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Rockstar Games' Red Dead Redemption won four awards including Game of the Year at tonight's Game Developers Choice Awards, while indie hit Minecraft racked up three other awards.

Kyle Orland, Blogger

March 3, 2011

3 Min Read

Rockstar Games' Red Dead Redemption was the big winner at tonight's Game Developers Choice Awards ceremony, taking home four awards including one for Game of the Year. The multi-million selling, critically acclaimed wild west title also won awards for audio, game design and technology at the awards ceremony, though it lost out to Mass Effect 2 in the writing category. Indie mega-hit Minecraft was another big winner of the night, earning three categories: Best Debut Game, Best Downloadable Game and the Innovation Award. The game had previously won two awards, including the Seumas McNally Grand Prize, in the evening's Independent Games Festival Awards. “Being nominated in both the IGF and the GDCA shows just how fast Minecraft has grown,” developer Markus “Notch” Perrson said in accepting the award for Best Debut Game. “Apparently we are a real game now, so go indies.” The night's other awards went to Playdead Studios' dark puzzle platformer Limbo for Best Visual Art and Chillingo's physics-based puzzler Cut the Rope for Best Handheld Game. This year's Ambassador Award went to Game Developers Conference Associates Program founders Tim Brengle and Ian Mackenzie, for their work providing free conference attendance to thousands of students and independent developers who volunteer their services at the show. Legendary Sega developer Yu Suzuki won the night's Pioneer Award for his work on titles including Outrun, Space Harrier, and, more recently, the Shenmue series. “In my 28 years of making games I have always tried to live every day as a pioneer, so I'd like to say it's an honor to be, officially, a pioneer,” he said in accepting the honor. EA founder and current Digital Chocolate CEO Trip Hawkins was on hand to present a Lifetime Achievement Award to Populous and Fable designer Peter Molyneux, who used his acceptance speech to apologize to all his co-workers for an annoying habit of his. “There are people that I have worked with that have put up with my incredibly insane habit of designing games [during] press interviews... by putting gimmicks in and just being an incredibly difficult person to work with,” he said by way of apology. Third-time Choice awards host and Double Fine founder Tim Schafer jokingly praised the awards as a valuable alternative to those that recognize athleticism, peace promotion or acting, because they can be won “while leading a sedentary lifestyle, promoting violence and paying no attention whatsoever to personal appearance.” Schafer also used the evening's festivities to debut a new trailer for Trenched, a Double Fine-created Xbox Live Arcade mech combat game that lets you “turn no man's land into real man's land,” according to the tagline. The Game Developers Choice Awards, which honor the very best games of the year, were created for developers and voted on by developers. The finalists were chosen via a combination of open game industry nominations and the votes of the leading creators in the Choice Awards Advisory Committee. Best Audio: Red Dead Redemption (Rockstar Games) Best Debut Game: Minecraft (Mojang) Best Writing: Mass Effect 2 (BioWare) Best Game Design: Red Dead Redemption (Rockstar Games) Best Downloadable Game: Minecraft (Mojang) Best Visual Art: Limbo (Playdead Studios) Best Technology: Red Dead Redemption (Rockstar Games) Best Handheld Game: Cut the Rope (Chillingo) Innovation Award: Minecraft (Mojang) Game of the Year: Red Dead Redemption (Rockstar Games)

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About the Author(s)

Kyle Orland

Blogger

Kyle Orland is a games journalist. His work blog is located at http://kyleorland.blogsome.com/

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