Talk:List of Game of the Year awards/Archive 1

Archive 1

Discussion

What's the game tat's got most overral GotY awards?

Half Life 2 got 35, MGS4 got over 40. I guess Super Mario Galaxy must have got around as much, how bout it? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 201.103.21.116 (talk) 04:51, 15 April 2009 (UTC)


Missing some important GotY awards, like 1up and IGN reader's choice awards (Just as important as the gamespot reader's choice awards, MGS4 got it this year.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 189.253.25.201 (talk) 23:50, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

am i the only one that will improve this article>:( ><ino 10:23, 27 September 2005 (UTC)

I dunno. Why are you creating seperate articles for each platform? There is no need for that. Thunderbrand 17:43, 27 September 2005 (UTC)


Yea there is a need, if i creat them in one, it won't look good, it needs to look professional, if i seperate them people can know what year and what platfrom of GAME OF THEY YEAR, anyway like what i did?:D the way i did it, seems the right way


I think we need a per medium (magazine/website) GOTY article. Fskn 12:41, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

Please, update this page!

This stub needs to be updated.....badly. It has links from 2004 in it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.229.50.193 (talk) 04:24, 31 December 2007 (UTC)

Super Mario Galaxy did not win the majority of the Game of the Year awards, Bioshock actually did. Regardless of who won, neither should be listed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.227.77.144 (talk) 10:34, 3 February 2008 (UTC)

Bullshit. I put up a list on Talk: Super Mario Galaxy#Game of the Year Roundup, using only NOTABLE critic awards, not those you awarded on your personal blog. Prove me wrong. Wikipedian06 (talk) 08:03, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

IGN UK does not represent IGN overall, IGN AU gave Mass Effect 2 GOTY. Taking out IGN GOTY 2010 until the overall GOTY is picked. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 108.119.61.165 (talk) 03:02, 13 December 2010 (UTC)

AIAS

Why are the AIAS awards in this article? It's an obvious bias, and Wikipedia is no place for promoting the views of the AIAS (especially outside of its own article), and not when there are dozens of other media organizations (see IGN, Gamespot, etc.) whose selections are far more notable within the gaming community. (Look at the GameFAQs boards whenever IGN and Gamespot announce their picks, and compare that to after AIAS announces their picks. Few people care about AIAS because (1) they are a relatively obscure organization [1] [2]; (2) their picks are announced very late -- into the next calendar year instead of at the end of the year; and (3) a lot of GameFAQs users have discounted their credibility due to their preference towards first-person shooters, with 7 out of 11 GOTY winners being of that genre.) Wikipedian06 (talk) 21:57, 19 April 2008 (UTC)

Mere inclusion of information relevant to the subject, and notable to anyone searching for Game of the Year does NOT imply bias, and certainly not an "obvious" one. Please note that the inclusion of the AIAS selections did not come at the expense of any other list of awards. Your personal opinions of the AIAS awards themselves are moot (not to mention incorrect, but that doesn't matter here); feel free to add any other overall Game of the Year listings from any other publication or organization noted in the article, as that is the point - to inform the reader. Fifty7 (talk) 23:05, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
I have undone your revision. If you feel like adding the other publications' or organizations' overall GOTY lists, I would suggest removing the "see below" next to the AIAS listing, and turn the list of publications/organizations into a table of contents. Fifty7 (talk) 23:08, 19 April 2008 (UTC)

How about a seperate page for games that claim to be "game of the year"

  • Quite a few games use game of the year as a selling point on the front cover, and a few have titled "Game of the year edition"s (all I can recall are Deus Ex, Morrowind and Oblivion) while other list game of the year awards recived (IIRC The Witcher does)

2008 GOTY Roundup

  • Edge: LBP
  • Eurogamer: LBP
  • Gamepro: LBP
  • Gamespot: MGS4
  • Gamespy: Fallout 3
  • Gametrailers: GTAIV
  • Gamezine: MGS4
  • IGN: (Pending announcement)
  • X-Play: Fable 2

Wikipedian06 (talk) 22:02, 15 January 2009 (UTC)

AIAS has given LBP game of the year. Ffgamera (talk) 08:57, 24 January 2009 (UTC)

It might be worth mentioning the phenomenon of many games being re-released as "Game of the Year" Editions, often with added DLC or Expansion packs now integrated into, or included with, the game. Any thoughts? Cyclonius (talk) 15:03, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

I think that's a good idea. It would be useful information to list, anyway. Off the top of my head, I'm coming up with Oblivion, LittleBigPlanet, Fallout 3, Gears of War 2, Left 4 Dead, CoD4. 128.38.168.103 (talk) 13:04, 15 December 2009 (UTC) who the hell labeled Batman AA as a shooter?!??!? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.148.157.116 (talk) 17:56, 2 January 2010 (UTC)
Also add The Operative - No One Lives Forever and Warhammer 40k - Dawn of War as well as Kohan - Immortal Sovereigns. I wonder why none of them appear in any of the lists. Do these games just claim to be GotYs?--TeakHoken91.47.70.240 (talk) 21:41, 28 June 2011 (UTC)

Best Review Score Not Mean Game Of The Year Award

Metacritic & GameRankings use average review score. The best average review score not mean game of the year award. There are many cases that game of the year award give to game that review score lower than the others.

Edit request from 141.218.227.165, 20 January 2011

{{edit semi-protected}} Requesting the section "Art of Interactive Entertainment" be removed for reasons of notability and self promotion.

