Sonic Frontiers is on its way to winning a Game Award as fans push for a 'Sonic Sweep'

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Most winners at Geoff Keighley's Game Awards are determined through a mix of public voting and jury selection—PC Gamer is one of those jurors—but one award, called Players' Voice, is entirely up to the public. Right now, the leader of that public vote is overwhelmingly Sonic Frontiers.

After coming out on top in the first two rounds, Sonic Frontiers has a whopping 48% of the votes in the third and final round of the Players' Voice award voting. In second place, Genshin Impact has 29%, and in third, Elden Ring has just 13%. God of War: Ragnarok is in fourth with 8%, and Stray has the last spot at 2%. 

“Can we get a Sonic Sweep?!?!?!” wrote Sega senior PR manager Evan Bader on Twitter earlier today.

Sonic Frontiers is not among the jury-selected nominees for TGA's overall Game of the Year award, although Elden Ring, God of War: Ragnarok, and Stray are. The others in the GOTY category are Horizon Forbidden West, A Plague Tale: Requiem, and Xenoblade Chronicles 3. It's pretty much a given that Elden Ring will win that category. I previously thought that Ragnarok might have a chance at upsetting it, but if the public and jurors vote like they are in the Players' Voice voting, it won't come close.

The Player's Voice award, on the other hand, will probably go to Sonic Frontiers, which wasn't nominated for any other Game Awards. From one perspective, that discrepancy illustrates why the main awards shouldn't be decided entirely by fan vote. The Game Awards says it mixes jury voting and public voting to avoid the winners being “socially engineered,” and the Sonic fan lobby, which has also awarded Sonic Frontiers a higher Metacritic user score than Elden Ring, seems pretty good at coordinating its enthusiasm. 

An alternative interpretation, however, is that the Sonic Frontiers nomination snub means it has simply been under-appreciated by mainstream critics. Our anti-Sonic bias has been exposed! (Plus it released a bit late in the year.)

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The divide between fans and professional critics isn't actually as chasmic as I thought it might be, though. PC Gamer's Sonic Frontiers review wasn't among the glowing ones, but there are lots of positive critic reviews. According to Gene Park at The Washington Post, Frontier's controls, soundtrack, “evocative” storytelling, and Sonic Adventures-style structure are a boon for long-time Sonic fans.

“Sonic Frontiers won't win any awards, and it doesn’t need them,” wrote Park in November. “For fans of the hedgehog, experiencing the game feels like winning a lifetime achievement award.”

That last bit may be true, but unless Genshin Impact fans rally quickly (and the gap between the games did close a little today), it looks like Frontiers will win at least one non-imaginary award after all. 

Even non-Sonic fans seem to be getting into the Sonic Sweep. As I saw one voter say on Twitter, Elden Ring and the like will get all the attention in the main awards, so why not vote for a different game in the one category where the favorites can be beaten?

Voting results showing Sonic Frontiers leading the Players' Voice race.

The Players’ Voice voting results at the time of writing. (Image credit: The Game Awards)

Voting for the Players' Voice award, as well as the other Game Awards, is open for two more days. The winners will be announced at the 2022 Game Awards this Thursday at 7:30 pm ET.



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