A couple of months back, the British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs, more or less the British Oscars) got bored of figuring out which things were good by itself. Instead, it decided to ask you, the humble gaming public, to divine the most influential game of all time. And boy, you’ve really made a hash of that.

In results announced today, the BAFTAs declared, with an entirely straight face, that Yu Suzuki’s 1999 Dreamcast opus is the most influential videogame ever made, according to the results of its poll. The academy calls Shemue “a pioneer for open-world gameplay and laid a roadmap that others continued on in the years that followed,” and credits/blames it for popularising “the use of Quick Time Events (QTEs)” in games that came after.



Source link