141.218.227.165 (talk) 03:30, 20 January 2011 (UTC)

  Not done: I don't see a section called "Art of Interactive Entertainment". I do see a section called the "Academy of Interactive Entertainment," but the fact that they have their own wikipage implies to me that they meet our notability standards. I don't see how they are any more or less promotional than the rest of the awards handed out by companies, magazines, and other groups. Qwyrxian (talk) 05:57, 20 January 2011 (UTC)

Typo

Is it just me, or is the "Games" GotY list a year ahead? 74.197.34.135 (talk) 07:11, 19 December 2011 (UTC)

You are correct. The note underneath that table explains why. Should we add a note to the top as well perhaps? -Thibbs (talk) 15:58, 19 December 2011 (UTC)

Suggestion/Other Use of Term

I suggest we add a clarification that "GOTY" often refers to a re-release of a game including its full DLC, and it's not necessarily an award from a reviewer. In fact I'd wager most games with the GOTY branding are using GOTY with that meaning today. Though some games do use different labels, such as the recent release of "Saint Row 3: The Full Package". GOTY seems to be the most common label for DLC re-releases though. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.50.186.170 (talk) 09:32, 16 November 2012 (UTC)

Moby Games

Moby Games is a website which ranks the games according to the average review score, just like Gamerankings and Metacritic, so I suggest to add it since the web shows a list of its GOTY from 1980 to 2012. Moby Games GOTY list --Apolo13 (talk) 03:11, 29 January 2013 (UTC)

Needed changes

I iVoted keep at the AfD on condition of changes. The article seems to be a valuable information source (see item #1 WP:LISTPURP), but has problems. I think the following changes should be made and the AfD issue revisited in light of the changes or lack of these changes:

  • 1. Rename to Lists of Game of the Year awards or List of games receiving Game of the Year awards.
  • 2. For the "Video games – Critic and editor awards (Game of the Year)" section, create a "Critic and Editor" column in each table and then put all the tables into one connected table. By allowing multiple Critic and Editor listed for a single entry, that will shrink the long article. Also, readers of the list are no so interested in who gave the award. Rather, they first are interested in the "Game", then the Year, then interested in which Game of the Year awards it received. After all, the article is called "Game" of the "Year". The other sections can be similarly changed so that the page only has five tables.
  • 3. Create a Notes column for each table. Each entry needs to be sourced and the Notes column is where that reference can be placed.
  • 4. The references used need to be independent of the organization giving the award and need to be published by a reliable source. This will help focus the article.
  • 5 Selection criteria - The lack of selection criteria is where this article fails:
  • Who: If I create a website and list my Game of the Year awards, will my website be listed in this Wikipedia article? That certainly would help publicize my website! Should this list be limited to awards from publications that are printed with ink on paper on a regular or periodic schedule? We could have separate Lists of Game of the Year awards from print publications and Lists of Game of the Year awards from websites to have better control over the website entries.
  • When: Should the Lists of Game of the Year awards entries be from the very first game invented (e.g., by cavemen) or is it limited to games that came into existence after the 19th century? Is it limited to awards focused on the first year a game is published?
  • What: What about board games like mancala or is it awards for only electronic games? Should new versions of Kick the Can game or other play type game that receive Game of the Year awards be included?
  • Where: Should the Lists of Game of the Year awards entries be from any Game of the Year award given anywhere in the world? Should the list be limited to awards list originally published in the English language?

I'm skeptical that a selection criteria can be made that is unambiguous and objective. However, I'm willing to give editors a chance to address the above issues to then judge at AfD in two months from the close of the AfD as to whether the product resulting from those changes should be kept or deleted. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:36, 27 February 2013 (UTC)

Removed content

I removed any section that lacked even a single citation, the tables and content are preserved here so they can be cited and restored when someone gets round to it. If someone is re-adding, please make sure and put the tables in the correct sections. Cabe6403 (TalkSign) 09:49, 11 March 2013 (UTC)

