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Record Attendance At The 2010 Tokyo Game Show

CESA, organizer of the Tokyo Game Show, has confirmed record attendance figures for this year’s event, and announces the ten top games of the show as voted by attendees, including Gran Turismo 5 and more.

Simon Parkin, Contributor

September 20, 2010

1 Min Read
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CESA, organizer of the Tokyo Game Show, has announced record attendance figures for this year's event, which drew to a close yesterday. Over its four days, the show welcomed 207,647 attendees, a new record and the first time attendance has surpassed the 200,000 mark. Last year's event had a total attendance figure of 185,030. The first two days of the event, which are set aside for industry attendees, recorded numbers of 24,764 and 24,229 respectively, while the latter two days, which are open to the public, recorded 81,469 and 77,185. To close the event CESA, held the Future Division ceremony for its annual Japan Game Awards. The Future Division awards are given to the best ten forthcoming games voted for by Tokyo Game Show attendees over the first three days of the event. Attendees were able to pick from 183 titles due for release in the next twelve months. The winning games are: * Idolmaster 2 (Namco Bandai, X360) * Vanquish (Sega, PS3/X360) * El Shaddai (Ignition, PS3/X360) * Gran Turismo 5 (SCE, PS3) * DanceEvolution (Konami, X360) * Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy (Square Enix, PSP) * Ni no Kuni (Level-5, DS) * Final Fantasy XIV (Square Enix, PC/PS3) * Monster Hunter Portable 3rd (Capcom, PSP) * Yakuza Of the End (Sega, PS3) Highlights of Gamasutra's coverage of the event include Kinect spokesman Kudo Tsunoda explaining why he believes Kinect Sales will 'Blow Away' iPad, Shuhei Yoshida, president of Sony's Worldwide Studios organization, discussing his views on Move, Team Ninja head of development Yosuke Hayashi inviting comparisons between the company's new work and its old, and EA's COO John Schappert on being the number one publisher on the iOS App Store.

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2010

About the Author

Simon Parkin

Contributor

Simon Parkin is a freelance writer and journalist from England. He primarily writes about video games, the people who make them and the weird stories that happen in and around them for a variety of specialist and mainstream outlets including The Guardian and the New Yorker.

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