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BAFTA Games Awards: Full list of winners
BAFTA Games Awards: Full list of winners

Sky News

time08-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Sky News

BAFTA Games Awards: Full list of winners

The BAFTA Games Awards celebrate gaming excellence and creative achievement in the best games of the last year. Hosted by comedian Phil Wang for the second year running, the biggest names in gaming gathered at London's Queen Elizabeth Hall. With 41 games nominated across 17 categories, here are all the winners - in bold - from the night. Animation Astro Bot Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 LEGO Horizon Adventures Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Thank Goodness You're Here! Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 Artistic Achievement Astro Bot Black Myth: Wukong Harold Halibut Neva Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Still Wakes the Deep Audio Achievement ANIMAL WELL Astro Bot Helldivers 2 Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Star Wars Outlaws Still Wakes the Deep Best Game Astro Bot Balatro Black Myth: Wukong Helldivers 2 The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom Thank Goodness You're Here! British Game A Highland Song LEGO Horizon Adventures Paper Trail Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Still Wakes the Deep Thank Goodness You're Here! Debut Game ANIMAL WELL Balatro Pacific Drive The Plucky Squire Tales of Kenzera: ZAU Thank Goodness You're Here! Evolving Game Diablo IV FINAL FANTASY XIV ONLINE No Man's Sky Sea of Thieves Vampire Survivors World of Warcraft Family Astro Bot Cat Quest III LEGO Horizon Adventures Little Kitty, Big City The Plucky Squire Super Mario Party Jamboree Game Beyond Entertainment Botany Manor Kind Words 2 (lofi city pop) Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Tales of Kenzera: ZAU Tetris Forever Vampire Therapist Game Design ANIMAL WELL Astro Bot Balatro Helldivers 2 The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom Tactical Breach Wizards Multiplayer Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Helldivers 2 LEGO Horizon Adventures Super Mario Party Jamboree TEKKEN 8 Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 Music Astro Bot Black Myth: Wukong FINAL FANTASY VII REBIRTH Helldivers 2 Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Star Wars Outlaws Narrative Black Myth: Wukong Dragon Age: The Veilguard FINAL FANTASY VII REBIRTH Metaphor: ReFantazio Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Still Wakes the Deep New Intellectual Property ANIMAL WELL Balatro Black Myth: Wukong Metaphor: ReFantazio Still Wakes the Deep Thank Goodness You're Here! Technical Achievement Astro Bot Black Myth: Wukong Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Tiny Glade Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 Performer in a Leading Role Alec Newman as Cameron 'Caz' McLeary in Still Wakes the Deep Humberly González as Kay Vess in Star Wars Outlaws Isabella Inchbald as Indika in INDIKA Luke Roberts as James Sunderland in SILENT HILL 2 Melina Juergens as Senua in Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Y'lan Noel as Troy Marshall in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Performer in a Supporting Role Abbi Greenland & Helen Goalen as The Furies in Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Aldís Amah Hamilton as Ástríðr in Senua's Saga: Hellblade II Jon Blyth as Big Ron in Thank Goodness You're Here! Karen Dunbar as Finlay in Still Wakes the Deep Matt Berry as Herbert the Gardner in Thank Goodness You're Here! Michael Abubakar as Brodie in Still Wakes the Deep

Hellblade II's Dom Matthews: 'Kids Growing Up Can Be Games Developers'
Hellblade II's Dom Matthews: 'Kids Growing Up Can Be Games Developers'

Forbes

time08-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Hellblade II's Dom Matthews: 'Kids Growing Up Can Be Games Developers'

