First Human to Beat Tetris Emerges as US Teen

First Human to Beat Tetris Emerges as US Teen

tetris-has-been-part-cultural-landscape-decades-now-us-teen-has.jpg?w=736&f=64d696498b22b1bb3fc0b4e78093297a” alt=”Simple, but highly addictive, Tetris has‌ been part of the cultural landscape for decades, and now a US ⁢teen has beaten it, playing until the code freezes” width=”736″ height=”481″>

A US teenager has beaten classic computer game‍ Tetris, forcing it‍ into a game-ending glitch in‌ a feat previously achieved only by artificial intelligence.

Willis Gibson, 13, a competitive gamer known as “blue scuti,” became the first human‌ to ‌reach the “kill screen” of the Nintendo version of the puzzle game, as fellow players followed⁣ his progress online.

“Oh my God!” Willis screams repeatedly towards the ​end⁢ of a more than 40-minute video he uploaded to YouTube ⁤this⁤ week.

“I can’t feel my fingers,” he adds breathlessly.

The emotion stands in stark contrast to the preceeding 35 minutes of gameplay in which Willis,⁣ from Oklahoma, sits⁤ mostly motionless while rapidly scrolling his fingers across a controller.

It also underlines this big achievement for ⁣a community of enthusiasts who play both online and in-person tournaments.

“It’s never ‌been done by a human before,” Classic Tetris World Championship president Vince Clemente said, according ⁢to The New York Times.

“It’s basically something that everyone thought was impossible until a ‌couple of years ago.”

The brainchild of a Soviet software ⁣engineer,⁤ Tetris is a simple but highly addictive game in which players must rotate and manipulate falling blocks of different‌ shapes‌ to fit together and create solid lines inside a box.

Once a⁣ line (or two, three or four) is formed, it vanishes, ‌leaving more space — and time — to shuffle the following blocks.

Blocks fall faster as a player progresses ⁤through the levels, all the way up to⁢ Level 29, which was for a ​long ⁣time ⁣believed to be the end of the game — the point ⁢where things move too fast for humans ⁣to react.

But a series of innovations over recent years have pushed the envelope, and players have​ found a‍ way to keep going, beyond the capability of​ the ancient code that sustains the game.

For some time, ​competitive players⁢ have known there is a point at ‍which the code⁣ bugs out and‌ the game ⁣stops, ⁢but only another computer has been able to reach it.

Until December 21 when Willis was on ​Level 157 and dropped a piece into place that caused a single line of blocks to vanish, and the game ‍to freeze.

Fellow players were​ quick to share ⁢the excitement, with Classic Tetris World Champion fractal161 — aka Justin Yu — shouting ⁤”He ⁤did it, he did it!” on his livestream.

Tetris chief executive Maya Rogers joined the celebrations, telling popsci.com ⁣it was a fitting achievement ahead of the 40th anniversary of the game in 2024.

“Congratulations to ‘blue scuti’ for achieving this extraordinary accomplishment, a feat​ that defies all preconceived limits of⁣ this legendary game,” a statement said.

AI

2024-01-04 17:00:03
Source from www.ibtimes.com

Exit mobile version