removed content unsourced

Electronic Gaming Monthly

The winners of the Electronic Gaming Monthly Game of the Year are chosen by the magazine's editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2012 Far Cry 3 First-person shooter Windows Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Ubisoft Montreal
2011 The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Open World: RPG Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC Bethesda Game Studios
2010 Red Dead Redemption Open World: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar San Diego
2009 Uncharted 2: Among Thieves Action-Adventure: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2008 Grand Theft Auto IV Open World: (Third-Person) Action Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar North
2007 BioShock Survival Horror: (First-Person) Shooter Windows, Xbox 360, Mac OS X, PlayStation 3 2K Boston/2K Australia
2006 The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess Action-adventure Wii, Nintendo GameCube Nintendo
2005 Resident Evil 4 Survival Horror: (Third-Person) Shooter GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows, Wii Capcom
2004 Halo 2 (First-Person) Shooter Xbox, Windows, Bungie
2003 Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Action-Adventure: Hack & Slash Platformer Xbox, GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows Ubisoft Montreal
2002 Metroid Prime (First-Person) Action-Adventure Nintendo GameCube Nintendo
2001 Halo: Combat Evolved (First-Person) Shooter Xbox, Windows, Macintosh Bungie
2000 Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 Sports PC, Nintendo 64, PlayStation, Dreamcast Activision
1999 Soul Calibur Fighting Sega Dreamcast Namco
1998 The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time Action-Adventure Nintendo 64 Nintendo
1997 Goldeneye 007 (First-Person) Shooter Nintendo 64 Rare
1996 Super Mario 64 Action-Platformer Nintendo 64 Nintendo
1995 Twisted Metal Action-Driving PlayStation SingleTrac
1994 Donkey Kong Country (Side-Scrolling) Action-Platformer Super Nintendo Rare
1993 Samurai Shodown Fighting Neo-Geo MVS SNK
1992 (Tie) Sonic the Hedgehog 2 Action-Platformer, Racing Sega Master System, Game Gear, Genesis Sega
1992 (Tie) Street Fighter II Fighting Super Nintendo Capcom
1991 Sonic the Hedgehog (Side-Scrolling) Action-Platformer Sega Genesis Sega
1990 Strider (Side-Scrolling) Action-Platformer Sega Genesis Capcom
1989 Ghouls'n Ghosts (Side-Scrolling) Action-Platformer Sega Genesis Capcom
1988 Double Dragon (Side-Scrolling) Beat 'em up NES American Technos
Greatest Games (Pre-1990)
Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
1989 Herzog Zwei[1] (Real-Time) Strategy Mega Drive / Genesis Technosoft
1988 Super Mario Bros. 2[1] (Side-Scrolling) Platformer Nintendo Entertainment System, Super Nintendo, Game Boy Advance, Virtual Console Nintendo EAD
1987 Tetris[2] Puzzle Elektronika 60, MS-DOS, Arcade, Nintendo Entertainment System, Game Boy, Windows Alexey Pajitnov, Bullet Proof Software
1986 The Legend of Zelda[2] Action-Adventure: Open World Famicom Disk System, Nintendo Entertainment System, Nintendo GameCube, Game Boy Advance, Virtual Console Nintendo EAD
1985 Super Mario Bros.
(Best Game of All Time)[2]
(Side-Scrolling) Platformer Nintendo Entertainment System, Famicom Disk System, Arcade, Super Nintendo, Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, Virtual Console Nintendo EAD
1981 Galaga[1] Shoot 'Em Up Arcade, Atari 7800, Famicom Disk System, NES, Game Boy, GameTap, MSX, SG-1000, TRS-80, iOS, 3DS, Roku, N64, NDS, PS2, Xbox, GameCube, GBA, Windows, PSP, PlayStation, Dreamcast, Xbox 360, PS3, Wii Namco
1980 Pac-Man[2] Maze Arcade, Mini-Arcade, Atari 2600/5200, Atari 8-bit, Commodore VIC-20, Apple II, Commodore 64, Intellivision, NES, MSX, Game Boy, Game Gear, Neo Geo Pocket Color, Game Boy Color, Mobile, XBLA, Virtual Console, iOS Namco
1978 Space Invaders[2] Shoot 'Em Up Arcade, Atari 2600/5200, Atari 400/800, Handheld, NES, WonderSwan, Sky Active, Mobile, iOS Taito
1972 Pong[2] Sports Arcade, Dedicated, PC, Mega Drive, PlayStation Portable, Nintendo DS Atari

Readers choice

In addition to their Editors' Choice Awards, Electronic Gaming Monthly also handed out Readers' Choice Awards voted by the magazine's readers.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2003 Prince of Persia: Sands of Time[3] Platform-Adventure PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Game Boy Advance, Windows, PlayStation 3 Ubisoft Montreal
2002 Metroid Prime (First-Person) Action-Adventure GameCube, Wii Retro Studios, Nintendo
2001 Halo: Combat Evolved (First-Person) Shooter Xbox, Windows, Mac OS X, Xbox 360 Bungie
1998 The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time[4] Action-Adventure Nintendo 64, GameCube, iQue Player, Virtual Console, Nintendo 3DS
1997 Final Fantasy VII[5] Role-Playing Game PlayStation, Windows, PlayStation Network Squaresoft

GamesMaster

The winners of the GamesMaster Game of the Year are chosen by GamesMaster editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2012 Halo 4 (First-Person) Shooter Xbox 343 Industries
2011 Batman: Arkham City Action-Adventure Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rocksteady Studios
2010 Super Mario Galaxy 2 Platformer Wii Nintendo
2009 Batman: Arkham Asylum Action/adventure Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC Eidos Interactive
2008 Grand Theft Auto IV Open World, Action Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar North
2007 Super Mario Galaxy Platformer Wii Nintendo
2006 The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess Action-adventure Wii, Nintendo GameCube Nintendo
2005 Resident Evil 4 Survival Horror: (Third-Person) Shooter GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows, Wii Capcom

