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Tim Schafer to Receive BAFTA Fellowship

21 February 2018
Event: British Academy Games AwardsDate: Thurs 12 March 2015Venue: Tobacco Dock, East LondonHost: Rufus Hound-Area: PRESS ROOMBAFTA/Jamie Simonds

Revered game designer will be honoured with the Fellowship at the British Academy Games Awards on Thursday 12 April

BAFTA has announced today that Tim Schafer, the renowned designer best known for the LucasArts cult classics Full Throttle, Day of the Tentacle and Grim Fandango, and more recently for his work at Double Fine, will be presented with the Fellowship at the British Academy Games Awards on Thursday 12 April 2018 in recognition of his creative contribution to the industry.

The Fellowship is the highest accolade bestowed by BAFTA upon an individual in recognition of an outstanding and exceptional contribution to film, games or television. Fellowships previously presented for outstanding work in games include John Carmack, David Braben OBE, Rockstar Games, Gabe Newell, Peter Molyneux, Shigeru Miyamoto and Will Wright.

Amanda Berry OBE, Chief Executive of BAFTA, said: “Tim Schafer is a true pioneer of game design, who has pushed the boundaries of the medium through his extraordinary talents. With a career spanning three decades, his diverse body of work includes some of the most iconic and best-loved adventure games, all characterised by his powerful storytelling and distinctive comedic writing style. We are honoured to be presenting him with the BAFTA Fellowship.”

Tim Schafer, President and CEO, Double Fine Productions said: “I am surprised, humbled, and honored to be receiving the BAFTA Fellowship this year. BAFTA's long-standing support of video games and championing of creativity and strong storytelling in that medium, have had an extremely positive impact and I'm very grateful to be recognized by them with this Fellowship.”

Tim Schafer is a revered designer within the games industry. He is best known for his work at LucasArts, which he joined in 1989. He first worked as an assistant designer, alongside Ron Gilbert and Dave Grossman, on The Secret of Monkey Island (1990) and Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge (1991).

In his first lead role on a game project, Schafer co-designed with Dave Grossman Day of the Tentacle in 1993, a time-travel comedy adventure and the sequel to Ron Gilbert's Maniac Mansion. Schafer's first solo project, the biker adventure Full Throttle, was released in 1995. Tim Schafer then went on to design the critically acclaimed Grim Fandango in 1998, a noir adventure game set in the Aztec afterlife.

After leaving LucasArts, he founded Double Fine Productions in 2000, where he led on creation of BAFTA-winning platformer Psychonauts (2006). In 2009 Schafer designed Brutal Legend, which received a BAFTA nomination for Story in 2010. Tim Schafer crowdfunded his first adventure game since Grim Fandango, called Broken Age, on Kickstarter and more than tripled the $400,000 target in 24 hours. The BAFTA-nominated title remains one of the most successful crowdfunded games projects on the platform.

In 2015 he set up the crowdfunding platform Fig, a curated version of Kickstarter specifically for games projects. Schafer and Double Fine have continued to champion independent development, both through the Day of the Devs events and Double Fine’s annual Amnesia Fortnight, where the team are encouraged to down tools and work on new game concepts.

The British Academy Games Awards will take place on Thursday 12 April at the Troxy, London. The awards will be preceded by a Champagne Taittinger reception and followed by a seated dinner and after-party for guests. Nominations will be announced on Thursday 15 March. Tickets for the awards will go on sale in the coming weeks.

BAFTA curates a year-round global programme of events and initiatives that support the games industry. This includes developer talks, showcases, debates, scholarships and professional network and masterclass programme Games Lecture by an inspirational practitioner. BAFTA Young Game Designers (YGD) gives young people and educators insights into the industry and access to the brightest creative minds in games. Applications for BAFTA YGD are now open.

Guests attending BAFTA’s awards ceremonies support the organisation’s charitable work and initiatives that identify, support and nurture new talent in this thriving sector. Applications are now being taken for games membership of BAFTA at membership.bafta.org.

For further information:
Eleanor Pickering at BAFTA
T: 020 7292 5863
E: [email protected]

About BAFTA

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) is a world-leading independent arts charity that brings the very best work in film, games and television to public attention and supports the growth of creative talent in the UK and internationally. Through its Awards ceremonies and year-round programme of learning events and initiatives – which includes workshops, masterclasses, scholarships, lectures and mentoring schemes in the UK, USA and Asia – BAFTA identifies and celebrates excellence, discovers, inspires and nurtures new talent, and enables learning and creative collaboration. For advice and inspiration from the best creative minds in working in film, games and television, visit www.bafta.org/guru. For more, visit www.bafta.org.