Ninja Theory Seven years ago, Hellblade: Senua's Saga dominated the 2018 Bafta Games Awards by winning five gongs, including one for Melina Juergens' raw performance as the game's lead character. Its sequel, Senua's Saga: Hellblade II, has every chance of being just as successful as it goes into tonight's 21st annual Bafta ceremony leading the way with 11 nominations. The game continues the story of Senua, a warrior in 9th century Iceland who suffers from a condition called psychosis which causes her to hallucinate and hear voices. She embarks on a violent journey across the country seeking revenge. I spoke with Dom Matthews, the studio head at the game's developer, Ninja Theory, about being nominated for so many awards and why the game struck a chord with players. It's really special. To get one nomination makes me proud, but to get as many as we have is incredible. The Bafta awards are the awards. When we won a few with Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice it was one of the best moments of my life. The reason I think it's so special is because Bafta puts video games on a different platform. It's a vehicle through which games transcend beyond the games industry for a period and become more mainstream, so people really take notice. I think a category like British game shows the amazing work that's happening in this country. I want the next generation of kids growing up to say: 'this stuff is happening in my backyard, maybe I can be a games developer' because they absolutely can be. I'd love to win any of them, but I think games beyond entertainment is particularly special to me. Hellblade is a story about a character that experiences psychosis and we've got a really amazing partnership with Paul Fletcher at the University of Cambridge who is a professor of neuroscience, as well as links with a local recovery college there. They've really helped tell Senua's story in a truthful way through her experiences of psychosis. I'd love to win that for them. With Bafta, there's always a diverse range of games that are nominated. I don't think we can just say 'the games industry' anymore as it's become too broad. We're talking about [titles] that are completely different experiences. I think it's great that we're in an industry with lots of different types of experiences and games like there are in films, literature and theatre. People now have easy access to games through digital distribution and pricing models, so I think the diversity is something to be celebrated. I love the fact that games of all types can be loved by different audiences. The nominations for Hellblade II say that we had an ambition to make a game that would find its place in people's hearts and I think it did. A big part of what we care about as a studio is focusing on taking people on an impactful journey. I love hearing people say they've built a relationship with Senua or that they've connected with her story. Someone once told me that they feel like she's the only one that understands them. She feels like a real person that is really going through a journey.

Hellblade 2 leads the way at Bafta Games Awards
Hellblade 2 leads the way at Bafta Games Awards

Yahoo

time04-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Hellblade 2 leads the way at Bafta Games Awards

Senua's Saga: Hellblade II has picked up the most nominations at this year's Bafta Games Awards. The action-adventure game, developed by Cambridge-based studio Ninja Theory, is up for awards in 11 out of 14 categories at the annual ceremony. It's in the running for best game alongside 3D platformer Astro Bot - up for eight awards - which clinched top prize at the US-based Game Awards in December. The event, considered one of the most prestigious in the games industry calendar, will be held in London on 8 April. The other contenders in the best game category are: Balatro - a poker-inspired card game Black Myth: Wukong - an action-adventure made in China and inspired by a popular myth Helldivers II - a multiplayer co-operative shooter The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom - the first game in Nintendo's popular series to star the princess it's named after Thank Goodness You're Here! - a wacky cartoon adventure game developed by two friends from Barnsley Bafta hands out prizes each year in a range of categories, including acting, music and game design. Three of the six most-nominated games this year were made in the UK. Still Wakes the Deep, from Scottish studio The Chinese Room, is up for eight awards, while Thank Goodness You're Here! is up for seven. Lego: Horizon Adventures, based on the PlayStation series and largely developed by London-based Studio Gobo, is nominated in four categories. Indie hits Animal Well and Balatro, each have four nominations, as does Call of Duty: Black Ops 6. Senua's Saga: Hellblade II is a sequel to Senua's Sacrifice - which picked up five awards at 2018's gaming Baftas. Its 11 nominations might surprise some - the game was an impressive technical showcase and received positive if not outstanding reviews. However, like the first game, it was praised for its sensitive depiction of the main character's psychosis. Bafta Games committee chair Tara Saunders tells BBC Newsbeat it represents "a strong year for British-made games". She says the voting panel is made up of members across the world who take the awards "very seriously" and vote based on a range of features. "It's all about excellence," she says. "Excellence in the crafts and maybe some of those games have nailed all of those craft areas." Bafta CEO Jane Millichip agrees, and wants to embrace the fact they have a British game category. "Our members are international and they're the people who choose," she says. Arranged by number of categories: Senua's Saga: 11 Astro Bot and Still Wakes the Deep - eight Thank Goodness You're Here! - seven Black Myth: Wukong - five Read more about the nominees: 'Dead reyt': The love letter to Yorkshire making gamers cry laughing Mind games: Hellblade returns to explore psychosis Astro Bot: Could the old-school hit reshape PS5's future? The Bafta Games Awards are no stranger to the odd upset. In 2023, Vampire Survivors - made by a tiny British studio - beat Sony's God of War: Ragnarök to the top prize. This year's best game field has a similar mix of big-budget blockbusters and indie hits. "I love that Bafta can surprise, I love that it's not a given and we can get to that night and we don't know what's going to come out on top," Tara says. "It's putting a spotlight on some really tiny games that might have slipped by." Metaphor: Refantazio and Final Fantasy VII: Rebirth, two games that featured prominently in nominations elsewhere, only picked up three nominations between them. Times remain tough for people working in the games industry worldwide, with mass layoffs, studio closures and cancelled projects continuing to make headlines. Tara says awards like the Baftas are "a beacon of light in the dark times". "It's really important to pause and celebrate the teams and individuals that have crafted these standout games experiences," she says. And Jane, who also oversees Bafta's events across film, TV and other creative industries, says the gaming awards are a place for people to support each other. "I've never seen a community cheer so much when they lose, it's a brilliant thing to behold," she says. "It's so wonderful to see the whole games community being so supportive of each other and there to celebrate the sector, not themselves. "It's kind of devoid of ego and that's great." You can find a full list of Bafta Games Awards nominations for 2025 here. Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays - or listen back here.