Nintendo Power Awards

The winners of the Nintendo Power Awards, also known as the Nester Awards, from 1988 onwards.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword Action-Adventure: Open World Wii Nintendo EAD, Monolith Soft
2010 Super Mario Galaxy 2 Platformer Wii Nintendo EAD Tokyo
2009 New Super Mario Bros. Wii (Side-Scrolling) Platformer Wii Nintendo EAD
2008 Super Smash Bros. Brawl Fighting Wii HAL Laboratory, Sora, Game Arts, Monolith Soft, Paon
2007 Super Mario Galaxy Platformer Wii Nintendo EAD Tokyo
2006 The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess Action-Adventure GameCube, Wii Nintendo EAD
2005 Resident Evil 4 Survival Horror: (Third-Person) Shooter GameCube Capcom Production Studio 4
2004 Metroid Prime 2: Echoes (First-Person) Action-Adventure GameCube Retro Studios, Nintendo
2003 The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker Action-Adventure: Open World GameCube Nintendo EAD
2002 Metroid Prime (First-Person) Action-Adventure GameCube Retro Studios, Nintendo EAD, Nintendo R&D1
2001 Super Smash Bros. Melee Fighting GameCube HAL Laboratory
2000 The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask Action-Adventure: Open World Nintendo 64 Nintendo EAD
1999 Donkey Kong 64 Platformer Nintendo 64 Rare Ltd.
1998 The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time Action-Adventure: Open World Nintendo 64 Nintendo EAD
1997 GoldenEye 007 (First-Person) Shooter Nintendo 64 Rare Ltd.
1996 Super Mario 64 Platformer: Open World Nintendo 64 Nintendo EAD
1995 Chrono Trigger Role-Playing Game Super NES Squaresoft
1994 Donkey Kong Country (Side-Scrolling) Platformer Super NES Rare
1993 Mortal Kombat Fighting Super NES Midway, Sculptured Software
1992 Street Fighter II: The World Warrior Fighting Super NES Capcom
1991 Super Mario World (Side-Scrolling) Platformer Super NES Nintendo EAD
1990 Super Mario Bros. 3 (Side-Scrolling) Platformer Nintendo Entertainment System Nintendo EAD
1989 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Platform-Action Nintendo Entertainment System Konami
1988 Zelda II: The Adventure of Link Action RPG: Platform-Adventure Nintendo Entertainment System Nintendo EAD

PC Gamer (US)

The winners of the PC Gamer (US) Game of the Year are chosen by editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2012 Mass Effect 3 Action RPG Windows Bioware
2011 The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Action RPG Windows Bethesda Game Studios
2010 Starcraft II: Wings of Liberty Real-time Strategy Windows Blizzard Entertainment
2009 Dragon Age: Origins Role-Playing Game Windows BioWare, Edge of Reality
2008 Fallout 3 Action RPG Windows Bethesda Game Studios
2007 Crysis First-Person Shooter Windows Crytek
2006 Company of Heroes Real-time Strategy Windows Relic Entertainment
2005 Battlefield 2 First-Person Shooter Windows Digital Illusions CE
2004 Half-Life 2 First-Person Shooter Windows Valve Corporation
2003 Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic Role-Playing Game Windows Bioware
2002 Battlefield 1942 First-Person Shooter Windows Digital Illusions CE
2001 Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon First-Person Shooter Windows Red Storm Entertainment
2000 Deus Ex Action RPG Windows Ion Storm
1999 Homeworld Real-time Strategy Windows Relic Entertainment
1998 Half-Life First-Person Shooter Windows Valve Corporation
1997 Star Wars Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II Real-time Strategy Windows Relic Entertainment
1996 Civilization II Turn-based Strategy Windows MicroProse
1995 Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness Real-time Strategy Windows Blizzard Entertainment
1994 Doom First-Person Shooter Windows id Software

PlayStation Official Magazine (UK)

The winners of the PlayStation Official Magazine (UK) Game of the Year are chosen by editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception Action-Adventure: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2010 Red Dead Redemption Open World: (Third-Person) Shooter Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 Rockstar Games
2009 Uncharted 2: Among Thieves Action-Adventure: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2008 Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots Stealth-Action: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3 Kojima Productions
2007 Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (First-Person) Shooter Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Windows, Infinity Ward

Cheat Code Central

The winners of the Cheat Code Central Game of the Year are chosen by CheatCC editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception Action-Adventure: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2010 Red Dead Redemption Open World: Action-Adventure Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 Rockstar Games
2009 Uncharted 2: Among Thieves Action-Adventure: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2008 LittleBigPlanet Puzzle-Platformer PlayStation 3 Media Molecule
2007 BioShock (First-Person) Shooter Windows, Xbox 360, Mac OS X, PlayStation 3 2K Boston/2K Australia
2006 The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess Action-Adventure Wii, Nintendo GameCube Nintendo
2005 Resident Evil 4 Survival Horror: (Third-Person) Shooter GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows, Wii Capcom

E!Online

The winners of the E!Online Game of the Year are chosen by E!Online editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 Batman: Arkham City Action-Adventure Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rocksteady Studios

Rock, Paper, Shotgun

The winners of the Rock, Paper, Shotgun PC Game of the Year are chosen by editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2012 Far Cry 3 First-person shooter Windows Ubisoft Montreal
2011 The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Action RPG Windows Bethesda Game Studios
2010 Minecraft First person, Sandbox, RPG Windows Mojang
2009 Dragon Age: Origins Role-Playing Game Windows BioWare, Edge of Reality
2008 World of Goo Puzzle Windows 2D Boy
2007 Portal Puzzle, first-person shooter Windows Valve Corporation

Spike Video Game Awards

The winners of the Spike Video Game Awards Game of the Year are chosen by an advisory council, featuring 25 journalists from various media outlets.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2012 The Walking Dead Point-and-click adventure game Xbox 360, Playstation 3, Windows, OS X, iOS Telltale Games
2011 The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Action RPG Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Windows Bethesda Game Studios
2010 Red Dead Redemption Open World, (Third-Person) Shooter Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 Rockstar San Diego
2009 Uncharted 2: Among Thieves Third-person shooter PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2008 Grand Theft Auto IV[6] Open World, Action Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar North
2007 BioShock Shooter Windows, Xbox 360, Mac OS X, PlayStation 3 2K Boston/2K Australia
2006 The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Action RPG Xbox 360 Bethesda Game Studios
2005 Resident Evil 4 Survival Horror: (Third-Person) Shooter GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows, Wii Capcom
2004 Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas Open World: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 2, Windows, Xbox Rockstar North
2003 Madden NFL 2004 Sports game PlayStation 2, Windows, GameCube, Xbox 360 EA Tiburon

