Indie Expo Live 2021 Will Feature Over 300 Upcoming Games On June 5
The third Indie Expo Live will have over 300 indie games during its five-hour show.
Another challenger approaches the current parade of live stream events for video games this summer. Indie Live Expo 2021 is planning to show over 300 upcoming indie games during its live stream on Saturday, June 5, at 2 AM PT / 5 AM ET. The Japan-based presentation will run for five hours and feature games from known publishers like 505 Games and Playism, as well as up-and-coming developers and publishers. The stream will be available on Indie Live s YouTube, Twitch, and Twitter accounts, with an English version of the stream.
E3 2021 schedule – and every game industry event confirmed for 2021
The summer game announcement schedule isn t quite as messy as last year, but there s still a lot to keep track of
Both E3 and not-E3 are approaching fast, and while it’s not quite as big of a mess as it was last year, there’s still a heck of a lot of individual events to keep track of. Not everything has a specific date just yet, but enough events have been announced that we can start to get a picture of what to expect from this summer’s lineup of game announcements.
Music fans at Indie Live, Heartwood Soundstage’s first concert series since the COVID-19 pandemic. (Skylar McCue/WUFT News) Home/Arts and Entertainment/After A Year Of Silence, The Beat Is Back: Live Music Slowly Returns To Gainesville
After A Year Of Silence, The Beat Is Back: Live Music Slowly Returns To Gainesville
By Skylar McCue
February 3, 2021
More than 100 music fans flocked to Heartwood Soundstage’s outdoor venue on Saturday night for Indie Live, its first concert series since the COVID-19 pandemic.
“It feels almost unreal after all these months to be standing here,” University of Florida senior Morgan Simonson said, “watching and listening to live music.”
Six-part concert series Indie Live kicked off Saturday night
Florida bands Driptones and Faze Wave performed at the socially distanced series’ opening night The venue had socially distanced seating and standing space available.
“Stay in the Hula-Hoop, motherf -ers!”
Faze Wave, one of the two bands who performed at Saturday’s Indie Live concert, bellowed this sentiment from onstage in the middle of its set to keep rowdy concertgoers socially distanced.
The evening marked the opening night of the six-part outdoor concert series hosted by Heartwood Soundstage and Swamp Records, a student-run record label based in Gainesville. The sequence, which spotlights a diverse range of indie groups, kicked off with performances by upbeat, alternative band Faze Wave and rising Gainesville quartet Driptones.