The venue is at least as "upscale" as Pintail, and probably more so. Even the tent floors were tiled! There is also infinite room for expansion. Think of an endless golf green!
Sadly, the reason there is so much room is Foxhall is a large home development that hasn't sold many homes. Foxhall's owners have recently turned two sister home developments over to creditors, so who knows what the future holds for the property.
I asked vendors at the Vintage Cup who were also exhibiting at EPIC what they were hearing from their collegues and they sounded pretty disappointed. One said the EPIC organizers told them there were 1500 people through the gate, about 5% of the 30K crowd the organizers predicted, and most of those didn't visit the fine gun tent. I talked to one vendor who passed on EPIC this year, but went to see what it was like. They said they were glad they passed on it.
Apparently, the mud made it hard for some vendors to set up, and the press reported the bad weather kept Georgia's Governor from making the ribbon cutting ceremony.
The oganizers' press release doesn't give a gate number, but says "Thousands of people were on the event grounds throughout the three-day weekend". In PR speak, that sounds like around 2000 people including vendors, staff, entertainers, clean up crew and attendees. The vendors I've heard from aren't buying that number at all.
If 1500 attendees were true, that wouldn't be bad for an inaugural event, but considering they were budgeting for 30,000 and including free country music concerts to get people out, that would be an epic flop.
I still think the Game Fair concept is a great idea and hope the organizers have learned a lesson regarding their lead shot ban and excessive hype. Hopefully, they will give it another try at a more suitable venue where fine gun owners can actually participate.