VentureBeat

The winners of the VentureBeat Game of the Year are chosen by editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception Action-adventure PlayStation 3 Naughty Dog
2010 Red Dead Redemption Open World: (Third-Person) Shooter PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar San Diego
2009 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (First-Person) Shooter Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Infinity Ward
2008 Gears of War 2 Third person shooter Xbox 360 Epic Games
2007 Super Mario Galaxy Platformer Wii Nintendo EAD Tokyo Development Group

Academy of Interactive Entertainment

Formerly known as Academy of Video Games. Includes all GOTY Winners picked by AIE staff members. Note: All winners before 1993 were picked in 1993 when AIE was formed.

Year Game Platform
2011 The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
2010 Red Dead Redemption PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
2009 Dragon Age: Origins PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
2008 Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots PlayStation 3
2007 Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
2006 The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
2005 God of War PlayStation 2
2004 Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas PlayStation 2
2003 Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic Xbox, PC
2002 Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell Xbox, PS2, PC
2001 Final Fantasy X PlayStation 2
2000 No One Lives Forever PC
1999 Shenmue Dreamcast
1998 The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time Nintendo 64
1997 Final Fantasy VII PlayStation
1996 Resident Evil PlayStation
1995 Chrono Trigger Super Nintendo
1994 Super Metroid Super Nintendo
1993 Secret of Mana Super Nintendo
1992 Lunar: The Silver Star Sega CD
1991 The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past Super Nintendo
1990 The Secret of Monkey Island PC
1989 Final Fight Arcade
1988 Ninja Gaiden NES
1987 Punch-Out!! NES
1986 The Legend of Zelda NES
1985 Super Mario Bros. NES
1984 Tetris NES
1983 Dragon's Lair Arcade
1982 Pitfall! Atari
1981 Castle Wolfenstein Apple II
1980 Mystery House Apple II
1979 Adventure Atari
1978 Space Invaders Arcade

Gamest Awards

The Japanese Gamest magazine was published from 1986 to 1999, and held the Gamest Award ceremonies every year, focusing mainly on arcade games. The winners of the Grand Prize awards were chosen by voters.

Year Game Genre Company
1998 (12th) Psychic Force 2012 Fighting Taito
1997 (11th) Vampire Savior Fighting Capcom
1996 (10th) Street Fighter Zero 2 Fighting Capcom
1995 (9th) Virtua Fighter 2 Fighting Sega
1994 (8th) The King of Fighters '94 Fighting SNK
1993 (7th) Samurai Spirits Fighting SNK
1992 (6th) Street Fighter II Dash Fighting Capcom
1991 (5th) Street Fighter II Fighting Capcom
1990 (4th) Final Fight Beat 'Em Up Capcom
1989 (3rd) Tetris Puzzle Sega
1988 (2nd) Gradius II (Side-Scrolling) Shooter Konami
1987 (1st) Darius (Side-Scrolling) Shooter Taito

Japan Media Arts Festival

The video games in the Entertainment/Interactive Art division of the Japan Media Arts Festival that have won Grand Prizes or Excellence Prizes.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2010 (14th) Echochrome II Puzzle PlayStation 3 SCE Japan Studio
2009 (13th) Naruto: Ultimate Ninja Storm Fighting PlayStation 3 CyberConnect2
2008 (12th) Wii Fit Fitness Wii Nintendo EAD
2007 (11th) Wii Sports Sports Wii Nintendo EAD
2006 (10th) Ōkami Action-Adventure PlayStation 2, Wii Clover Studio
2005 (9th) Nintendogs (Pet) Simulation Nintendo DS Nintendo EAD
2004 (8th) WarioWare: Twisted! Action Nintendo DS Nintendo SPD, Intelligent Systems
2003 (7th) Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles Action Role-Playing Game GameCube The Game Designers Studio
2001 (5th) Pikmin Real-Time Strategy GameCube, Wii Nintendo EAD
2000 (4th) Dragon Quest VII Role-Playing Game PlayStation Heartbeat, ArtePiazza
1999 (3rd) Seaman (Pet) Simulation Dreamcast, PlayStation 2 Vivarium
1998 (2nd) The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time Action-Adventure: Open World Nintendo 64, GameCube, iQue Player, Virtual Console, Nintendo 3DS Nintendo EAD
1997 (1st) Final Fantasy VII
Intelligent Qube
Role-Playing Game
Puzzle
PlayStation, Windows, PlayStation Network
PlayStation, Mobile
Square
Sony Computer Entertainment

Los Angeles Times

The winners of the Los Angeles Times Game of the Year are chosen by Los Angeles Times editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2009 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 First-person shooter, third-person shooter Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Infinity Ward
2008 Grand Theft Auto IV Open World, Action Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar North

Metro GameCentral

The top game of each year, chosen by Metro's GameCentral editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword Action-Adventure: Open World Wii Nintendo EAD, Monolith Soft
2010 Super Mario Galaxy 2 Platformer Wii Nintendo EAD
2009 Street Fighter IV Fighting PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Windows Capcom, Dimps
2008 Fallout 3 Role-Playing Game Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Windows Bethesda Game Studios
2007 Super Mario Galaxy Platformer Wii Nintendo EAD
2006 The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess Action-Adventure: Open World Wii, GameCube Nintendo EAD
2005 Resident Evil 4 Survival Horror: (Third-Person) Shooter GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows, Wii, iOS, Zeebo, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Capcom Production Studio 4

Time (magazine)

The winners of the Time magazine Game of the Year are chosen by Time magazine editors.

