Camp Hyrule Awards

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Camp Hyrule Awards
The logo for the Camp Hyrule Awards in 1999

Camp Hyrule Awards were awards ceremonies held at the end of the yearly online stay-away camp "Camp Hyrule". Initially, none of the awards appear to have been themed after Nintendo characters, though Nintendo began naming the awards after characters appearing in their games for the 2002 ceremony. Users had the opportunity to vote for other campers to win certain awards prior to each camp's closing ceremony. After the ceremony, the overall winning cabin would receive a prize; for instance, in 2002, the prize was a caricature of the camp counselors, and in 2004, the prize was a screensaver. Many of the featured awards were themed after the Super Mario franchise.

Awards[edit]

Name Requirements Recipient
Baby Mario Award Given to the camp's "cutest camper" Sisterpink
Paper Mario Award Given to the camp's best artist *HEN*
Candy Kong Award Given to the camp's friendliest camper Wolverine
Bowser Award Given to the camp's biggest troublemaker GEX1
Mario Award Given to the most helpful user God_Of_Destruction
Mushroom Award Given to the user most loyal to the Nintendo GameCube Unknown
Luigi Award Given to the camp's best speller HMM
Koopa Award Given to the camp's worst speller LINK_88
Seven Stars Award Given to the user most knowledgeable about role-playing video games PIKMIN_PROTECTOR
Toad Award Given to the most sportsmanlike user BUU_THE_DESTROYER
Chuck Quizmo Award Given to the camp's "deepest thinker" Unknown
DK Award Given to the user who spent the most time in the jungle area DONKEYKONG126

Notes[edit]

  • The awards given out in 2004 were largely identical to that of the previous year, though the Chuck Quizmo Award was replaced with the Marche Award, which had the same requirements. Additional awards were also added with new requirements, though none of these were themed after the Super Mario franchise. The same is true for the following year, as the Marche Award was replaced with the Professor Oak Award. The award still retained the same requirements.
  • Select requirements for awards given out prior to 2002 were retained in the ceremonies following said year, though they were renamed. For instance, the Picasso Award was replaced by the Paper Mario Award, and the Barney Award was replaced by the Candy Kong Award.

External links[edit]