• 13 Year Old Beats NES Tetris

    From Ben Collver@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 8 01:10:45 2024
    # 13-Year-Old Becomes First Person to Ever Beat Tetris

    by Jason Koebler
    Jan 2, 2024 at 10:11 AM

    34 years after its release on NES, Blue Scuti has become the first
    human to ever reach Tetris' Kill Screen.

    A 13-year-old competitive Tetris player has become the first known
    human to beat the game on the original NES by forcing it into a kill
    screen. In doing so, the player, Blue Scuti, broke world records for
    overall score, level achieved, and total numbers of lines in the
    34-year-old game. Previously, only an AI had broken Tetris.

    The feat took Blue Scuti about 38 minutes, as shown in a video he
    posted to his YouTube. As he nears the feat, Blue Scuti says "Oh I
    missed it," after misplacing a block. He recovers, then says "Oh my
    God," as it seems like he'll be able to do it. "Please crash," he
    says as the blocks careen down the screen impossibly fast. He gets
    another line and the game freezes: "Oh my God! Yes! I'm going to pass
    out," he says. "I can't feel my hands."

    Blue Scuti is a Tetris prodigy who employs the "rolling" controller
    technique, a new way of holding and using the NES controller that was popularized in 2021. Rolling surpassed "hyper tapping," which
    requires players to tap the controller's D-pad 12 times per second,
    as the fastest and best way of playing Tetris. Rolling is a method
    where players roll their fingers on the bottom of an NES controller
    and use that pressure to push the controller into their other hand,
    which presses the D-pad to move the blocks. With rolling, players can
    push the D-pad at least 20 times per second, which is fast enough to theoretically play the game until it breaks. The technique has
    completely revolutionized competitive Tetris over the last few years.

    "With rolling players could theoretically play forever ... or as long
    as the game can handle it," the Classic Tetris YouTube channel
    explained on a video of Blue Scuti breaking the game.

    In an interview with streamer ITZsharky1, BlueScuti said he had
    previously gotten close to game crash and began grinding after the
    feat.

    "My biggest struggle was when the nerves started kicking in after 30
    minutes of play," BlueScuti said. BlueScuti dedicated the game to his
    dad, Adam Gibson, who died in December.

    From: <https://www.404media.co/ 13-year-old-becomes-first-person-to-ever-beat-tetris/>

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