Events, conferences, and trade shows
Found in 254 Collections and/or Records:
The 1993 International Summer Consumer Electronics Show, CES Official Directory, June 3–6, 1993
This is a collection of various event guides from various gaming events, including the Consumer Electronics Show, the Game Developers Conference, and the Electronic Entertainment Expo.
The 1996 International Winter Consumer Electronics Show Official Directory, January 5–8, 1996
This is a collection of various event guides from various gaming events, including the Consumer Electronics Show, the Game Developers Conference, and the Electronic Entertainment Expo.
The Game News, "A Special Number on the E3", May 22–24, 2002
This collection currently includes two promotional magazines.
The World of Atari '98 guidebook, August 21–23, 1998
This is a collection of various event guides from various gaming events, including the Consumer Electronics Show, the Game Developers Conference, and the Electronic Entertainment Expo.
This Week In Consumer Electronics CES Daily
This is a partial collection of TWICE from 1989–1990. The library only plans to collect issues of TWICE from the period when the magazine covered the video game and electronic toy industries, though it is unclear exactly when the magazine's coverage shifted.
This Week In Consumer Electronics, SCES 1994 Daily, Day 3, June 25, 1994
This officially licensed Consumer Electronics Show daily magazine was published for Summer CES 1994.
Tokyo Game Show 2012 Capcom Special DVD [Region 0 DVD], 2012
"Promo movies from Capcom at Tokyo Game Show 2012, including Dark Souls with Artorias of the Abyss Edition (DVD chapter 8) by FromSoftware for PlayStation 3 and Windows Live. CAP-TGS2012"
Trade show and event guidebooks
Trade shows and other events would frequently print show guides, directories, and proceedings. These guides included information about exhibitors, panels, maps, and other event highlights.
Trade show and press kit CD-ROMs, 1995–1997
Objects in this series are not directly related to the bulk of Mark Flitman's work but are still relevant to the history of video games. This includes assorted flyers, correspondence, industry reports, press materials from other companies for which Flitman was not employed, and other game-related documents that fall outside the bulk of Flitman's career.