MTV Video Music Award for Best Video Game Soundtrack
The MTV Video Music Award for Best Video Game Soundtrack was awarded from 2004 to 2006 as an attempt by MTV to tap into the video gaming community in order to gain greater audiences for its VMAs. When the MTV Video Music Awards were revamped in 2007, this award was eliminated and never brought back.
Recipients
Year | Winner | Other nominees |
---|---|---|
2004 | Tony Hawk's Underground (Activision) |
|
2005 | Dance Dance Revolution Extreme (Konami)[1] |
|
2006 | Marc Eckō's Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure (Atari) |
|
- v
- t
- e
- Video of the Year
- Artist of the Year
- Song of the Year
- Album of the Year
- New Artist
- Group of the Year
- Pop
- Rock
- R&B
- Hip-Hop
- Alternative
- Latin
- K-Pop
- Collaboration
- Direction
- Choreography
- Visual Effects
- Art Direction
- Editing
- Cinematography
- Song of Summer
- Show of the Summer
- Video for Good
- Global Icon Award
- Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award✯
- Artist Website
- Breakthrough Video
- Concept Video
- Dance
- Female Video
- International Viewer's Choice Awards
- Latino Artist
- Longform Video
- Lyric Video
- Male Video
- Metaverse Performance
- Monster Single of the Year
- Most Experimental Video
- Most Share-Worthy Video
- MTV2 Award
- Overall Performance
- Performance in a Pepsi Rock Band Video
- Post-Modern Video
- Quadruple Threat of the Year
- Rap Video
- Ringtone of the Year
- Stage Performance
- UK Video
- Video Game Score
- Video Game Soundtrack
- Video from a Film
- Video (That Should Have Won a Moonman)
- Viewer's Choice Award
Key: ✯ Have special significance and are not necessarily awarded annually
References
- ^ "DDR Extreme Wins VMA Best Game Soundtrack". gamedeveloper.com. Retrieved December 20, 2023.