Deutscher Computerspielpreis

The Deutscher Computerspielpreis (DCP, German Video Game Awards) is a prize for the German games industry and has been awarded since 2009. The DCP is awarded by the Federal Republic of Germany, represented by the Ministry of State for Digitalisation and the Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure, and game – the German Games Industry Association.

Deutscher Computerspielpreis
LocationGermany
Presented byGAME, Cabinet of Germany Edit this on Wikidata
First awarded2009
Websitehttps://www.deutscher-computerspielpreis.de/ Edit this on Wikidata

Description

The Deutscher Computerspielpreis (The German Video Game Awards) was first awarded in 2009. The venue for the German Video Game Awards ceremony alternates annually between Munich and Berlin. The German Video Game Awards are presented by the Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure and game – the German Games Industry Association, with the support of the Digital Gaming Culture Foundation. The prize money is donated by those supporters and amounts to a total of €790,000 in 2021. The German Video Game Awards are the most prestigious games award within Germany. Awarded are games of "cultural and pedagogical value", technical or gameplay-related innovations or games of high entertainment value. Prize money is only disbursed to winners in national categories. Basic condition to submit a game in one of the donated categories is a development quota of 80 percent of the game in Germany.

In 2015, the award was fundamentally reshaped. Besides the introduction of new and the re-structuring of existing categories, criteria for registration have been reformulated. The award consists of 15 categories including a "Special Jury Award" and the category "Player of the Year" elected by the community. The international award categories and the category "Player of the Year" are exempt from donation.

The German Video Game Awards are announced (tendered) jointly by politicians and industry and were created by the German Government following an initiative of the German Bundestag (German Parliament) in cooperation with the former game associations BIU (German Trade Association of Interactive Entertainment Software) and GAME (German Games Industry Association) trade associations. Documents concerning the origin of the award are the Report of BKM to the German Bundestag dated 24. October 2007 (federal printed matter: BT-Drs. 16/7081) and the resolution of the German Bundestag dating 21. February 2008 following a proposal of the grand coalition of the SPD Party and the CDU Party (printed matter: BT-Drs. 16/7116). Background of the initiative was the perceived change of importance within society regardless of age, sex and social background of gamers and the increase of games industry as an economy of scale, as well as the extended application of games and game technology in other sectors of economy. Until 2014 the Kulturstaatsministerium (State Ministry of Culture) was the political Partner complementary to BIU and GAME as the economical partners of the German Video Game Awards. In 2014 the Ministry of Transport and digital Infrastructure adopted the role of the political partner.

Primary purpose is the promotion of the German games industry. Especially the development of innovative cultural and pedagogical valuable games is emphasized. Complementing its role as an advancement award, the German Video Game Awards also award donated prizes to game concepts from students within a particular category “Best debut” and “Best prototype” therefore support non-professionals financially to realize their ideas for video games.

Awarded games

2009

2010

  • Best German Game and Best International Game: Anno 1404
  • Best Children's Game: Lernerfolg Vorschule – Capt´n Sharky
  • Best Youth Game: The Whispered World
  • Best Browser Game: Wewaii
  • Best Mobile Game: Giana Sisters DS
  • Best Serious Game: ExperiMINTe
  • Best Pupil's Game: GooseGogs (Frederic Schimmelpfennig, Nikolaus-August-Otto-Schule, Bad Schwalbach)
  • Best Student's Game: Night of Joeanne (Mediadesign Hochschule, Düsseldorf)

2011

2012

  • Best German Game Crysis 2
  • Best Youth Game: Edna & Harvey: Harvey’s New Eyes
  • Best Children's Game: The Great Jitters: Pudding Panic
  • Best Browser Game: Drakensang Online
  • Best mobile Game: Das verrückte Labyrinth HD
  • Best "Serious Game": Vom Fehlenden Fisch – Die Geheimnisvolle Welt der Gemälde
  • Best Concept of the Young Talents Competition: About Love, Hate and Other Ones
  • Special Award Browser Game: Trauma
  • Special Award of the Young Talents Competition: Pan it!

