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A list of known Hunger Games in chronological order.

Known Hunger Games[]

1st-9th Hunger Games[]

Exterior of the Capitol Arena

Exterior of the Capitol Arena

During the first nine Hunger Games, tributes were held in the Peacekeepers' stables.[1] Soon after, they were locked inside the Capitol Arena with nothing but weapons while the audience watched from the comfort of their own homes. At the conclusion of each competition, the bodies would be removed and the doors locked until the next year with no further fanfare.[2] Districts 1 and 2 produced more victors in these years, but Districts 4 and 11 were also considered contenders.[3] The Head Gamemaker was Dr. Volumnia Gaul. There was no history of muttations ever being used in the first nine years of the Games.[4]

In The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, Arachne Crane complained that she might receive a "pathetic runt girl from one of the poor districts, like 8 or 12" as her tribute, who would die within a few minutes "like they did last year and the year before."[5] If her comment was specific to those two districts, then the female tributes of Districts 8 and 12 died very early into the 8th and 9th Hunger Games.

9th Hunger Games[]

On the first evening of the 10th Hunger Games, Dr. Gaul said that "In terms of fatalities, [they were] running neck and neck with last year".[6] This implies that during the 9th Hunger Games, around 10 tributes had died by 5pm on the first day.

10th Hunger Games[]

Main article: 10th Hunger Games
Interior of the Capitol Arena during the 10th Hunger Games

Interior of the Capitol Arena during the 10th Hunger Games

The 10th Hunger Games was the first to introduce mentors, who were the top twenty-four students from the Capitol's Academy.[3] It also introduced betting, sponsorship, sponsor gifts,[7] and interviews.[8] Additionally, snake mutts were released into the arena, making them the first mutts to be used in this way.[4] Prior to the Games, tributes were held in the Capitol Zoo,[1] and they later competed inside the Capitol Arena, the landscape of which had been altered by a bombing.[9] Dr. Gaul once again served as Head Gamemaker.

Many tributes and their mentors were killed before the Games officially began, and the victor, Lucy Gray Baird representing District 12, won by cheating with the help of her mentor, Coriolanus Snow.[10] Written off an embarrassing failure, all but one recording of the 10th Hunger Games were destroyed, though aspects like the interviews, betting, sponsorship, and mentorship would be carried forward in future editions.[11] This also marked the beginning of Snow's rise to power; he would eventually become the President of Panem.


11th Hunger Games[]

After the failure of the previous year, the Gamemakers brainstormed ways to engage the districts and the Capitol for the 11th Hunger Games. New additions included incentives to send forward stronger tributes, such as food parcels for the winning district, the creation of the Victors' Village, and monetary prizes for the victors themselves.[12] The victor this year was 16-year-old Mags Flanagan from District 4, who became the first to embark on a Victory Tour.[13]


25th Hunger Games / First Quarter Quell[]

Main article: 25th Hunger Games

This was the first Quarter Quell. Every twenty-five years, a new twist would be introduced for a special edition of the Hunger Games. The twist this year was that each district had to elect its own tributes.[14] The victor of these Games died sometime before the third Quarter Quell, which was held fifty years later.[15]


34th Hunger Games[]

Beetee Latier from District 3 won this year by setting up an electrical trap with parts scavenged from his arena.[16] In The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, Haymitch said Beetee had electrocuted six tributes at once.[17]


38th Hunger Games[]

These Games were not mentioned in the original trilogy, but revealed by Capitol Couture, a Hunger Games website promoting the movies. According to Capitol Couture, District 5 victor Porter Millicent Tripp sustained a broken neck in the final showdown.[18]


45th Hunger Games[]

District 11 victor Chaff lost his hand during these Games. He did not accept a prosthesis from the Capitol.[19]


46th Hunger Games[]

Palladium Barker from District 1 was the victor of the 46th Hunger Games.


49th Hunger Games[]

The arena for the 49th Hunger Games was full of shiny surfaces and lakes. The boulders, caves and cliffs were overlayed with mirrors, and the sky clouds above were reflected and turned to vapor. The Gamemakers introduced shiny silver beetles that swarmed and suffocated the tributes. Wiress from District 3 was the victor.


