The Case For and Against Shadow of the Erdtree’s The Game Awards Nominations

The Case For and Against Shadow of the Erdtree's The Game Awards Nominations

The announcement that The Game Awards would be considering DLC as eligible for nominations across several categories led to plenty of speculation regarding whether Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree would get a Game of the Year nod. Sure enough, Shadow of the Erdtree has landed nominations not just for Game of the Year but also for Best Game Direction, Best Art Direction, and Best RPG. The Game Awards is no stranger to being fraught with controversy, but the nomination of a DLC expansion for some of the most prestigious award categories has led to plenty of heated discourse regarding whether Shadow of the Erdtree is taking up a spot of games more deserving.




Unfortunately, the answer isn’t as simple or binary as one might think. While in most cases, a DLC expansion shouldn’t be eligible, Shadow of the Erdtree‘s additions to Elden Ring‘s core meta and experience put it in a different league altogether. On the other hand, those additions aren’t accessible to anyone without a copy of Elden Ring. Shadow of the Erdtree‘s nominations raises important questions about whether future DLC can and should be eligible for what’s the most-watched celebration of excellence in the industry, and it provides an intriguing case for either side of the argument.

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The Game Awards Allowing DLC GOTY Nominations is a Controversy Waiting to Happen

Now that DLC and other atypical game releases can be nominated for The Game Awards, the countdown to a foregone debate has begun.

Elden Ring’s Shadow of the Erdtree Expansion Raises the Bar for DLC


The argument in favor of Shadow of the Erdtree‘s nominations at The Game Awards rests on the fact that the expansion is comparable to a full AAA release. It’s an argument that holds water given that Shadow of the Erdtree accomplishes something that few other DLC expansions have ever done. Not only is Shadow of the Erdtree a massive 40+ hour expansion with a treasure trove of content for returning players, but its additions to the gameplay and lore of the base game make it an unmissable part of the Elden Ring experience.

In other words, Shadow of the Erdtree showcases FromSoftware operating at its peak to deliver more of the game that swept The Game Awards in 2022. As both an expansion to an existing game and a standalone product, Shadow of the Erdtree arguably raised the bar for what’s possible in a major DLC addition to a popular AAA release, and there’s every likelihood that other developers have taken notice. Shadow of the Erdtree is tantamount to being “Elden Ring 1.5“, and were it not a DLC expansion, it would handily have earned all of its nominations at The Game Awards with probably zero controversy.


Players Have to Cross Some Serious Barriers to Access Shadow of the Erdtree

Mohg, Lord of Blood standing with his arms out at his sides
Credits: FromSoftware Inc.

The case against Shadow of the Erdtree‘s nominations is fairly straightforward as well. This is the first year in which a DLC to an existing game has been eligible for GOTY. Rather than create a new category specific for DLC and expansions to be recognized at the ceremony, The Game Awards adjusted its rules to allow Shadow of the Erdtree to be nominated. It also feels like the exception was made specifically for Shadow of the Erdtree, and the controversy wouldn’t like be such a big deal if this had always been the rules OR the rules weren’t made for the game. Regardless of its quality and place as an essential part of the Elden Ring experience, Shadow of the Erdtree still requires players to already own Elden Ring and to have completed a sizable portion of the game to even access the DLC.


To even step foot in The Realm of Shadow and experience all Shadow of the Erdtree has to offer, players need to be far enough along in the main quest of Elden Ring to defeat Mohg, which is easier said than done and other bosses. Beyond that, though, opening up the floodgates to allow DLC to be eligible for nominations sets a precarious precedent for how developers and publishers might structure their releases moving forward.

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