‘Extraordinary' and ‘wide open' Bafta Games Awards field hailed
‘Extraordinary' and ‘wide open' Bafta Games Awards field hailed

Yahoo

time04-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘Extraordinary' and ‘wide open' Bafta Games Awards field hailed

British-made action-adventure game Senua's Saga: Hellblade II leads the way with 11 nominations at this year's Bafta Games Awards, with the head of Bafta calling the range of nominees 'extraordinary'. A total of 41 games have been nominated across 17 categories for the awards, which take place in April. Made by Cambridge-based studio Ninja Theory, Senua's Saga: Hellblade II's nominations include in the animation, artistic achievement, audio achievement and British game categories, while Sony's Astro Bot and indie horror game Still Wakes The Deep each have eight nominations. The nominations feature a host of independent and first-time nominees as well as big name franchises and well-known series such as Call Of Duty, Star Wars and Final Fantasy, which Bafta chief executive Jane Millichip said showed the gaming industry was 'really healthy'. 'I think it's a wide open field,' she told the PA news agency. 'That's what is extraordinary this year, it's the range of genres, the size of games – indie, big studio, multiplayer – it's a bewildering variety. 'It's really interesting to see how broad it is, and great to see so many British studios represented – 11 British studios from the length and breadth of the country, from Yorkshire to Brighton. 'It's a kind of mesmerising variety and certainly in the short time I've been involved in Bafta, it seems more than ever that that is the distinguishing factor this year, which is really exciting, and with a really open field of 41 games nominated it's really, really healthy.' Tara Saunders, chair of the Bafta Games Committee, said the nominees were a 'beacon of light' following some 'dark times' for the gaming industry in recent years, which has seen widespread job cuts in the wake of an economic downturn. 'It's a huge testament, and I think it shows the resilience of the teams and individuals that are making this content – it takes a lot of effort to make a fun product, and I think they're channelling all their energy into that,' she told PA. 'I think it's really important that we take this moment to celebrate the teams and the individuals that have crafted these standout games experiences. 'I really love that in the best game (category) we've got some indie games going shoulder to shoulder with some really big budget games. 'And I love that Bafta gives that platform for that to happen, to really shine a light on some of the smaller teams that are out there.' Comedy game Thank Goodness You're Here – made by independent Yorkshire studio Coal Supper – has seven nominations for this year's awards, including for best game, British game and debut game. In the best game category, it will compete alongside titles from industry giants Sony, the makers of the PlayStation, and Nintendo, for whom The Legend Of Zelda: Echoes Of Wisdom, the latest instalment in the hugely popular, long-running fantasy series, has been nominated.

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