Racquet Studios live-streamed the prestigious Golden Joystick Awards using Canon CR-N500 PTZ cameras (mounted on the ceiling at the far right of this view), two Canon XF605 camcorders at the sides, and a roving Canon EOS C70 on a gimbal. All the cameras were controlled from a Canon RC-IP1000 controller.
The Golden Joystick Awards are well known in the gaming community, being the world's longest-running publicly voted gaming awards. Rising production company Racquet Studios was commissioned to live-stream the 2024 Golden Joystick Awards event, and chose a range of Canon kit to do the job. Following this, the company filmed the Future Games Show, a pre-recorded event but filmed as live, relying on some of the same Canon kit. Here's how the Canon cameras and technologies facilitated both productions.
The 41st annual Golden Joystick Awards event was live-streamed from a central London hotel. This was a demanding task in itself, but this year there was an extra challenge: the awards were being held as an in-person event for the first time since 2019, before the Covid pandemic, and the organisers wanted to replicate the look and feel of the virtual events that had been held online-only over the pandemic period.
Those virtual events featured lavish virtual environments, the graphical style of which the production company had to recreate. At the same time, it had to combine this with a stage to accommodate the live presenters and guests and even a live musical performance. To add to the challenge, the whole event was to be live-streamed over multiple platforms, with no possibility of post-production.
Simon Skinner, Racquet Studios' Managing Director, reveals how they did it, with insights from Rob Ruardy, Technical Director, and Josh Lewis, Production Director.