Skip to main content

Games for Change Awards presents its winners for 2017

Historical games beat Minecraft at every turn in Games for Change Awards

games for change awards 2017 minecraft education edition
Image used with permission by copyright holder
The winners of this year’s Games for Change Awards have now been revealed, and they are a far cry from the typical AAA titles which normally steal the top spots in game awards. The Game of the Year at this ceremony was Walden, A Game, a title about tranquil survival with a soft, reflective narrative. It took home the award for Most Significant Impact title, too.

Unlike other game awards, like the BAFTAs, which laud games for their aesthetics, mechanics, and features within their defined genre, Games for Change is more interested in social impact. It looks at educational games, innovative games, and ones that provide great gameplay while improving the lives of their players, and on July 31, it announced the best of the best.

Walden, A Game, a title that puts players in the boots of 19th-century American philosopher Henry Thoreau, received the most praise for its use of quiet contemplation in a game with more typical survival elements. Featuring a mix of familiar gameplay functions with a relaxed pace, it was considered the top game at the show, as well as the most impactful in its award nods.

Walden, a game - Official Launch Trailer

It wasn’t the best at everything, though. When it came to Best Gameplay, Tracking Ida took home the award. An alternate reality game that blends physical props and clues with problem-solving and interviews with real people, it tells the story of 19th-century journalist Ida Wells.

Other winners included Everything for Most Innovative, with its ability for players to literally play as everything and anything they want in the game. Dragonbox Big Numbers was given the award for Best Learning Game, for the way it helps teach children about harder mathematical concepts. And At Play in the Cosmos won the People’s Choice award for its exploration of space and time through mission challenges.

Minecraft: Education Edition was a nominated finalist for the Best Gameplay and Most Significant Impact awards and was the only game to secure nominations in several categories, but it didn’t take home a single award by the end of the show.

It wasn’t the only one to miss out on a top spot though. Sea Hero Quest hoped to win with its unique aide of dementia research through gaming. Epistory looked to impress through its encouragement of typing ability through a narrative story, while Liyla and the Shadows of War teaches players about Gaza during the conflict of 2014.

Many different games and platforms were on show during the event, including a specific look at virtual reality games. Taking place as part of the festival, VR for Change showed how VR games are advancing real world causes and helping to raise awareness through up close and personal virtual reality experiences.

Updated: Added and described the award winners.

Editors' Recommendations

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
Epic still plans to bring its Games Store to iOS and Android this year
epic games store ios android 2024 egs mobile

Epic Games affirmed its commitment to bringing the Epic Games Store to iOS and Android before the end of 2024 during its State of Unreal presentation at GDC 2024.

Steve Allison, Epic Games Store general manager, explained that the mobile version of the Epic Games Store will feature Fortnite, as well as games from "a selection of third-party partners who have expressed interest in joining us when we launch." Like the PC version of the storefront, developers who release games on the mobile version of the Epic Games Store will have 88/12 base revenue share and Unreal Engine royalties waived.

Read more
Xbox Game Pass gets its first Activision Blizzard game very soon
xbox game pass march games diablo 4 iv

Microsoft unveiled the batch of titles coming to its gaming subscription service throughout the back half of March. Quite a few awesome titles are making their way to the service, but by far, the most notable addition is Diablo IV, the first Activision Blizzard game being made available on Xbox Game Pass.

Diablo IV was released in June 2023, just a few months before Microsoft completed its acquisition of Activision Blizzard. It's the latest entry in a long-running isometric RPG series, and it retains the same engaging dungeon design, deep progression systems, and captivating loot loop that makes games in this franchise special. People have been wondering when Activision Blizzard games would arrive on Xbox Game Pass in the months since the acquisition process was completed, and Diablo IV was finally confirmed to be coming to the service on March 28 last month.

Read more
Summer Game Fest will hold its fifth annual showcase this June
The logo for Summer Game Fest 2024.

Summer Game Fest, Geoff Keighley's annual summer event full of new game reveals and trailers will return for its fifth edition on June 7.

Although Summer Game Fest 2024 had already been teased, the Summer Game Fest team laid out more specific details about its 2024 festivities today. The headlining Summer Game Fest kickoff reveal live stream will take place at 2 p.m. PT on June 7. It will be live-streamed across platforms like YouTube, Twitch, and TikTok, and there will also be a live show at the YouTube Theater in Los Angeles. Tickets for the live show will go on sale on May 7. Since it's still a few months out, no games have been confirmed for Summer Game Fest 2024 at this time; you can check out what was announced at 2023's show to get a better idea of what kinds of games tend to show up, though.

Read more