Not really a big surprise here and thoroughly deserved! The 2023 Steam Awards are over and Baldur's Gate 3 has won Game of the Year. Here's all the results for you.
Game of the Year: Baldur's Gate 3
VR Game of the Year: Labyrinthine
Labor of Love: Red Dead Redemption 2
Best Game on Steam Deck: Hogwarts Legacy
Better With Friends: Lethal Company
Outstanding Visual Style: Atomic Heart
Most Innovative Gameplay: Starfield
Best Game You Suck At: Sifu
Best Soundtrack: The Last of Us Part I
Outstanding Story-Rich Game: Baldur's Gate 3
Sit Back and Relax: DAVE THE DIVER
What are you thoughts on the winners this year?
See more on the Steam Awards page.
Just a reminder that the Steam Winter Sale still continues on until January 4th at 10am PT / 6pm UTC. Be sure to check out some fantastic co-op games contributor Scaine recently wrote up!
Optimistically, Heretic's Fork was in the running for Most Innovative, but that was always a long shot.
Baldur's Gate winning best game - no surprises there, that's a deserved one.
I was hoping WarThunder had a chance for Labor of Love, but no luck.
Never heard of Lethal Company - it seems to be in Early Access.
Hogwarts Legacy winning the Linux category is also surprising - I refunded it as it would not run on my Nvidia GPU, but probably the AMD GPU performance was better.
Last edited by Pikolo on 3 Jan 2024 at 11:04 am UTC
At least the latter had zero chance of winning against BG3, but still...
Last edited by williamjcm on 3 Jan 2024 at 11:10 am UTC
Absolutely, Starfield has pretty much zero innovation. It's a decent game, but innovation is not part of it, at all.This nomination has to be a troll, honestly. It's just too perfect.
Same goes for RDR2. People have been complaining Rockstar abandoned the game for years.
Last edited by such on 3 Jan 2024 at 11:35 am UTC
For me Beamdog is still the master of Baldur's Gate (Even i own both but never played and i know i have to play them)
Larian has stolen the spotlights and i'm pissed...
I have voted for Hogwarts Legacy as GoTY but noooooo random NPCS who think using dices non stop and reloading over 100 times the save to avoid failure is funny.. Those guys should play Solasta it has no romance but it's like you play D&D with friends in the garage.
Labor of Love i have voted DRG... i don't know why AAA games keep hacking the awards
Best game on steam deck (i don't own) but brotato was my vote, could have been dredge
Better with friends well Lethal Company is small indie early access where's it's more fun with friends and it is well deserve it doesn't use a big licence like warhammer
Atomic Heart won an award that's good i was tired of people giving hate
Starfield won = Todd Howard aren't fired... Remnant 2 should have won
The Trash of US remake after remake... i have voted for Hi-Fi Rush but noooo AAA games from brain dead
Outstanding story-rich sorry but Love is all around could have won it
Like Game awards everything is biased. No spotlights for indie devs who work hard to serve us good gems
What are you thoughts on the winners this year?Mostly a pretty sorry bunch, I'm sad to say - there were only a few well-deserved wins, and it was largely like an echo of Geoff Keighley's The Godawful Awards.
Except, unlike those, they're not telling the guys behind Baldur's Gate 3 to please wrap it up whilst they pay tribute to a deceased colleague (it was an automated prompt to hurry all gaming-related content along to make as much room as possible for advertisements, but it still wasn't a good look).
Absolutely, Starfield has pretty much zero innovation. It's a decent game, but innovation is not part of it, at all.
This is probably why Starfield won. https://www.gamesradar.com/starfields-new-game-plus-narrative-is-bethesda-rpg-innovation-at-its-finest/
Absolutely, Starfield has pretty much zero innovation. It's a decent game, but innovation is not part of it, at all.
This is probably why Starfield won. https://www.gamesradar.com/starfields-new-game-plus-narrative-is-bethesda-rpg-innovation-at-its-finest/
Ah yes, the innovative power of "New Game+"! Such trendsetters, such visionaries.
Random crud hentai game for GOTY 2024!
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Most Innovative Gameplay: Starfield
That right there is the only documentation one need against user driven awards. It really is a general popularity contest. The more users, the more votes.
And that's not always the purpose of an award. Like here.
Last edited by Beamboom on 3 Jan 2024 at 3:58 pm UTC
Most Innovative Gameplay: Starfield
That right there is the only documentation one need against user driven awards. It really is a general popularity contest. The more users, the more votes.
I think RDR2 getting "labour of love" even though Rockstar abandoned it the year prior is a better example. :D
Most Innovative Gameplay: Starfield
That right there is the only documentation one need against user driven awards. It really is a general popularity contest. The more users, the more votes.
And that's not always the purpose of an award. Like here.
Voting what you know is also easier. However if you get past the few baffling AAA wins, there's plenty of indies in the winners too. Which more or less means that indies have a chance, they need just enough publicity. And big publishers don't control all the media like they used to, so even the stranger indie games might get featured at least somewhere. I doubt something like Lethal Company has had big advertising budget.
Labor of Love: Red Dead Redemption 2
Love for money, maybe? A sad joke given that Deep Rock was also a finalist and actually deserving of the award.
Better With Friends: Lethal Company
Only in that it is slightly less terrible with friends than without. However I guess it fits the description of the award and the other finalists weren't much better.
Most Innovative Gameplay: Starfield
Hahaha, no.
Overall, except for BG3's well deserved top spot, there really wasn't much worth in the finalists and even less in the winners.
The story reminds me more of Demon Stone than any other Realms game, really. (A very good action game, oddly not an RPG. If you liked LotR: The Two Towers on the PS2/Xbox. Patrick Stewart voiced Blackstaff in that game. Michael Clark Duncan voiced Y'Gorl. Khelben sounded pretty good for ~900-1100!)
A few things I'm not happy about are the level cap not going to at least 16-18, as that's when you gain access to some of the most fun (read overpowered) abilities. Maybe we'll get another Throne of Bhaal?
No patron deity for Paladins? Drow pigeonholed into Lolth-worshipers and Seladrine syncophants? Svirfneblin without half their abilities? And that's just what I've noticed so far!
Spoiler, click me
I mean BG2:ToB let us break 20 and even implemented Wish if I remember correctly (I've never played a wizard PC in BG1-2.).
But it is easily the best CRPG released in the last couple of years. It's easily on par with DA:O, if not quite BG2, in my mind.
See more from me