50th Hunger Games / Second Quarter Quell[]

Main article: 50th Hunger Games

For the second Quarter Quell, two boys and two girls were reaped from each district, bringing the total number of tributes to 48. These Games were won by Haymitch Abernathy from District 12, who survived an arena full of poison, deadly mutts, and an active volcano. His last opponent, a girl from District 1, was killed when she unknowingly threw her axe into a force field, which redirected the weapon back at her.[15]


62nd Hunger Games[]

During her Games, District 2 volunteer[20] and victor Enobaria killed one tribute by ripping open his throat with her teeth. This made her very popular, and after her victory, she surgically altered her teeth so each one ended in a point like a fang, inlaid with gold.[21]


63rd Hunger Games[]

Gloss from District 1 was the victor of the 63rd Hunger Games. Being from a Career district, it's assumed that Gloss was in an alliance with the other Career tributes. His sister won the following year.[15]


64th Hunger Games[]

The victor this year was Cashmere from District 1.[22] She's presumed to have been in a Career alliance, and her brother, Gloss, won the year prior.[15]


65th Hunger Games[]

Main article: 65th Hunger Games

Finnick Odair from District 4 was the youngest victor in Hunger Games history at the age of 14. As a Career tribute, he was adept with spears and knives, and he held his own in the arena until his many sponsors, drawn to him by his good looks, gifted him a particularly expensive trident. At this point, Finnick secured his victory by netting other tributes and stabbing them with his trident.[19]


67th Hunger Games[]

These Games were not mentioned in the original trilogy, but revealed by Capitol Couture. The 67th Hunger Games were won by Augustus Braun from District 1, who was known as the "Cavalier Career", and hailed as "Panem's Favorite Son."[23]


69th Hunger Games[]

While these games were not mentioned in the original trilogy, the arena was a "burning desert".[24]

Katniss recalled an edition of the Hunger Games where the arena was made up of sand, boulders, and scruffy bushes, and many tributes went insane from thirst.[25] This was likely the 69th Hunger Games took place five years prior to the start of The Hunger Games trilogy, as it matches Atala's description of a desert arena.


70th Hunger Games[]

Main article: 70th Hunger Games

Annie Cresta from District 4 was traumatized after seeing her fellow District 4 tribute get beheaded. She hid for the remainder of the Games until an earthquake broke a dam, flooding the arena. Since Annie came from the fishing district, she was the best swimmer, so she was able to outlast the remaining tributes.[26]


71st Hunger Games[]

District 7 victor Johanna Mason pretended to be weak and fragile so others would underestimate her before she revealed her dangerous competence in the arena.[27]


72nd Hunger Games[]

According to an interview with Caesar Flickerman at the start of The Hunger Games film, this was Seneca Crane's first year as Head Gamemaker.[28]


73rd Hunger Games[]

The finale of the 73rd Hunger Games

The finale of the 73rd Hunger Games

Main article: 73rd Hunger Games

The 73rd Hunger Games were won by an unnamed male from District 2, assumed to be a member of a Career alliance. During the final battle, he used a brick to kill the boy from 10. This was Seneca Crane's second year as Head Gamemaker.[28]


74th Hunger Games[]

Main article: 74th Hunger Games
Katniss and Peeta holding out nightlock berries

Katniss and Peeta holding out nightlock berries

This was Seneca Crane's third and final year as Head Gamemaker.[28] When District 12 tributes Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark threatened double suicide by deadly nightlock berries, leaving the Capitol at risk of having no victor at all, both were allowed to win.[29] This would be the inciting incident for a series of uprisings across Panem, leading to the eventual revolution.


75th Hunger Games / Third Quarter Quell[]

Main article: 75th Hunger Games
The 75th Hunger Games arena.

The 75th Hunger Games arena.

