Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree shouldn't be eligible for Game of the Year

Elden Ring
(Image credit: FromSoftware)

The nominees for The Game Awards 2024 are here, and there's already a controversy brewing. Alongside the five excellent games tipped for Game of the Year that actually released in 2024 sits Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree, an expansion to a game that released in 2022. An undeniably excellent piece of DLC, its inclusion in a list of the best games of the year feels misplaced, and even borderline disrespectful.

Geoff Keighley laid the groundwork for this decision last week, when he confirmed that expansions and re-releases would be eligible at The Game Awards. That's not necessarily new – Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty was a leading nominee at last year's show, despite the base game releasing in 2020. But of its five nods (including community support and best performer for Idris Elba), only one – Best Narrative – was in a traditional 'Best' category. That's perhaps not a nomination I would have made myself, but there's a rationale behind it that I'm prepared to accept – putting a narrative-heavy, somewhat-standalone expansion forward for a narrative award makes sense.

But for me, for this award, Shadow of the Erdtree doesn't fit within that rationale. Much like Phantom Liberty's narrative nod, the argument that its level of craft might warrant nomination for Best Game Direction is one that I can live with. But to even do that ignores the argument at the center of this entire debate: Shadow of the Erdtree is an expansion, not a game, and the game that it's an expansion to did not come out in 2024. To name it a potential 'game of the year' is a contradiction that not only struggles to make sense, but also risks subverting the whole point of having a game of the year in the first place.

Plenty of people don't play the best games of a given year in the same 12-month period that they came out in. If we're prepared to look back two full years to find a Game of the Year contender, what's to stop that line from blurring more? What's to stop the gap from stretching further and further, or even crossing console generation lines as the years progress? And if we're looking ever further back into the past to hand out award show acclaim, how many deserving releases will miss out on their potential nomination because of a returning juggernaut that might have released half a generation ago? There's a strong case to be made for a substantial number of actual 2024 releases to have filled Shadow of the Erdtree's spot – Helldivers 2, Animal Well, Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown, to name my personal picks alone. Perhaps none of those games would have won the top prize – the rest of the field is extremely strong – but at least their inclusion would have made sense, and their developers would have had the chance to share in the same acclaim that FromSoft already won in 2022.

None of this gets in the way of our 5-star Elden Ring review, our 5-star Shadow of the Erdtree review, or the fact that FromSoftware is a leading voice in the industry that deserves to have praise heaped upon it. But expansions, DLC, remasters, and re-releases are not new games, and as such should not be part of Game of the Year discussions. There are several ways that they can be honored – at the Golden Joystick Awards, Shadow of the Erdtree is up for Best Game Expansion as part of a stacked field that includes add-ons to Diablo 4, World of Warcraft, and Destiny 2. At The Game Awards, it's also up for Best Game Direction – a nod that, like Phantom Liberty's narrative nomination, seems fitting for the high profile release that it was. 2024 has not been the strongest year for the games industry, admittedly, but surely The Game Awards could have found more than five great games to nominate without heaping a second serving of praise on one of the most acclaimed development teams of the past two decades?

Our list of new games 2024 will give you a sense of the titles that should actually have made the GOTY list.

Ali Jones
News Editor

I'm GamesRadar's news editor, working with the team to deliver breaking news from across the industry. I started my journalistic career while getting my degree in English Literature at the University of Warwick, where I also worked as Games Editor on the student newspaper, The Boar. Since then, I've run the news sections at PCGamesN and Kotaku UK, and also regularly contributed to PC Gamer. As you might be able to tell, PC is my platform of choice, so you can regularly find me playing League of Legends or Steam's latest indie hit.

Read more
Assassin's Creed Shadows screenshot of Yasuke and Naoe
We're only 3 months into 2025, but this year has already been stellar for RPG sickos like me – and it's showing no signs of slowing down
Best games of 2025: images of Split Fiction, Like a Dragon Pirate Yakuza in Hawaii, Kingdom Come Deliverance 2, and Monster Hunter Wilds.
The best games to play in 2025, so far
Screenshots of battle in Elden Ring Nightreign along with a logo for GamesRadar+'s Big in 2025 features
Elden Ring Nightreign could be the Fortnite of Soulslikes, but probably not for the reason you think
The Witcher 3, Bloodborne, Fallout 4 and more turn 10 this year, showing just how massive 2015 was for games
Ghost of Yotei lead Atsu in straw hat
What to expect from PlayStation in 2025: Classic games, live services, and moving beyond consoles
The two characters in Split Fiction dressed in fantasy gear each with a dragon on their back
2025's first standout GOTY contenders, Monster Hunter Wilds, Kingdom Come Deliverance 2, and Split Fiction, are coming to GeForce Now
Latest in Action Rpg
AI Limit
"AI is not as effective as it might appear": Dev of AI-focused Soulslike RPG says they didn't use any AI-generated content and it can't match "genuine creativity"
The First Berserker: Khazan protagonist
The First Berserker: Khazan isn't even out yet, but the new Soulslike RPG already has over 1,300 94% positive reviews on Steam from early buyers
Lies of P art showing P walking in a snowy forest
Lies of P director loves FromSoftware and respects the Soulslike tag, but says "I'm really serious, I'm not lying, I'm very truthful, our focus is to create our own style of game"
Lies of P Overture art of P
Lies of P director says Overture DLC is at least 15 to 20 hours long for "experienced" players, packing tons of bosses and ideas the devs couldn't fit at launch
Monster Hunter Wilds screenshot showing a hunter battling a congalala
If you missed the last one, the new Monster Hunter Wilds event quest is another way to stock up on rare ingredients before the big update drops next week
Monster Hunter Wilds
Monster Hunter Wilds' first major update rights its greatest wrong by adding a proper Palico cooking animation, and it's letting you change Alma's glasses
Latest in News
Destiny 2 Lightfall
When Destiny 2 "weekly active users dropped lower and faster than we'd seen since 2018," Bungie assembled an A-Team to put out some fires: "We needed to do something"
Velma, Daphne, Fred, Shaggy, and Scooby-Doo looking at a giant key which is also a clue
Netflix is rebooting Scooby-Doo as a live-action series from the producer of Supergirl and The Flash centered around a "supernatural murder" at a summer camp
Astro Bot
Astro Bot went through 23 pitch iterations before its director promised PlayStation "happy gameplay" and "overflowing charm," though it did once end with robot decapitation that made "some people really upset"
Tomb Raider
5 years after Avengers, 2 years after its last layoffs, and who knows how long before Perfect Dark and Tomb Raider return, Crystal Dynamics announces another round of layoffs
AI Limit
"AI is not as effective as it might appear": Dev of AI-focused Soulslike RPG says they didn't use any AI-generated content and it can't match "genuine creativity"
Fantastic Four: 1234 #2 cover excerpt
Sue Storm and Namor are officially both in Avengers: Doomsday, and fans are wondering if Reed Richards has something to worry about