Year Game Genre Platform(s) Developer(s)
2011 Minecraft First person, Sandbox, RPG Java platform, Java applet, Android, iOS, Xbox 360 Mojang
2010 Alan Wake Action/Adventure, Survival horror Xbox 360 Remedy
2009 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 , First-person shooter Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Infinity Ward
2008 Grand Theft Auto IV Open World, Action Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Rockstar North
2007 Halo 3 First-person shooter Xbox 360 Bungie
2006 Wii Sports Sports game Wii Nintendo EAD


This information simply isn't available online. These publications were magazine-only and will never upload their content. So there are no "sources" that could be linked. The "source" would just be to say "PC Gamer December Issue 2000" and then put that at the bottom of the page. That's the best you are going to get. Anyway, the lists look correct to me, and I think it serves the article better to have this content listed rather than delete it. Can we restore this content to the article? Cecoppola (talk) 04:41, 9 February 2017 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ a b c "Top 100 Games Ever". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Kisrael. 2002. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "The Best Video Games in the History of Humanity". Filibuster Cartoons. March 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  3. ^ "Electronic Gaming Monthly Reveals Winners for '2003 Gamers' Choice Awards'". PR Newswire. 2 February 2004. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  4. ^ "1998 Gamers' Choice Awards". Electronic Gaming Monthly (117): 107–114 [114]. 1999. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. ^ "Readers' Choice Awards". Electronic Gaming Monthly (104): 100. 1998. Retrieved 8 February 2012. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  6. ^ "Spike TV Announces 2008 "Video Game Award" Winners".

Selection criteria

For this article to be more than a repository of every GotY award awarded we should have some sort of selection criteria for each category: Video game specific print, Video game specific website, Institutions and award shows and other publications/media

I've laid out a very simple set of criteria and hopefully we can expand on them Cabe6403 (TalkSign) 10:07, 11 March 2013 (UTC)

What is the purpose of compiling all GOTY lists into one place? If you're interested in a particular publication's GOTY, you should be able to find it at the article for that publication. If you're interested in a game's accolades, you should be able to find it at the reception section of the game's article. What do we gain from copy-pasta-ing all of those GOTY tables into one place, besides convenience for the lazy? I think that an article that aggregated which games got the most GOTYs by year would be more interesting (kind of analogous to "number of Oscar nominations", perhaps?). The selection criteria discussed below would be decided to limit the scope to notable publications, of course. Axem Titanium (talk) 14:14, 12 March 2013 (UTC)
I somewhat agree if I'm honest but that is a huge piece of work to undertake, one I'm not sure I could manage (I'm not very good with wikitables and, while I know scripts exist, I've never used them). I think we consider that the end goal but, for now, cleaning up the data should be a priority. Once this article is nicely sourced and with the right stuff included we can take the data and transform it into something like your suggestion. Cabe6403 (TalkSign) 09:06, 14 March 2013 (UTC)
I agree, it is quite a large undertaking and I'm not necessarily up to do it right this moment either. Glad we're on the same page about the eventual direction of the article though. Axem Titanium (talk) 13:31, 14 March 2013 (UTC)

General criteria

  • How many years do we consider a minimum? Is one year enough or should it be at least 2/3/5 or does it not really matter so long as the specific criteria for that awarder is met? Cabe6403 (TalkSign) 10:07, 11 March 2013 (UTC)
    • I'm pretty sure every publication, web or print, has done a GOTY every year since they started publishing, and if they started this year, they're gonna do it again next year. This criterion doesn't seem like it'll weed anyone out. Axem Titanium (talk) 13:31, 14 March 2013 (UTC)

Video game specific publications criteria

Video game specific website criteria

  • Number of unique hits per day/month? Cabe6403 (TalkSign) 10:07, 11 March 2013 (UTC)
    • This is tricky, since there are so many websites and the threshold for notability seems to be lower. It's a lot easier to make a website than a magazine, so that's why there are so many more of the former. I think the only way to hash out this list is to put it up at WT:VG and discuss, case-by-case. The obvious ones like IGN, GameSpot, etc. don't need to be, but stuff like MMGM, CrispyGamer, etc. should be. Axem Titanium (talk) 13:31, 14 March 2013 (UTC)

Institutions and award shows criteria

Other publications/media criteria

Platform-specific publications

  • What should we do about platform-specific magazines and websites? They don't seem to be included at present. Including them would seem to turn the article into a contest of whoever has the most platform-specific publications on their side. I think, at best, they should be listed in their own section. Or, in the hypothetical end-state of this article, they would be aggregated separately from the platform-agnostic publications. Axem Titanium (talk) 13:31, 14 March 2013 (UTC)
    • I agree, at the moment since we're going on a publication/website basis it's not a huge issue but when the data is amalgamated we'll want to consider seperating them to avoid skewing the figures. Cabe6403 (TalkSign) 10:52, 15 March 2013 (UTC)

Are the E3 awards really appropriate here?

