The nominations for the 2025 BAFTA Games Awards were unveiled in London on Tuesday, with action-adventure Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II leading the pack with 11 noms, ahead of platform game Astro Bot and psychological horror game Still Wakes the Deep with six each, and the likes of Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, Lego Horizon Adventures, and Final Fantasy VII Rebirth also earning nods.
In the best game category, the contenders are Astro Bot, Balatro, Black Myth: Wukong, Helldivers II, Thank Goodness You Are Here, and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom.
The showdown for best British game features A Highland Song, Lego Horizon Adventures, Paper Trail, Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II, Still Wakes the Deep, and Thank Goodness You’re Here!
Overall, independent and British games did well in the nominations unveiled by the British Academy. They were all released between Nov. 25, 2023, and Nov. 15, 2024.
Last year, Baldur’s Gate 3 led...
In the best game category, the contenders are Astro Bot, Balatro, Black Myth: Wukong, Helldivers II, Thank Goodness You Are Here, and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom.
The showdown for best British game features A Highland Song, Lego Horizon Adventures, Paper Trail, Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II, Still Wakes the Deep, and Thank Goodness You’re Here!
Overall, independent and British games did well in the nominations unveiled by the British Academy. They were all released between Nov. 25, 2023, and Nov. 15, 2024.
Last year, Baldur’s Gate 3 led...
- 3/4/2025
- by Georg Szalai
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Welcome to the quaint northern town of Barnsworth. Nestled in the English countryside, this community is filled with colorful characters, both kind and cantankerous. You’ll meet them all during your brief but eventful stay.
You arrive as a traveling salesman, sent by your company to meet with the mayor. But on the day of your visit, the mayor has more pressing matters to attend to. Not one to wait idly, you venture into town to get acquainted with the locals. And what an assorted bunch they are! From big-pie maker Big Ron to hot-headed greengrocer Rog, each resident has their own quirks and qualities.
This is where indie gaming studio Coal Supper, founded in nearby Barnsley, aims to transport you. Its members have crafted Barnsworth and its people with care, humor, and attention to regional detail. Voice actors bring the townsfolk to life with authentic Yorkshire accents and mannerisms.
You arrive as a traveling salesman, sent by your company to meet with the mayor. But on the day of your visit, the mayor has more pressing matters to attend to. Not one to wait idly, you venture into town to get acquainted with the locals. And what an assorted bunch they are! From big-pie maker Big Ron to hot-headed greengrocer Rog, each resident has their own quirks and qualities.
This is where indie gaming studio Coal Supper, founded in nearby Barnsley, aims to transport you. Its members have crafted Barnsworth and its people with care, humor, and attention to regional detail. Voice actors bring the townsfolk to life with authentic Yorkshire accents and mannerisms.
- 7/31/2024
- by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
- Gazettely
Children in Need’s history of Doctor Who specials dates back to a time before Pudsey Bear even existed. Feature-length special ‘The Five Doctors’ was first aired in the UK during the 1983 Children in Need telethon, a full two years before Pudsey became the charity’s official mascot.
Doctor Who has a rich tradition of supporting BBC charities – including a 1999 Comic Relief special penned by none other than Steven Moffat – and there have been six further Doctor Who specials for Children in Need in the three decades since ‘The Five Doctors’.
They range from the sublime – aka ‘Time Crash’ in 2007…
…to the ridiculous. And we mean really, brilliantly ridiculous:
Some Doctor Who fans never really got over the 1993 ‘Dimensions in Time’ special, a set of two mini episodes which aired on consecutive nights, the first on Children in Need and the second on the 1990s Saturday night fever dream known as Noel’s House Party.
Doctor Who has a rich tradition of supporting BBC charities – including a 1999 Comic Relief special penned by none other than Steven Moffat – and there have been six further Doctor Who specials for Children in Need in the three decades since ‘The Five Doctors’.
They range from the sublime – aka ‘Time Crash’ in 2007…
…to the ridiculous. And we mean really, brilliantly ridiculous:
Some Doctor Who fans never really got over the 1993 ‘Dimensions in Time’ special, a set of two mini episodes which aired on consecutive nights, the first on Children in Need and the second on the 1990s Saturday night fever dream known as Noel’s House Party.
- 11/16/2022
- by Lauravickersgreen
- Den of Geek
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