For the third Quarter Quell, the tributes were reaped from their district's existing pool of victors.[14] This was Plutarch Heavensbee's first and only year as Head Gamemaker.[30] The Games were interrupted by a rebel plan to break out of the arena, so no victor was ever crowned, though six tributes survived.[31] This was the final Games ever held, and the Games were abolished after the Second Rebellion.[32]


76th Hunger Games[]

The idea of a 76th Hunger Games was put forth by District 13 President Alma Coin. She proposed that tributes be reaped from the children of Capitol officials, in order to satisfy calls for bloodshed and even genocide against Capitol citizens. This proposal was voted upon by the seven victors who survived the war, but while it was approved,[33] it was never officially held.[32]

Unknown Hunger Games[]

Victors of unknown Games[]

  • In The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, Haymitch also said that the District 6 female and District 6 male, also known as the morphlings, won their respective Games with the use of camouflage.[17]
  • In Sunrise on the Reaping, Haymitch mentions a male victor from District 4 that was deeply mentally affected following his games and needed to be comforted by his mentor, Mags. He won about ten years prior to the 2nd Quarter Quell.

Other victors[]

No specific details have been given about the Hunger Games won by the following victors:

Other Games[]

  • One year, the tributes had to bludgeon each other to death with spiked maces, the only available weapons.[27]
  • One arena had a landscape of boulders, sand, and scruffy bushes. Many tributes were bitten by venomous snakes or "went insane from thirst".[27]
  • Another year, half of the tributes froze to death at night because they had no firewood. The Capitol audience considered this "anticlimactic" because so many tributes huddled into balls and quietly froze to death.[27]
  • A few years prior to the 74th Hunger Games, the victor was a boy who received a training score of three.[34]
  • Also a few years prior, a boy from District 6 named Titus went insane and began to eat the tributes that he killed. Eventually, Titus was taken out by an avalanche speculated to be the work of Gamemakers.[35]
  • One year, a female tribute dropped her token— a small wooden ball— before the sixty-second countdown ended, setting off the land mines around her platform. She was blown apart and had to be collected in pieces.[36]
  • A pack of hideous reptiles once destroyed the Career tributes' food supply.[37]
  • Katniss also mentioned another year (possibly the 70th Hunger Games) where the food supply was washed away in a flood caused by the Gamemakers.[37]
  • Haymitch mentions that, a few years prior to his Games, the arena would go dark without warning and giant weasel mutts would emerge to attack tributes. The girl from District 5 had her face ripped off by one. This may have been Palladium's Games.[38]

Trivia[]

  • Only four Hunger Games outright occur during the series: the 10th,[6] 50th,[39] 74th,[36] and 75th.[40] Other Games are referenced or explained in passing.
    • The first film briefly depicts the ending of the 73rd Hunger Games on television when Katniss is on the train to the Capitol.[28]
    • In an early version of the first film script, Caesar mentions to Cato that a District 2 tribute won these Games.[28]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 3
  2. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 9
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 1
  4. 4.0 4.1 The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 19
  5. The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes
  6. 6.0 6.1 The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 14
  7. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 6
  8. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 11
  9. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 10
  10. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 20
  11. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Chapter 30
  12. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Epilogue
  13. MAGS, THE 11TH VICTOR - Capitol Couture
  14. 14.0 14.1 Catching Fire, Chapter 12
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 Catching Fire, Chapter 14
  16. Sunrise on the Reaping, Chapter 8
  17. 17.0 17.1 The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
  18. PORTER, THE 38TH VICTOR - Capitol Couture
  19. 19.0 19.1 Catching Fire, Chapter 15
  20. Game Faces: District 2’s Enobaria - Capitol Couture
  21. Catching Fire, Chapter 16
  22. Game Faces: District 1’s Cashmere - Capitol Couture
  23. AUGUSTUS BRAUN, THE 67TH VICTOR - Capitol Couture
  24. The Hunger Games: Tribute Guide
  25. The Hunger Games, Chapter 3
  26. Catching Fire, Chapter 24
  27. 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 The Hunger Games, Chapter 3
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4 The Hunger Games (film)
  29. The Hunger Games, Chapter 25
  30. Catching Fire, Chapter 6
  31. Catching Fire, Chapter 27
  32. 32.0 32.1 Mockingjay, Epilogue
  33. Mockingjay, Chapter 26
  34. The Hunger Games, Chapter 8
  35. The Hunger Games, Chapter 10
  36. 36.0 36.1 The Hunger Games, Chapter 11
  37. 37.0 37.1 The Hunger Games, Chapter 16
  38. Sunrise on the Reaping, Chapter 3
  39. Amazon - Sunrise on the Reaping. Retrieved on June 6, 2024.
  40. Catching Fire, Chapter 19