2013

  • Best German Game Chaos on Deponia
  • Best Youth Game: Tiny & Big in Grandpa's Leftovers
  • Best Children's Game: Meine 1. App – Band 1 Fahrzeuge
  • Best Browser Game: Forge of Empires
  • Best Mobile Game: Word Wonders: The Tower of Babel
  • Best "Serious Game": Menschen auf der Flucht
  • Best Concept of the Young Talents Competition: GroundPlay

2014

  • Best German Game The Inner World
  • Best Youth Game: Beatbuddy: Tale of the Guardians
  • Best Children's Game: Malduell
  • Best Browser Game: Anno Online
  • Best Mobile Game: CLARC
  • Best Concept of the Young Talents Competition: Scherbenwerk – Bruchteil einer Ewigkeit
  • Special award: The Day the Laughter Stopped

2015

The awards were announced[1] on April 21, 2015 in Berlin.

2016

The awards were announced[2] on April 7, 2016 in Munich.

2017

The awards were announced on April 26, 2017 in Berlin.[3]

2018

The awards were announced on April 10, 2018 in Munich.[4]

2019

The awards were announced on April 9, 2019 in Munich.[5]

2020

  • Best German Game: Anno 1800 (Ubisoft Mainz/Ubisoft)
  • Best Family Game: Tilt Pack (Navel/Super.com)
  • Young Talent - Best Debut: The Longing (Studio Seufz/Application Systems Heidelberg)
  • Young Talent - Best Prototype: Couch Monsters (Laurin Grossmann, John Kees, Marie Maslofski, Dennis Oprisa, Luca Storz, Jaqueline Vintonjek – HTW Berlin)
  • Best Innovation and Technology: Lonely Mountains: Downhill (Megagon Industries/Thunderful Publishing)
  • Best Games World and Aesthetics: Sea of Solitude (Jo-Mei/Electronic Arts)
  • Best Game Design: Anno 1800 (Ubisoft Mainz/Ubisoft)
  • Best Serious Game: Through the Darkest of Times (Paintbucket Games/HandyGames)
  • Best Mobile Game: Song of Bloom (Kamibox)
  • Best Expert Game: Avorion (Boxelware)
  • Best International Game: Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order (Electronic Arts)
  • Best International Multiplayer Game: Apex Legends (Electronic Arts)
  • Player of the Year: gob b (Fatih Dayik)
  • Best Studio: Yager Development (Berlin)
  • Special Jury Award: Foldit
  • Audience Award: The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt for Nintendo Switch (CD Projekt RED / Bandai Namco)

2021

  • Best German Game: Desperados III (Mimimi Games/THQ Nordic)
  • Best Family Game: El Hijo – A Wild West Tale (Honig Studios, Quantumfrog/HandyGames – a THQ Nordic Division)
  • Young Talent - Best Debut: Dorfromantik (Toukana Interactive)
  • Young Talent - Best Prototype: Passing By (Hannah Kümmel, Jan Milosch, Marius Mühleck, Ilona Treml)
  • Best Innovation and Technology: Holoride (Holoride)
  • Best Games World and Aesthetics: Cloudpunk (ION Lands)
  • Best Game Design: Dorfromantik (Toukana Interactive)
  • Best Serious Game: Welten der Werkstoffe (Cologne Game Lab der TH Köln)
  • Best Mobile Game: Polarized! (Marcel-André Casasola Merkle/TheCodingMonkeys)
  • Best Expert Game: Suzerain (Torpor Games/Fellow Traveller)
  • Best International Game: The Last of Us Part II (Naughty Dog/Sony Interactive Entertainment)
  • Best International Multiplayer Game: Animal Crossing: New Horizons (Nintendo)
  • Player of the Year: Gnu (Jasmin K.)
  • Best Studio: Mimimi Games (Munich)
  • Special Jury Award: Indie Arena Booth Online 2020 (Super Crowd Entertainment)

References

  1. And the award goes to... Die Gewinner des DCP 2015
  2. The awardees of the DCP 2016 (German)
  3. dcp-presse (2017-04-26). "Deutscher Computerspielpreis 2017: Das sind die strahlenden Gewinner". Deutscher Computerspielpreis (in German). Retrieved 2018-02-14.
  4. dcp-presse (2018-04-11). "Deutscher Computerspielpreis 2018: Das sind die besten deutschen Computerspiele". Deutscher Computerspielpreis (in German). Retrieved 2019-08-14.
  5. dcp-presse (2019-04-09). "Strahlende Gewinner und gute Nachrichten beim Deutschen Computerspielpreis 2019". Deutscher Computerspielpreis (in German). Retrieved 2019-08-14.
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