Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Keith Stuart

Bafta games awards 2025: full list of winners

group of people pose in front of blue wall while holding awards
The team from Astro Bot pose with five awards at the Bafta games awards, at Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank Centre, in south London on Tuesday. Photograph: Ian West/PA

In a video game year dominated by dark, bloody fantasy adventures – and continued job losses and studio closures – it was a cute robot that stole the night at the 2025 Bafta video game awards. Sony’s family-friendly platformer Astro Bot won in five categories at yesterday evening’s ceremony, including best game and game design.

The rest of the awards were evenly spread across a range of Triple A and independent titles. Oil rig thriller Still Wakes the Deep was the next biggest winner with three awards: new intellectual property, performer in a leading role and performer in a supporting role. Clearly actors looking for Bafta-winning roles need look no further than the North Sea. The only other multiple winner was online shooter Helldivers 2, which won in multiplayer and music. The night’s most nominated title, Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II, was victorious in just the one category: technical achievement.

Elsewhere, the British game award was taken by perhaps the most British game ever made, the Yorkshire-based adventure Thank Goodness You’re Here. Smash-hit card puzzler Balatro may have won only a single award – debut game – but it was surely also victorious in the non-existent best acceptance speech of the night category, thanks to actor Ben Starr’s appearance in full jester make-up and three-pronged hat.

There were a couple of surprise triumphs. Hardcore role-playing adventure Metaphor: ReFantazio won in the highly competitive narrative category, while sumptuous side-scrolling platformer Neva claimed artistic achievement and Vampire Survivors swooped in for Evolving game. The game beyond entertainment award went to Tales of Kenzera: Zau, a magical adventure inspired by the death of creative lead Abubakar Salim’s father and based on Bantu mythologies.

Finally, the Bafta fellowship was awarded to legendary soundtrack composer Yoko Shimomura, who has scored games such as Street Fighter II, Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy XV. “Music has always been there with me, when things were sad or when I was filled with anger, shifting my mood from negative to positive,” she said in her acceptance speech. “I’ve sometimes felt I have no talent for music, when I’ve been unable to write or play in the way I wanted. But now I am working in my dream job, writing music for the games I love.”

The full list of Bafta games awards winners

Animation Astro Bot

Artistic achievement Neva

Audio achievement Astro Bot

Best game Astro Bot

British game Thank Goodness You’re Here

Debut game Balatro

Evolving game Vampire Survivors

Family Astro Bot

Game beyond entertainment Tales of Kenzera: Zau

Game design Astro Bot

Multiplayer Helldivers 2

Music Helldivers 2

Narrative Metaphor: ReFantazio

New intellectual property Still Wakes the Deep

Performer in a leading role Alec Newman, Caz McLeary in Still Wakes the Deep

Performer in a supporting role Karen Dunbar, Finlay in Still Wakes the Deep

Technical achievement Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II

Bafta fellowship Yoko Shimomura

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.