They're not exactly "game of the year" since upcoming games with impressive demos often / usually win. Note that the Titanfall preview won in the summer of 2013, despite the game not even being released as of today! It's certainly possible to imagine games with great demos that win E3 and are tremendously disappointing at launch. It just doesn't seem to be a very good fit here, and would be better moved to an E3 article or the like. SnowFire (talk) 00:13, 23 February 2014 (UTC)

Date ordering?

Some of the awards are listed with the most recent games at the top of the tables, while others have the oldest at the top and the newest added as rows on the bottom as they're announced. Can we get some sort of standardization? CyMoahk2 (talk) 17:27, 5 June 2014 (UTC)

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Platinum Triad Strategy Game of the Year from CGR

is claimed by some computer games... Apparently sth called Computer Game Review... Completely non-notable? or just needs to be included with sourcing? — LlywelynII 07:11, 30 April 2016 (UTC)


References

These shouldn't exist.

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non-sense goty awards

why magazine picks are considered goty?or even readers pick??shouldn't only professional voting count as any other medium?only the video game awards/game developer awards/bafta/NAVGTR/and D.i.c.e awards should be counted. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 177.65.154.90 (talk) 01:29, 15 December 2016 (UTC)

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Why who is not admin cannot edit on this page anymore?

Let's give an example, I saw that the Game Awards gave GOTY to Zelda, so I come edit and make this page more updated, but it will not be possible because the Master of page will evaluate if the edition its good enough.. So even if the winner has already been chosen and has links and everything to prove, is not my edition worth it until you accept it? This to me is bullshit, I know you protected the page because people can not edit the idiocy, but you can do the same before, see the edit and delete if it was bullshit, now an edition of a site that changed the name came quick to change, nor to check if it was true before deleting, I think it's good you to change your concepts. 20:42, 20 October 2017 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 177.47.27.247 (talk)

Several people without accounts have made vandalistic edits to this page in the past, so the page has been semi-protected so that edits to the page must be “accepted” in order to be finalized and added to the page. I hope this makes sense to you and you understand why edits need to go through pending.

You could always create an account if you want to edit pages, of course! :)TheDisneyGamer (talk) 21:21, 20 October 2017 (UTC)

So, just that this type of edition you approve, right? That you let pass ... Detail: it has no account, only appears his IP, so technically he can't edit https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Game_of_the_Year_awards&diff=805650638&oldid=805565483 02:40, 23 October 2017 (UTC)

Please Just Read

I'd just like to know why of your bias by random people's edits on this page. Not everyone here comes unwillingly to ruin the page, there are people who come here and make an edition of which the information is correct. But you simply interpret it as vandalism or whatever. Ask ADM that protected the page remove this blocking that I assure myself that nobody will come edit nonsenses here, we just want to add information to the page. MalakoiExpert (talk) 18:27, 28 October 2017 (UTC)

Nobody is saying that all people who come to edit this page are 7 year-olds and other vandals who have come to completely mess up Wikipedia, we really aren’t. The reason that this page was protected is because several people were making problematic, unhelpful edits in the past, and in order to end that he page was protected so that edits have to be accepted before being enacted. If you really have such a big problem with that then feel free to keep conplaining about it- I certainly won’t stop you from it!- or you could just deal with the solid fact that at the moments your edits must be approved by administrators before it’s applied to the page- then, if your edit is deemed viable then it will be approved and added to the article, otherwise it’ll be undone/reverted. It affects me and every other non-admin editor here just as it affects you, so instead of complaining why don’t you just deal with it? I mean if your edits aren’t vandalistic and contribute helpful info to the page then I don’t see what the problem is in it being reviewed by other people before it’s finalized.TheDisneyGamer (talk) 19:58, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
Um, you got angry, huh? Buddy, I did a simple questioning, you got angry because you wanted to. The point is that this page is already bad, has several awards that no longer exist, and I think it should have a update to this page, but with this system pending is complicated, because they do not even look to see if the edition is compatible. And another, you are ADM here, nobody will change your edition, but there are others around here who do not even wait to check the edition, and remove it by pure ignorance. I'm not fighting, I'm just debating, remember that. MalakoiExpert (talk) 02:25, 29 October 2017 (UTC)
Alright, it seems that you’re somewhat misunderstanding what the protection does and who it affects. First of all, I’m not angry, I’m only questioning why you’re so upset by this. Secondly, I’m not an administrator- You seem to think that I am, but I really am not. I’m a normal editor like you, but I’ve been editing for at least a year or two. You only started editing at least a couple of days ago, and THAT’S why you aren’t able to edit this page- the page is protected so that only autoconfirmed users can edit it, not so that only administrators can edit. The reason I’m able to edit the page is because I joined WP a couple of years ago and have thus been autoconfirmed by a bot. You’ve been editing for a very short period of time, and this you still count as a “new user”. After a few months (I think; I’m not sure exactly how long, but something like that I’m pretty sure), you will be autoconfirmed probably by a Wikipedia bot, and then you’ll be able to edit this page without having to deal with any pending process crap. I can see that you have legitimate feelings about this article, and I understand that it must be somewhat annoying to be unable to edit anything, but I’m afraid that it’s just the way that it is- when a WP article is being vandalized by several IP editors, it’s probably going to be protected so that IP’s can’t mess it up anymore, even though not everybody who’s an IP editor/new user has malicious intents. In the meantime, there are probably plenty of other articles that aren’t protected that you could contribute to, instead of lingering on this one and continuing to complain about the fact that it’s protected.TheDisneyGamer (talk) 17:23, 29 October 2017 (UTC)
Okay, thanks for the explanation. I guess, they should create a Bot to monitor this page, and evaluate the editions, not the editors themselves to do it, so you do not have to protect the page from malicious issues, of course, sometimes the Bot can go wrong and delete a correct edit, but if it is well programmed, it will not make mistakes and it would make it easier to work, rather than waiting for someone to evaluate your issue and perhaps delete it only by not knowing who you are and thinking you are a vandal. I do not know if I was clear, but this is my opinion about this. MalakoiExpert (talk) 00:36, 31 October 2017 (UTC)

