It’s a good sign when the craziest thing that happens at the Academy Awards is a tie. No fights. No streakers. No envelope mixups. Just the award for Best Live Action Short going to two nominees, Sam A. Davis’s musical comedy The Singers as well as Natalie Musteata and Alexandre Singh’s dystopian drama Two People Exchanging Saliva.

Kumail Nanjiani presented the award and calmly walked everyone through the unexpected result. Ties are absolutely possible at the Academy Awards but have only happened a handful of times. This is the first tie this decade, the seventh tie in Academy Award history, and the second tie in the Live Action Short category. How cool is that?

Here’s every tie that has ever happened at the Oscars:

In 2013, Zero Dark Thirty and Skyfall tied for Best Sound Editing. Fun fact: That category no longer exists. The sound editing and sound mixing categories merged into a single Best Sound category in 2020.

Prior to that, in 1995, Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life and Trevor tied for Best Live Action Short. The former was directed by actor Peter Capaldi and stars Richard E. Grant. The latter is the namesake of the nonprofit organization for LGBTQ+ youth suicide prevention called The Trevor Project.

Best Documentary had two winners in 1987. Brigette Bergman’s Artie Shaw: Time Is All You’ve Got tied with Lee Grant’s Down and Out in America.

This one is wild: Katharine Hepburn and Barbra Streisand tied for Best Actress in 1969. Can you imagine if something like that happened today? It would be such a to-do. Katharine won for her role in The Lion in Winter and Barbra for Funny Girl—which she also starred in and received a Tony nomination for on Broadway. Katharine had also won Best Actress the year before for Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?

There was a tie for Best Documentary Short in 1950. The winners were a newsreel about a boy’s home in Italy called A Chance to Live and an educational cartoon about the importance of health care for all called So Much for So Little.

Finally, the first tie in Academy Awards history happened in 1932 at the fifth-ever ceremony. The category? Best Actor. Wallace Beery and Fredric March tied for The Champ and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, respectively. What’s even crazier is that there were only three people nominated. That really sucks for Alfred Lunt, the star of The Guardsman and the only Best Actor loser that year.

Again, it would be so crazy if an acting category tied today. Fingers crossed that that happens again in our lifetime. Or maybe a directing tie? That could be fun. Let’s spread the love! It’s fun to see surprises at the Oscars that mean more people are having a good time and getting the recognition for their work that they deserve.