Brain Training wins Edge award
Nintendo wins annual award for innovation; mobile title also recognized.
EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND--A 'close to unanimous' jury, chosen by Edge magazine, today awarded its annual innovation in gaming award to Nintendo. The EIEF06 Edge Award, presented by editor Margaret Robertson, was awarded to Dr. Kawashima's Brain Training (known as Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day in the United States) at a ceremony that closed out the first day of the Edinburgh fest.
The game beat out a short list of titles chosen for their ability to change people's expectations of gaming, rather than the game's commercial success. The other contenders were Amped 3 (Xbox 360), Dragon Quest VIII: Journey of the Cursed King (PlayStation 2), Electroplankton (Nintendo DS), Fahrenheit (PC, PS2, Xbox--known as Indigo Prophecy in the US), Guitar Hero (PS2), Killer 7 (GameCube, PS2), and Ossu! Tatakae! Ouendan! (DS--known as Elite Beat Agents in the US).
The Nintendo rep who picked up the prize said that Brain Training represented the different direction in which the company is headed, one which aims to expand the market and ultimately benefit gaming as a whole. Robertson, summing up the success of the grey-cell-testing game, said that "only Nintendo could make mental arithmetic this year's 'must have' [title]."
Alongside the main Edge award was a new award added to recognize the growing mobile sector. The EIEF 2006 Edge Mobile People's Choice Award went to Dirty Sanchez Party Games. The game, which beat mobile rivals Doom RPG, Lumines Mobile, and Digital Chocolate's Tower Blocks for the inaugural award, was praised for taking the game "beyond the handset."
43 Comments
"Edge magazine is the most pretentious magazine you mean. Basically if its not japanese and really obscure they dont like it." - King Davanos IV
Not true at all. Why would they award US-made shooters like Halo and Half-Life 2 with a rare 10/10 score if they do not care for such things?
Edge is the most unbiased and professional gaming magazine I have come across.
Another DS game wins an award!
Oblivion should have been at the very least nominated.
yes Edge are a rubbish mag. they do the occasional 360 cover, for godssakes :-p
Edge magazine is the most pretentious magazine you mean. Basically if its not japanese and really obscure they dont like it. I can't belive you hold their reviews in higher regard than an enourmous website like gamespot.
Edge magazine is the most respected magazine in the industry
there reviews mean more than GS's reviews to those in the know
Really, it is the only one which changes gaming out of all the participants ...
This is just more proof (as if any were needed) that Edge is the most pretentious magazine in gaming.
hex the DS lite is dirt cheap compared to the psp if you are counting playable games that are unique. The DS is the far better value overall.
[This message was deleted at the request of the original poster]
yeah, i'm also waiting for the prices to drop, this game looks pretty good, i like the idea of holding the ds like a book!
Im a waiting for prices to go down then I will buy a DS but these look good.
Hey, Dr. ka-WASH-i-MA' Brain... "doctor, wash'a my brain!" *said with a funny accent and wrong emphasis*
wow, these games rule.
Indigo Prophecy
Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan!
Guitar Hero
Brain Age
Think what'll happen next year after a year of Wii....
A great game always deserves an award. Hats off to Nintendo.
Just got it. It's very fun and addicting. Nintendo knows what they are doing.
that's lovely even though I haven't played the game in ages
Go Nintendo!
Ouendan!, Guitar Hero, and Killer 7 are also awesome titles.
Wii
Featured Game
Latest News
Latest Entertainment Headlines
Hip-hop vets tell Aussie papers they're in the midst of recording their seventh studio album and plan to preview some tracks next month.
News Features
Featured Stories
PS3 coming to Europe, Oz March 23
Sony sets date, price for console's European, Australasian debut; console will retail for 599 euros, AUD999.95, and have 30 games for "launch period."Newsmaker Q&A
Q&A;: Scoring Lost Planet
Lost Planet composer Jamie Christopherson talks to GameSpot about the writing process, breaking the language barrier, and the power of silence.
