Please review the Protection policy for any questions you may have relating to the protection of this page. Just a few days ago I was involved in blocking several new editors who were engaging in behaviour that was deserving of a block, making personal attacks towards each other, and editing the article in a disruptive manner. Just today I have had to warn an editor against making personal attacks towards others on this talk page.

Unfortunately, when folks cannot behave in a civil manner towards each other and the article begins to suffer as a result of disputes between editors (including vandalism), page protection is one of the many defences against such disruptive editing.

Pending revisions to the article are brought to the attention of others and they'll be reviewed accordingly by users with the appropriate access to do so. If you wish to see the article unprotected, then those engaging in the disruptive editing will need to learn to behave according to Wikipedia policy. It's not that hard to be civil, cooperate, and put petty disagreements aside if you try. -- Longhair\talk 01:12, 28 November 2017 (UTC)

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Remove them, please.

These Voxel guys have no credibility at all, you guys should take them off this list, they do not even play to make reviews, how can they award a Game of the Year? In fact, none of these journalists even play the games, I think those awards sucks, but it's because these journalists want to talk about what they do not know, so I think it's irrelevant. The readers is even asking Gamertag and PSN ID of these journalists to know if they play, because they influence many to buy games based on their opinions, being that they talk about what they do not know, especially these guys from Voxel. I would like to remove them from this list, they have no merit. And another, I would like you to go to GOTYPICKS.BLOGSPOT.COM, because they do a compilation of Goty's said by various sites and awards, and there you can see other sites to include in this list. See you. 15:06, 21 November 2017 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2804:7F0:A090:EDBD:3D03:70AB:AF8E:1A4A (talk)

A lot of your suggestions in terms of Voxel and these other GOTY awards seem to stem solely from your opinion... it may be true that they don’t actually play the games, but that’s besides the point of Wikipedia, which is to be an encyclopedia- in other words, inclusions aren’t made based on the quality of the award so much as the notability of the award. Basically that means whether or not it’s something that’s cared about y a large number of people- the difference between, say, a popular artist like Elton John and an obscure rapper on YouTube or something like that.
Basically my point is that regardless of the “credibility” of Voxel, the point still stands that it’s a recurring award ceremony that exists and is prolific enough to be mentioned on WP.
Sorry if this is inadvertantly unclear or confusing- I tried to make what I’m talking about as understandable as possible. I’ll totally try and look into the website you mentioned though! :)
P.S. I left a message on your talk page that I suggest you check out.TheDisneyGamer (talk) 15:42, 21 November 2017 (UTC)
If possible take a look at this site, it is very good to make compilations of awards from Goty, even the game companies use it with reference, you have seen in that Goty version of Overwatch, which they saying that it is a winning game of more than 100 awards? Or have you seen that The Witcher 3 won 257 awards? Probably caught on that site. And I left a question on your dialogue page, please do not criticize me for what I asked and I'm not a jerk if you get a bad impression of me. OldHunterX (talk) 00:05, 22 November 2017 (UTC)

I have a suggestion

I wanted to propose to you if I could put a list that shows the game that won the most awards in the year, or else the games that won the most, like a top 3, since 2003 we already know the number of goty of certain games, I think that it would be cool for you to report on the game that won the most prizes like Uncharted 4 in 2016, The Witcher 3 in 2015, etc. I know you already have a website that does this, as has already been said in another paragraph, but there are many people who do not know this site and come here to know that game won goty in certain awards in certain sites, would be an interesting thing, could put before or after all the sites listed, just to people have a notion, if you decide to add I volunteer to put in . Thank you in advance if you will respond. BriefingMan (talk) 18:50, 22 November 2017 (UTC)

Do you have any sources or references to back your point up? Neverrainy (talk) 03:32, 27 November 2017 (UTC)
Of course, if I say it's because I assure you, you can leave it to me. BriefingMan (talk) 21:24, 27 November 2017 (UTC)
Your suggestion has been rejected as you don't have any sources or references to back up your point and you didn't even bother editing the article. Neverrainy (talk) 22:33, 27 November 2017 (UTC)
So, go fuck yourself ok? I do not even know why I try to help you, they would not let me edit anyway, their bunch of wanker BriefingMan (talk) 00:34, 28 November 2017 (UTC)
You're arrogant, huh? FelinoPlayer (talk) 00:46, 28 November 2017 (UTC)
Please refrain from using coarse language on Wikipedia. That will not help get your point across your reason on editing Wikipedia. Neverrainy (talk) 16:09, 28 November 2017 (UTC)