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The top two GOTY 2025 front-runners are AA games and that’s a good sign

2 23
19.05.2025

A familiar refrain over the last few years has been the death of what we like to call AA games: mid-budget games made by mid-sized teams. AA games have production values that are comparable with AAA blockbusters — you know: full voice acting, cinematic cutscenes, fancy 3D graphics — and occupy similar genres, but tend to have a more modest scope and realistic set of ambitions. They used to be the industry’s stock-in-trade, until they were squeezed out by an exploding indie scene on one side and risk-averse publishers’ focus on mega-budget sure bets on the other. Now they’re an endangered species.

Or are they?

A post on the gaming forum ResetEra recently alerted me to something interesting. The two best-reviewed games of 2025 so far (alongside the indie darling Blue Prince) – and the two leading front-runners for Game of the Year at The Game Awards in December — are Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 and Split Fiction. These both retail for $50 — not the industry-standard $60 or the increasingly widespread premium price point of $70 (never mind Nintendo’s decision to break the $80 taboo with Mario Kart World). The poster framed this as a triumph of fair pricing over the greed and bloat of AAA gaming.

Personally, I’m wary of constructing critical arguments around........

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