I would disagree with the OP. I've been doing news coverage for events like this for many years and different games, first for Apolyton and now for WePlayCiv, and this year's E3 has certainly yielded more reports than any previous edition: for E3 2005 we had just over 20 news stories about Civ4 at E3 -- with the dates ranging from a few days before E3 until a full month after. Right now (only two days after E3 ended), WePlayCiv is already up to about 35 stories published, and I can assure you that a bunch more new previews from E3 will still come out in the days and weeks to come. Mind you, in both cases most of those stories are previews that mostly rehash the same points with just a few tidbits of new info, but the overall amount of information we're getting certainly isn't any less than in 2005.
As far as a playable demo goes, I don't think any Civ product has ever had a playable demo at E3 (certainly not Civ4), those don't pop up until a month or two before release -- which is when the real multi-media extravaganza begins anyway. It's still a month or two too early for that with Civ5.
And sure, there were less screenshots this time around, but there was actually more and especially much higher quality video footage of the game in action this year than in any previous E3, and these actually showed the game off in a clearly close-to-finished state -- the Civ4 builds from May 2005 were still a LONG way from being finished, they didn't have any of the final UI in yet. Based on this year's videos I was able to capture a ton of (mostly high-quality) screencaps -- the
WPC E3 Gallery has 100+ images in it already, considerably more than E3 2005 generated. And I suspect that once the print magazines get around to publishing their reports we'll see some new screens from them as well.
True, IGN dropped the ball big time this year with their less than mediocre coverage, but there have been other sources to pick up the slack.
GameSpot's coverage was great; as always Jonah Falcon posted an excellent
preview as did
The Escapist; the
Three Moves Ahead podcast was simply outstanding;
the BBC feature showed off some great new stuff;
GameSpy had a nice original take on events and IMO the best written article of E3 was posted by a French site I'd never heard of before:
Factornews. To top it all off (for now), today
2old2play posted a complete audio recording of the E3 demo they attended. Information-wise, what we got this year was at least on par with E3 2005, if anything it was a little better. In addition, Civ5 won a lot of Best of E3 awards this year, far more than any previous year. Firaxis and 2K Games definitely made a BIG impression on the people who attended the show.
Maybe it just seems less because most of the the big changes -- hexes, 1UPT, new combat model, per-tile border expansion, all the civs included -- were already broken ahead of time, so the new stuff that we learned about in the last week seems minor by comparison. Also, the Civ4 builds that popped up around E3 2005 were leagues ahead of the screens we'd seen previously, whereas the the first Civ5 images we saw earlier this year seem to have been pretty close to final already. But as far as more video footage and playable demos goes, we never see much of that before July anyway (for games with a fall release date) -- look out for GamesCom in August and PAX Prime in early September to offer playable demos not only for journalists but for regular folks like us as well (for those of us that can make it out to Cologne or Seattle anyway).