Didn't feel it here in So. Central PA. I'm pretty much used to earthquakes.
I spent 2 years in Japan (was just outside Tokyo at Camp Drake during the Niigata quake in June of '64 - that sucker really rocked and rolled - it was a 7.5 but don't quote me on that - my memory isn't what it used to be) and 35 years in CA. Was in CA for both the Sylmar (I was in Thousand Oaks at the time) and Northridge (I was living in Newbury Park) quakes. It pretty much takes a 4 or better to get my attention.
If your house, or the building you are in, is on or very close to bedrock, you won't feel nearly as much motion as you will if your house is on fill.
After the Niigata quake the earth kept moving like the surface of a lake for quite a while. It made some folks almost seasick. You could see the waves in the ground surface. Bunch of us went up on the flat roof of our barracks and looked down the ridges of the adjacent building roofs. You could see them moving up and down as the waves passed.
People were talking about the "massive earthquake", it was a 5.9 (not massive), which will definitely get your attention if you are near the epicenter, but more than a few miles away it isn't that bad.
Fitch