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Today β€” 12 December 2025Main stream

Everything announced and all the winners at The Game Awards 2025

11 December 2025 at 23:41

This year at The Game Awards, if your game wasn’t melodramatic, mechanically innovative, beautifully presented and aggressively French, it didn’t stand a chance. The Game Awards 2025 wrapped up on the evening of Thursday, December 11 with a record-breaking showing by Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 from Sandfall Interactive. The game received the most nominations and wins in the show’s 12-year history.

But, we know that’s not really why you’re here. Between the award presentations and musical numbers, there were heaps of new game trailers, announcements and updates, and we’ve collected them all for you right here. The award winners are also there.

News

Award winners

Best family game: Donkey Kong Bananza

Innovation in accessibility: Doom: The Dark Ages

Best esports game: Counter-Strike 2

Best esports athlete: Chovy

Best esports team: Team Vitality

Best mobile game: Umamasume: Pretty Derby

Best indie game: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Best adaptation: The Last of Us season 2

Best action game: Hades II

Best performance: Jennifer English, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Games for impact: South of Midnight

Best ongoing game: No Man’s Sky

Best audio design: Battlefield 6

Content creator of the year: MoistCr1TiKaL

Best fighting game: Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves

Most anticipated game: Grand Theft Auto VI

Best action/adventure game: Hollow Knight: Silksong

Best art direction: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Best sim/strategy game: Final Fantasy Tactics: The Ivalice Chronicles

Best debut indie game: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Best score and music: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Best sports/racing game: Mario Kart World

Best community support: Baldur’s Gate 3

Best VR/AR game: The Midnight Walk

Best RPG: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Players’ voice: Wuthering Waves

Best narrative: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Best multiplayer game: Arc Raiders

Best game direction: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Game of the year: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

Trailers

Pragmata by Capcom

Star Wars: Fate of the Old Republic by Arcanaut Studios and Lucasfilm Games

Divinity by Larian Studios

Coven of the Chicken Foot by Wildflower Interactive

ONTOS by Frictional Games

4:LOOP by Bad Robot Games

Resident Evil Requiem by Capcom

Order of the Sinking Star by Thekla

Exodus by Archetype Entertainment

WARLOCK by Invoke Studios and Wizards of the Coast

Control Resonant by Remedy Enterainment

Gang of Dragon by Nagoshi Studio

Street Fighter movie sneak peak

LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight by Warner Bros. Games

Tomb Raider: Catalyst by Crystal Dynamics

Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis by Crystal Dynamics and Flying Wild Hog

Invincible VS by Skybound Games

Diablo 4: Lord of Hatred by Blizzard Entertainment

Deadpool is coming to Marvel Rivals

007 First Light – Lenny Kravitz Announcement

Saros by Housemarque

Warframe featuring Werner Herzog for some reason

Total War: Warhammer 40,000 by Creative Assembly

Hitman World of Assassination by IO Interactive

Ace Combat 8: Wings of Theve by Bandai Namco

Star Wars Galactic Racer by Fuse and Lucasfilm Games

Out of Words by Kong Orange and WiredFly

Phantom Blade Zero by S-GAME

Mega Man Dual Override by Capcom

Super Mario Galaxy movie trailer

Highguard by Wildlight Entertainment

Don’t forget to check out our Day of the Devs: The Game Awards 2025 roundup, which included six world premieres, three release date announcements and a whole bunch of awesome indie goodness. The Wholesome Snack, Women-Led Games and Latin American Games showcases tied to the awards were also downright delightful.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/everything-announced-and-all-the-winners-at-the-game-awards-2025-044101761.html?src=rss

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Yesterday β€” 11 December 2025Main stream

Coven of the Chicken Foot is the debut game from Naughty Dog alum Bruce Straley's indie studio

11 December 2025 at 20:40

Coven of the Chicken Foot has a lot of things going for it already, in my book. It stars a hero rarely seen in video games, an elderly woman, and it has gorgeous storybook-style art in a lush fantasy setting. It’s a single-player puzzle platformer, it relies on wordless storytelling and the woman, a witch named Gertie, travels with a creepy-cute companion. Plus, Gertie has chicken feet. I love her little chicken feet.

Coven of the Chicken Foot is the first game from Wildflower Interactive, the independent studio founded by Naughty Dog veteran Bruce Straley. The game is coming to Steam and it’s available to wishlist now, though there’s no firm release date. The first trailer for Coven of the Chicken Foot premiered at The Game Awards 2025, showing Gertie and her friend traveling together through caves, forests and temples.

Gertie is on a quest to prove herself to the local coven by standing up to the self-appointed, prideful heroes of the land. She doesn’t have a sword or a dodgeroll, and instead has to figure out how to work with her strange friend to survive. Her companion develops unique behaviors based on individual play styles, shaping how Gertie gets around.

