Culture Black Myth: Wukong Team Reportedly Cried After Losing Game of the Year - Chinese smash hit loses to game I never heard of before to own the chuds.

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The Black Myth: Wukong team reportedly had a lot of emotional investment in winning Game of the Year. The Game Awards are the biggest awards show in the industry, often compared to the Oscars for gaming. However, they do things a lot differently. On top of presenting awards to the top games of the year, they also do gigantic game reveals, musical performances, and more. It’s quite an elaborate production and this year was probably the best version of the show to date thanks to how well it balanced great game announcements while giving developers time to give thoughtful speeches.

The show has been criticized in the past for being a giant ad for future games, other non-gaming companies, and more. Host and creator Geoff Keighley has taken the feedback seriously and is always working to improve the show, though. Still, it’s not the most serious show in the world. The Muppets have showed up to crack jokes, there are big sales for video games during it, and many of the awards are given rapidly off stage with no speeches for the developers. It’s just a fun event for people who like video games and want to see some sort of recognition for the industry, but it’s not the end all be all.

However, this was a pretty big year for The Game Awards. Controversially, Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree was nominated for Game of the Year despite being an expansion. Some other big titles like Silent Hill 2 were absent from Game of the Year. One game that fans were excited to see nominated was Black Myth: Wukong, a Chinese Souls-like from developer Game Science that released to massive player counts and a warm reception from players. However, Black Myth: Wukong didn’t win Game of the Year, that went to Astro Bot.

While other developers typically celebrate their peers’ success and cheer for them, even if they lose, Game Science reportedly didn’t do that. According to former Sony Santa Monica writer Alanah Pearce, the Black Myth: Wukong team were seen visibly crying when Astro Bot won Game of the Year. Pearce noted she’s never seen anything like that and that they were “definitely upset” that they didn’t win Game of the Year. While it’s understandable to be disappointed that they lost, this outward display of emotion over losing at The Game Awards is pretty unusual. Furthermore, Game Science CEO Feng Ji took to Chinese social media platform Weibo to express his disappointment and frustration with the lost in a big rant.


In a post translated by MP1st, Ji noted that he had written an acceptance speech for Black Myth: Wukong winning Game of the Year two years ago. The producer noted he was extremely confident in the quality of the game and felt like he traveled to Los Angeles for the award show for nothing. Similarly, he questioned the criteria for what makes a game eligible for Game of the Year, but noted the nominees were all exceptional. He ended the post by celebrating his team and emphasizing the power of Chinese culture and talent.

Of course, it’s important to remember that this was a translated post, so some of the context may have been lost in translation. Regardless, it all makes for an incredibly interesting response to an awards show. It’s clear it meant a lot to the team and they have a tremendous amount of pride in Black Myth: Wukong, however, losing this award isn’t the end of the world. Black Myth: Wukong was a massive commercial success and enjoyed strong reviews too, which is really what matters most for a game studio that wants to keep on making games. Not only that, but this was Game Science’s first internationally released AAA video game. The fact it even got nominated at all is a triumph for a first time team.

Either way, with all of this confidence it’s likely Game Science will only use this as motivation to make its next game bigger and better. It’s expected there will be some kind of successor to Black Myth: Wukong, though it’s unclear if it will be a direct sequel or just something in the same style a la FromSoftware doing games like Dark Souls and Bloodborne. Black Myth: Wukong is also rumored to come to Xbox eventually, but nothing has been confirmed.
 
Okay so I have no knowledge of the monkey game I keep hearing about. What is it they hate about it exactly?
There was malding because Chinese made a game without blacks or gays and doesn’t allow feminist propaganda when being played by streamers.
Ahead of Black Myth’s release, some content creators and streamers revealed that a company affiliated with its developer had sent them a list of topics to avoid talking about while livestreaming the game: including “feminist propaganda, fetishisation, and other content that instigates negative discourse”.
 
[a company] sent them a list of topics to avoid talking about while livestreaming the game: including “{...} fetishisation"
It does warm my heart a little bit to see them connecting the dots between these freaks + wanting to hypersexualize everything because they're degenerate perverts.
 
If true, they are cuckolds for seeking praise from a cabal of jewish pedophiles.
20 years later, an embittered veteran of the Chinese Army starts to rant about Jews. After being discharged he attempted to be an artist but was rejected by the cathedral that controlled what constituted good art. Slowly he began to hate, and instead turned his creativity towards political ends.
 
...Yeah, I'm not hugely sympathetic, because that sounds like the same entitled attitude that made this a thing.

