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GamesRadar
Technology
Anthony McGlynn

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 devs receive rare honor from French Ministry of Culture, previously won by Shigeru Miyamoto and the creator of Rayman

Two characters standing on a glowing battlefield during Clair Obscur: Expedition 33.

After sweeping The Game Awards and capturing our hearts wholesale, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33's plaudits continue still. Studio Sandfall Interactive has now received an award from the government of France for creating a milestone in the country's game development scene.

"We were received yesterday at the Ministry of Culture to celebrate our game, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33," Sandfall Interactive says in a LinkedIn post, as spotted by VideoGamer. "As such, the members of Sandfall Interactive were awarded the Order of Arts and Letters. This distinction honors us, and our deepest thanks go especially to our team who shaped this world and to the millions of players who have brought it to life."

Getting the respect of your peers is an impressive feat, but getting noticed and picked for a cultural nod from your country is something else, especially for video games. Despite the scale of the industry, games don't always attract the same prestige and attention within the arts as film or literature.

That said, Clair Obscur's success didn't go un-noticed within the French political sphere. President Emmanuel Macron called the JRPG-inspired game a "great price" for the team's home city of Montpellier, and the country as a whole, while congratulating them on being the first Game of the Year winner at The Game Awards to be from France.

Rachida Dati, the Minister of Culture in France, noted Sandfall's achievement on Twitter, saying the country affirms what games bring to it culturally. Now the studio joins legends such as Nintendo icon Shigeru Miyamoto, Rayman creator Michel Ancel, and Frédérick Raynal, who made the original Alone in the Dark, as recipients of the Order of Arts and Letters, placing them in extremely strong company.

After Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was snubbed at the Grammys, legendary Journey composer Austin Wintory dedicates his win to Sandfall's "once-in-a-generation-level rarity"

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