13-YEAR-OLD BECAME THE WORLD’S FIRST PERSON TO BEAT TETRIS (VIDEO)

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Sun 07 January 2024:

A US youngster has accomplished a feat previously only accomplished by artificial intelligence: beating the popular computer game Tetris and forcing it into a game-ending glitch.

As other players tracked his progress online, 13-year-old Willis Gibson, also known as “blue scuti,” became the first person to reach the puzzle game’s “kill screen” on the Nintendo version.

“Oh my God!” At the end of a video that he posted to YouTube this week that lasted over 40 minutes.

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

Willis Gibson, 13, becomes the first person to complete Tetris, triggering  the 'true kill screen' at level 157

The emotion stands in stark contrast to the preceding 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. 

SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES

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