Straley left Naughty Dog in 2017 after almost 20 years with the studio, where he directed The Last of Us and Uncharted 4. He announced Wildflower Interactive in July 2022 with a brief YouTube message, saying, β€œIn 2017 I left the industry not sure if I wanted to make games anymore. But the longer I was away, I kept thinking about this medium, and everything yet to be done and everything I wanted to do still. And this idea kept following me. So I grabbed some friends and we started prototyping.”

This naturally led to the formation of a studio, Straley explained.

β€œWe have to do it the right way,” he said in the video. β€œIt has to be inclusive, equitable and collaborative, full of big-hearted people that want to grow both professionally and personally. The culture needs to be as iterative as the way we make games.”

Coven of the Chicken Foot
Coven of the Chicken Foot
Wildflower Interactive

Today Wildflower Interactive has 16 employees from AAA and smaller-scale backgrounds, according to its website. Its mission statement reads as follows:

β€œWe’re making β€˜small-ish,’ creatively-charged, uniquely-stylized games that explore the possibilities of our medium. And we’re building a small, open-hearted team of creators that want to improve their skills and still lead a good life outside of work. People that want to hone their craft, have a say in the process, feel respected for their contributions, and be a part of the evolution of this awesome medium.”

I’m not going to say the studio’s direct and repeated emphasis on work-life balance, diversity and compassion is a response to the soulless capitalistic grind built into the AAA development complex, but I’m not going to not say that, either.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/coven-of-the-chicken-foot-is-the-debut-game-from-naughty-dog-alum-bruce-straleys-indie-studio-014004553.html?src=rss

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Before yesterdayMain stream

The world premieres and other hotness from The Game Awards 2025 Day of the Devs stream

10 December 2025 at 15:00

You gotta love that post-Day of the Devs showcase feeling. The organization, founded by Double Fine Productions and iam8bit, consistently highlights top-tier games from independent developers across the globe, providing space for creators to share their stories in both online and in-person events. This year’s Day of the Devs: The Game Awards Digital Showcase was an hour-long celebration of 22 upcoming indie games, including six world premieres and three release date announcements.

Settle in and bask in the afterglow with us:

World Premieres

Virtue and a Sledgehammer - Deconstructeam

Deconstructeam is a small Spanish studio that’s responsible for some of the most cerebral, sexy and darkly philosophical games around, including Gods Will Be Watching, The Red Strings Club and The Cosmic Wheel Sisterhood. The team’s next project is Virtue and a Sledgehammer, and it represents a new look with 3D, cel-shaded animations and a third-person perspective rather than the studio’s typical pixelated planar fare. The vibes are just as sinister and introspective as expected, though.

Virtue and a Sledgehammer is a moody coming-of-age experience set in a wooded ghost town dotted with robots and lost locals. Spend quiet moments with old friends and then swing the sledgehammer to raze your hometown and uncover memories that can help you move on. The game’s buildings and objects are highly reactive, which can only help with the catharsis of it all.

Virtue and a Sledgehammer is due to hit Steam in 2026, published by Devolver Digital.

UN:Me - Shueisha Games

Now, this is a horror game. UN:Me comes from Japanese publisher Shueisha Games and developer Historia, and it’s a creepy, mind-bending exploration of primal fear. It stars a young woman with four souls trapped inside of her body, fighting for control of her consciousness. She wanders sterile, illogical hallways and encounters grotesque horrors representing common human fears like heights, authority figures and confined spaces. The souls switch randomly, each one manifesting a specific anxiety. As she wanders, the player has to choose souls to eliminate until only one remains. Whether it’s her real soul or a fake isn’t disclosed until the very end.

UN:Me is available to wishlist now on Steam.

Scramble Knights Royale - Funktronic Labs

Funktronic Labs is mainly known as a VR studio, with games like Cosmic Trip, Fujii and The Light Brigade under its belt, but its latest project doesn’t require a headset at all. Scramble Knights Royale is coming to PC and Xbox in 2026, and it’s a battle royale with adventure game twists. You begin on a boat with 30 to 40 other online players, make your way to land on the back of a turtle, and then it’s essentially Naked and Afraid from there. Find resources, fight creatures, upgrade your gear and play your own game, only battling other players when you encounter them in the wild.

Don’t let the sweet, clay-like animations fool you, either β€” Funktronic says the combat mechanics are incredibly deep and finely honed. Scramble Knights Royale also supports local split-screen.

