Every year, fans eagerly await the announcement of Game of the Year from The Game Awards. It’s an award as prestigious as they come and is often a hotly contested topic amongst those in the industry and fans alike.
Originally known as the Spike Video Game Awards, The Game Awards has been giving out Game of the Year awards since 2003 and there are some incredible titles amongst the winners.
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Below, we’re going to give you a run-down of every Game of the Year ever according to The Game Awards.
Every Game of The Year Awarded By The Game Awards
2003 – Madden NFL 2004
Madden NFL 2004 was the first game in the series that offered an “Owner” mode, undoubtedly contributing to its successes at The Game Awards. This allowed players to fully involve themselves in the management of an NFL franchise, even down to regulating Hot Dog prices! It remains the only sports title to win Game of the Year at The Game Awards, so far.
2004 – Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
Despite the controversy surrounding it, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is without a doubt a fantastic game. It acted as a commentary, and somewhat a glorification, of the issues that plagued Los Angeles throughout the 1980s and 1990s and remains one of the highest rated games on Metacritic.
2005 – Resident Evil 4
Resident Evil 4 released to universal acclaim following the successes of its predecessors. It was regarded highly for its voice-acting performances, fight choreography, and detailed character design. It introduced a new style of gameplay to the franchise and the action-orientated narrative beat titles such as God of War to the award.
2006 – The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
In 2006, Oblivion was at the forefront of video gaming and deservedly won Game of the Year from The Game Awards. It had fantastic graphics, an expansive open-world, and raised the bar on in-game NPCs. It combined everything great about RPG, action, and adventure games at the time to provide one of the best experiences both at the time and to this day.
2007 – BioShock
BioShock, as a Game of the Year, had everything. It’s gameplay was fantastic, it was graphically stunning, and the narrative it presented players with was unrivalled. It’s morality-based storyline offered a degree of exploration within each level and combat scenario that made it a compelling, replayable title.
2008 – Grand Theft Auto IV
There was a long wait between Grand Theft Auto games, but when Grand Theft Auto IV launched, everyone realised why. This title set a new benchmark for open-world games and remains one of the best in the genre. Alongside fantastic developments in the fluidity of it’s gameplay and combat, many also praised it for the sheer freedom it afforded players alongside the gripping narrative it followed.
2009 – Uncharted 2: Among Thieves
After the successes of the first Uncharted title, Naughty Dog raised the bar with the sequel: Uncharted 2: Among Thieves. Nolan North’s performance as Nathan Drake is still one of the best in the industry and many applauded Uncharted 2 for it’s immersive nature and cinematic action-sequences. It was visually stunning and raised the bar for what is expected from single-player action-adventure games.
2010 – Red Dead Redemption
Following the success of Grand Theft Auto IV, Rockstar Games took a step back in time to explore the Wild West. It was the spiritual successor to Red Dead Revolver but took everything fantastic about Grand Theft Auto along with it. John Marston remains one of the most compelling protagonists in the history of gaming and Red Dead Redemption is regarded by many as one of the best open-world titles ever made.
2011 – The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
It’s the game that is now seemingly everywhere. One thing that The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim did well is remove the class-system that featured heavily in previous Elder Scrolls titles. The ability to freely explore Skyrim’s skill trees and the freedom to change “classes” as and when the player wanted undoubtedly contributed to its success. It also simplified the in-game interface and better-allowed players to get lost in it’s rich environment and sprawling narrative.
2012 – Telltale’s The Walking Dead
Praised for it’s deeply emotional narrative and consequence-driven gameplay, Telltale’s The Walking Dead was the first step in a renaissance of-sorts in the industry. It was fantastically written and featured incredible stylisation and voice acting, championing a more purely narrative-based experience.
2013 – Grand Theft Auto V
This game has transcended console generations since it’s launch, and for good reason. Grand Theft Auto V is widely regarded as the greatest video game of all time. It features three, compelling, interwoven narratives that highlight a number of key real-world issues. Even without this, though, Grand Theft Auto V offers a near-limitless sandbox experience in Los Santos with an incredible amount of detail and numerous side-missions and activities to get stuck into.
2014 – Dragon Age: Inquisition
Dragon Age: Inquisition married everything good about Dragon Age II’s combat and the strategy involved in Dragon Age: Origins to provide one of the best action-fantasy RPG games ever made. Praised for detailed character creation, visually stunning graphics, and a sprawling narrative, Dragon Age: Inquisition deservedly won Game of the Year. Some people may have thought it lacked the nuance of modern storytelling, but it remains one of the strongest fantasy stories in video game form.
2015 – The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
Geralt of Rivia’s third outing is widely-regarded as one of the greatest video games of all time. It was marred by technical issues on launch, somewhat similarly to how Cyberpunk 2077 has been, but it’s truly enormous, detailed world and compelling continuation of Geralt’s story left many looking past these temporary issues. On top of all this, Doug Cockle’s performance as Geralt remains one of the greatest of all time.
2016 – Overwatch
Overwatch is the first multiplayer-only title to win Game of the Year at The Game Awards. This marks an important step in the critical appreciation of multiplayer titles over single-player, narrative driven, experiences. That being said, it still remains the only multiplayer-exclusive title on the list.
2017 – The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Breath of the Wild is the first Nintendo-exclusive title to win Game of the Year from The Game Awards, despite the popularity and acclaim of previous Mario and Zelda titles. It was the first Zelda title to release on the Nintendo Switch Console and raised the series to a new, higher standard that many agree makes it one of the best titles ever made.
2018 – God of War
2018’s God of War is the first title in the series to move away from it’s Greek Mythology roots, opting to explore Norse Mythology through an older Kratos and his son. It’s sublime gameplay and world-building is complimented fantastically by incredible performance-capture performances and it’s “one shot” gameplay was applauded. Not only is this Game of the Year 2018, but many argue it is the game of the decade.
2019 – Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice won Game of the Year against stiff competition in 2019; however, it won for good reason. Many praised FromSoftware’s decision to evolve their traditional “Souls-like” combat and improve the reliance on “split-second swordsmanship” and parrying. There were also wonderful stealth options and a resurrection system which stuck out amongst the game’s features. Verticality was something always missing in FromSoftware titles and many praised Sekiro’s improved level design that included this.
2020 – The Last of Us Part II
Naughty Dog’s sequel to The Last of Us promised to be mind-blowing, emotionally traumatic, and spectacular. Thankfully, despite delays, it delivered on all this and more. Introducing a second playable character, The Last of Us Part II is arguably the perfect game. Graphically, it is unrivalled and the performance-capture performances throughout are phenomenal. It’s complicated narrative is wonderfully interwoven to maintain the thrilling suspense and mystery throughout. Many regard it as a benchmark for storytelling in video games and it’s polarising nature did not stop it winning Game of the Year in a number of outlets.
2021 – ?
We’re only in the opening stages of the year, but what game do you think has the potential to win Game of the Year at The Game Awards in 2021?
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Are there any games in there that you don’t think deserve GOTY awards? Or, are The Game Awards pretty spot-on?
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