Anthem won't be at E3, despite Cataclysm update

Anthem won't be at E3, despite Cataclysm update

The long-awaited content update for Cataclysm, a sci-fi shooter, will be unveiled today, with a live stream broadcast on both Twitch and Mixer. EA's publisher reveals that the game will not be part of the company's E3 2019 showcase. The news will accompany the game's 1.2.0 update, which (as the BioWare developer has already pointed out) focuses on " bug fixes, stability and gameplay" instead of the new ones. Game moments. 1.2.0 provides "under the hood content that you won't see right away, but is in the works in a future update, Cataclysm," according to BioWare. Cataclysm is (or at least was supposed to) be a big moment for Anthem, setting the stage for the game as a long-term content plan. This urgent update would offer "massive world-changing events" and "the most ambitious and ambitious content", which will be attended by the best players and in the final stages. The most severe enemies, raging storms and "new mysteries" are about to be part of the cataclysm. We'll be sure to update you with the specific details as soon as they're revealed on the live stream, which will air on both Twitch and the mixer at 3:00pm Central Standard Time.

A cataclysmic year.

But is it too little, too late for BioWare's anthem? It looks like publisher EA is already giving the game a cold kick, at least with regards to its big E3 showcase projects. The company will present its products in Los Angeles in a three-hour conference and a series of previously unreleased concerts, which will include titles such as Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, Apex Legends, Battlefield V, FIFA 20, Madden NFL 20 and the aging group Los Sims 4. But Anthem, once on the verge of becoming the company's biggest concern in live gaming, seems to be conspicuously absent, with the new kids' poster, Apex Legends, taking the spotlight. . This is to an understandable degree from EA: Anthem was poorly received, littered with bugs and missing content at launch, while also failing in the shoot-replay-shoot loop required by the game's genre. Anthem may get some alone time today, but right now it looks good on the black sheep of the EA family.