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Revision as of 00:05, 24 August 2023

Award
Cybermania '94
DateNovember 5, 1994 (1994-11-05)
VenueUniversal Amphitheatre
CountryUnited States
Presented by
Highlights
Most nominationsMegaRace and Myst (3)
Best Overall GameMortal Kombat
Television/radio coverage
NetworkTBS
Runtime2 hours
Viewership1.1% (Nielsen ratings)
Produced byPeter Hayman
Directed bySue Brophey

Cybermania '94: The Ultimate Gamer Awards was the first televised video game awards show. The two-hour show was produced by TBS with the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences and broadcast live on TBS on November 5, 1994. Out of twelve award categories, Mortal Kombat won "Best Overall Game".

Format

Cybermania '94 was produced by TBS and the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences (AIAS). It was staged in the Universal Amphitheatre and broadcast live on TBS on Saturday, November 5, 1994. The broadcast ran for two hours with Leslie Nielsen and Jonathan Taylor Thomas as hosts. William Shatner narrated the nominee announcements. Awards in twelve categories were handed out by a range of lesser-known celebrities, interlaced with acts like jugglers, wrestling, and dancers performing to music by Herbie Hancock, as well as comedic bits about the gaming scene.

According to AIAS founder Andrew Zucker, the group had solicited nominations from 2,500 multimedia companies across the United States. Because of an application fee, only 200 competing entries were received. Some companies, such as LucasArts, decided to stay out of the event due to the unclear credibility of the AIAS. The nominations were voted on by the AIAS' 300-member body, except for the televoting-based "Best Overall Game", was Mortal Kombat. More than half of the awards were won by Philips Interactive Media, which considered its products winning awards on national television "worthwhile" as a marketing strategy and morale boost for its employees.

Awards

Best Overall Game Best Action/Adventure
Best CD Computer Game Best Portable
Best Comedy Best Art and Graphics in an Interactive Product
  • Myst
    • Tuneland
    • OceanLife II, III
    • Space: A Visual History
    • Mac World Interactive Vol. I, II
Best Music Best Simulation/Strategy
Best Sports Best Actor – Female
Best Actor – Male Special awards
  • Governor's Award for Best Achievement in Virtual Reality: Iwerks Entertainment
  • Special Achievement in Education: Ruff's Bone
  • Individual Growth In Development: American Institute for Learning (Addiction and Its Processes)

Reception

The broadcast drew in 1.1% of US households. Journalistic reception was largely negative. Bill Kunkel, writing for Electronic Games, criticized the show for low production value, including missing details for games (such as platform, developer, and publisher), no names for people who collected awards, missed cues, poor writing, and bad performances. He noted that, as a video game journalist, he never "had to endure anything like TBS' horrendous Cybermania '94, the first televised attempt to integrate electronic games and the tired TV award show format". Chris Nashawaty for Entertainment Weekly described the ceremony as "a low-rent whack at the MTV Video Music Awards without the faintest whiff of Oscar's legitimacy". In 2022, Time Extension contacted several of the show's winners, of whom several reported that they had not known the show was televised.

Legacy

Cybermania '94 was the first televised video game awards show. A teenage Geoff Keighley was part of the production as the "interactive products specialist", writing Shatner's narrations. He said that being at an event with the creators behind popular games like Doom and Myst left a big impression on him. Keighley went on to work on the annually hosted award shows of G4 (G-Phoria) and Spike TV (Spike Video Game Awards) until 2013. He then created The Game Awards, which he hosts.

References

  1. ^ Martens, Todd (December 5, 2017). "Geoff Keighley's lifelong obsession to create a video game Oscars". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  2. ^ Yarwood, Jack (December 8, 2022). "Before The Game Awards, There Was Cybermania '94". Time Extension. Archived from the original on August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  3. ^ Berg, Jeremy (February 1995). "Buying Your Award – Cybermania '94: Respected Awards Show or Joke of the Year". Computer Player. Vol. 1, no. 9. HG Publications. pp. 13–14. Retrieved August 24, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ Nashawaty, Chris (November 25, 1994). "Cybermania '94: The Ultimate Gamer Awards". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  5. ^ Kunkel, Bill (January 1995). "The Kunkel Report: TBS & The Sonic Hedgehog". Electronic Games. Vol. 2, no. 11. Decker Publications. p. 144. Retrieved August 24, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
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