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I wonder why a game studio that tried to export censorship was snubbed??
"Don't shittalk us and don't bring up your gay Westoid GRIDS, we're paying you niggers to talk about the game" is muhcensorship?
You can't possibly be employed. Enjoy your tardbux I guess.
 
Isn't Astro Bot a children's game? I feel like there's some dimension to this where adults are mad that a children's industry looks more favorably at the interests of children, not adults.
 
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"Don't shittalk us and don't bring up your gay Westoid GRIDS, we're paying you niggers to talk about the game" is muhcensorship?
What, "if you want to be play our game, you can't talk about the industry and country it came from?" "Don't talk about the enormous outsourcing of the Western game industry to China, the rampant culture of misogyny and the fact that several of our team are serious weirdos?"

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"Don't mention the fact that our government has already directly pressured Western studios to punish players for saying shit they don't like?" I wonder why an American awards show might find that a bit hard to swallow?

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"Don't mention Covid-19, Tiananmen Square, Hong Kong, Taiwan or Winnie the Pooh, because it might make us sad?"

If you accept those petty, snowflake terms, to police your own words, just on principle, over some silly video game, who's actually the niggercattle?

You can't possibly be employed.
I WORK and LIVE there. I've been careful even here about what I say because I know exactly what it's like to have your language policed. So again, not very sympathetic that this studio didn't get rewarded for pulling this stunt. Sorry, not sorry.

And calm down. China is barely Communist anymore. Nobody walks around with drab jackets and a little red book. The skies swarm with delivery drones, shiny hybrid cars line the malls, barely dressed models gleam from huge screens, and people walk about with every local brand consumer electronic you could name. I'm not insulting some austere Soviet paradise.
 
Crying themselves to the bank I presume.
 
Steam games get botted all the time
View attachment 6755779View attachment 6755780
this piece of shit has 100K players even though it's just a clicker with community market items
Only free games can even realistically be boted unless the devs want to purchase the game for each bot account which they then loose money to valve on each transaction and valve will probably pretty quickly catch on that the same bank account has purchased 500 copies of ass rape simulator 2020. Or they can generate hundreds of give away keys that will probably be denied considering valve has to approve batches of keys and monitors them incase you are violating some of the other selling related terms.

That banana game has an insane amount of players because there's some bizarre marketplace scheme that the devs have convinced retards that it'll make them money. It randomly rewards marketplace items every certain amount of play time. So people have made multiple accounts to get as many bananas as possible. So in that case it's technically botting but not done by the developer and it's such a weirdly retarded situation that I don't think it should apply to all of steam. They don't get botted all the time.

How many times have you seen a game that no one actually plays on the leaderboard. Even if it's a shit game you've probably heard about it before it topped the charts.
 
Steam games get botted all the time
View attachment 6755779View attachment 6755780
this piece of shit has 100K players even though it's just a clicker with community market items
I wouldn't classify this as "botting". It's closer to a ponzi scheme I would say. I think you underestimate how many people are willing to sacrifice hours of their time and leave random questionable software open in the background of their pc to earn $0.05c in steam wallet funds that they can never withdraw.

I would say Steam analytics are a pretty good way of seeing what's popular purely for the fact that's is raw numbers and completely unbiased (There are exceptions like idle games but generally speaking). A high Steam playercount + reviews is way more likely to get me to try a game, than some panel of legacy games journalists saying it's good because they are paid off by the companies/publishers, and who only seeming award and give a shit about games that satisfy their incredibly niche political/social beliefs in the moment.
 
Okay so I have no knowledge of the monkey game I keep hearing about. What is it they hate about it exactly?
  • Had chinese restrictions for review
  • Was blackmail for not having enough DEI in the game
  • whole point was to tell journey to west for modern audience.
  • Made in china
Only down side was believe the nomination process would not be rigged.
I believe this fake article show power/back jurno being able to black ball companies from the game awards if they do not play ball.
Isn't Astro Bot a children's game? I feel like there's some dimension to this where adults are mad that a children's industry looks more favorably at the interests of children, not adults.
It's a glorified tech demo & graveyard of old games & was not even acknowledged until it did well by sony (anti-wiisports).
 
It's really rude to your fans to say you shouldn't have bothered attending when one of the two awards your game actually won was "Player's Choice." Winning the fan vote wasn't good enough for you? Then fuck off, you ungrateful assholes. Suck it up for the fans who supported you. At least Astro Bot doesn't have notorious performance issues, which is more than I can say about Black Myth Wukong's memory leaks that never got fixed. Even their game is Made in China quality.
 
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