Weāre here to help you out. Iāve put together a list of signs that the E3 rumor youāre reading might not be true. Feel free to use this for reference any time you see a wild rumor for the next few weeks. Itāll help.
Sign 1: Itās a giant list of games.
When looking at a rumor, itās helpful to ask yourself one big question: Who would actually be in a position to know all of this information? If the answer is ānobody,ā the rumor probably isnāt true.
So for example, this silly list of āfirst partyā gamesācomplete with that oh-so-convincing āNDAā in the cornerāis a clear fake not just because itās really dumb, but because there is nobody in the world who would make or have a list like this.
Donāt count on seeing āThe Legend of Zelda: Shard of Nightmareā this year, or anything else you might see on a giant āleaked listā of E3 presser announcements. These decisions are constantly in flux, and bullet-pointed lists of game names are the easiest thing in the world to fake.
Sign 2: Youāre looking at an angled, blurry picture of a screen.
I donāt know how this trend started, but for some reason, people like creating fake images and taking slanted, blurry pictures of them. Maybe it seems more authentic than just sharing the image straight-up? Anyway, this is almost always a sign that youāre looking at a fake.
This photo from last year, for example:
Sign 3: The source of the rumor is a prophet.
Hereās a fun story: a few months ago, I got an e-mail from someone who said he was responsible for writing up one of the big fake E3 2o13 rumor lists that had floated around NeoGAF and other gaming sites last year. We exchanged a few e-mails, and I eventually asked him where heād come up with all that stuff. Hereās his response, verbatim, with names removed to protect his identity:
Well, where I got the original info Iād posted plus all of what I just told you isnāt your usual typical industry source. Because of this Iām not bound to any NDAās keeping me from talking about it. Iāve gone this far so Iāll tell you what that source is. For most of my adult life I have had a VERY string gut intuition. Now, sometimes thereās misses of course but itās right far more often than not. Over the years Iāve known about all kinds of major gaming announcements months before they happened. When my intuition kicks in I see flashes of what will happen, like pictures. In the [GAME NAMES] cases I saw flashes of the translated English versions plus flashes of the actual people involved in the deals sitting in the room making them. As to my shocker [GAME NAME] statement all I can tell you is thatās what I was seeing flashes of-and very vividly at that which is why my mouth dropped open when I saw it was [GAME NAME] [STUDIO] was doing. I didnāt sit down beforehand going āLetās see what I can write about [GAME NAMES].ā I was writing what I saw as I saw it. As a further example, I knew Mega Man Legends 3 had been canned a bit before Capcom officially said it.
If your rumor came from someone who saw it in a flash, itās probably not true.
Sign 4: It looks like it was easy to make in Photoshop.
Rumored unfinished promotional materials that look like they were really easy to make in Photoshop were usually just made in Photoshop.
Hereās one from last year:
(Resident Evil 7 was not announced at E3 2013.)
Sign 5: It sounds like fanboy drivel.
As a general rule, when a list of E3 rumors is peppered with hyperbolic descriptors like ājaw-dropping visualsā and āsetting a bench-mark for console graphics,ā it was probably created just to get excited fans to spread it across the web.
Two big lists of āE3 announcementsā from Sony and Microsoft circulated last week, and both were full of the type of breathless adjectives usually reserved for message boards and console wars. This is a good sign that they were not real. The people who made them just wanted you to get stoked about them. (Sorry. š )
E3 is in four weeks. Stay skeptical, and as always, stay tuned to Kotaku as we help you sort out whatās real and what isnāt
https://lastchance.cc/more-signs-that-big-xbox-one-leak-was-real-1573633520%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E