Mirria - Mografi

Mografi made a name for itself with the adorable Jenny LeClue detective game, but now it’s time for something different. Mirria is an atmospheric puzzle experience from ISLANDS: Non-Places artist Carl Burton, published by Mografi, and it looks like a delicious mix of Kentucky Route Zero and Monument Valley. In Mirria, you explore mirror worlds and attempt to make the two realities match, paying attention to small details and making minute adjustments until the unsettling environments are perfect reflections. It looks and sounds like soul-soothing stuff.

Mirria is due out in 2026 on Steam.

CorgiSpace - Finji

In recent years, Finji founder Adam Saltsman has been involved in high-profile indie games like Overlands, Night in the Woods, Tunic and Usual June, but his new project taps into his simplistic and mechanics-driven Canabalt roots. Corgispace is a collection of 8-bit games with off-kilter premises, including the soulslike Rat Dreams where you can only dodgeroll, the no-jumping platformer Skeleton Jeleton, and Prince of Prussia, an adventure where you stab Nazis β€œbut in a fun new way,” according to Saltsman. Also, he says there are no secrets in this game, which leads us to believe there is at least one secret in this game.

Corgispace is out now (!) on Steam and Itch.io.

Frog Sqwad - Panic Stations

If the former Fall Guys developers at Panic Stations know how to do one thing, it’s make a silly-physics multiplayer game, so that’s exactly what they’re doing. Frog Sqwad is a co-op experience where you and your fellow frogs search the sewers for food in order to satiate the swamp king. You can eat food to grow bigger and become the mega frog, vomit to shrink, and use your long sticky tongue to swing, hang and slingshot your friends. The sewer levels are procedurally generated, so your froggy playground will always be different, and each run gets harder as the swamp king requires more food.

Frog Sqwad is coming to Steam in 2026, with a playtest beforehand.

Release dates

  • Dogpile by Studio Folly, Toot Games and Foot: Today, like literally right now

  • Big Hops by Luckhsot Games: January 12, 2026

  • Demon Tides by Fabraz: February 19, 2026

And the rest

The stream featured a dozen other in-development titles, including the super spooky Lucid Falls, a 90s-grunge-band rhythm game called Rockbeasts, the soothing alien musicality of Soundgrass, an impressive-looking follow-up to The Invincible called Into the Fire, and Unshine Arcade, a creepy game about the secret lives of tamagotchis and claw machines.

Day of the Devs: The Game Awards Digital Showcase 2025 wrapped up with a neat little announcement. Day of the Devs partnered with the Video Game History Foundation to release Xcavator 2025, a finished version of a long-lost game from legendary programmer Chris Oberth. It was originally developed by Big Buck Hunter studio Incredible Technologies but never found a publisher. It’s been revived by Mega Cat Studios, Retrotainment Games and iam8bit, and an NES cartridge of Xcavator 2025 is available to pre-order now on iam8bit. Proceeds will benefit the Video Game History Foundation.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/the-world-premieres-and-other-hotness-from-the-game-awards-2025-day-of-the-devs-stream-200000447.html?src=rss

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Watch the Day of the Devs: Game Awards 2025 edition right here at 1PM ET

10 December 2025 at 01:00

The Game Awards 2025 edition of the Day of the Devs digital showcase goes live on Wednesday, December 10 at 1PM ET on Twitch and YouTube. That’s more than 30 hours before The Game Awards itself kicks off, which makes perfect sense. It is called Day of the Devs, after all, and if we’re judging by past appearances, the event absolutely deserves its own full 24 hours in the spotlight.

This year, the Day of the Devs: The Game Awards Digital Showcase will feature 22 indie titles, including three release date announcements and six world premieres. That’s a packed show, even by Day of the Devs standards. Expect to see projects from developers including 17-BIT, BONE Assembly, Capybara Games, Deconstructeam and Panic Stations, and publishers Annapurna Interactive, Devolver and Blumhouse Games, among others.

Each Day of the Devs showcase lasts about an hour and highlights a batch of extremely rad-looking independent games across a wide range of genres, complete with commentary from creators. The featured games are curated by industry veterans at Day of the Devs, and past shows have offered early looks at future hits like Animal Well, Blue Prince, Cocoon, Despelote, Crow Country, Phoenix Springs, Skate Story, UFO 50, Eternights, Sorry We’re Closed and many others.

Day of the Devs is a non-profit operation that provides a platform for select independent creators to showcase their games to large audiences for free, founded by folks at Double Fine Productions and iam8bit. On top of accepting donations, it receives support from various industry players, including Xbox, PlayStation and Summer Game Fest.

The Game Awards 2025 begins on Thursday, December 11 at 7:30PM ET, with a half-hour pre-show up first. The whole thing will certainly last longer than one hour, but we’ll find out together whether it’ll have more game reveals than Day of the Devs.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/watch-the-day-of-the-devs-game-awards-2025-edition-right-here-at-1pm-et-060000319.html?src=rss

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