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A teenager from the US claims to have beaten Tetris

Nearly 34 years after its release, Tetris was finally beaten by a teenager from Oklahoma, US.

By Jess Mon 08 Jan, 2024 3:32 PM
Willis Gibson, who goes by the name Blue Scuti on YouTube, has played Tetris since he was 11 years old. Since then, he has competed in many tournaments, regularly passing other record holders as they vie for control of the world record leaderboard. Gibson, now 13, said he was attracted to the game because of its "simplicity".

It's easy to start off yet it's really hard to master it.
Willis Gibson, New York Times interview

The Journey

Gibson said his Tetris journey began when he watched YouTube videos of the game and thus started his quest to gather the equipment necessary to play an old version of it. His mother, Karin Cox, bought Gibson a version of the NES called RetroN from a pawnshop. This new version of the console uses the same hardware as the original NES console and would allow the games to be played as they were originally intended. Ms. Cox also bought her son an old cathode-ray tube television that would allow Gibson to get started with his Tetris competitions.

"I'm actually OK with it," Ms. Cox said in an interview with the New York Times. "He does other things outside of playing Tetris, so it wasn't difficult to say OK. It was harder to find an old CRT TV than it was to say, 'Yeah, we can do this for a little bit.'"

Going for the Crash

Although gamers have hacked into the game's software in order to "beat" Tetris, Gibson, who in the last year became one of the top Tetris players in the country, is believed to be the first to have beaten it on the original hardware. There are AI bots and plugins that do show what is possible with the game, and they have been used in the past to train AI in completing games. This version of the competition, however, dubbed "Going for the Crash", does not allow emulated software. "The main strategy is just playing as safe as you can," Gibson said.

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David Macdonald, a video game content creator and competitive Tetris players known online as aGameScout said, "It's a bit more complicated than that." In recent years of competitive Tetris play, players have used the "rolling technique," which is a method using several fingers to quickly tap the buttons on the controller instead of just one or two. This changed what could be possible in competitive Tetris. This allowed more top players to "go for the crash," instead of just accumulating as many points as possible before the game defeats them.

The Glitch

In Macdonald's YouTube video, he talks about what causes the crash. It is actually a game bug that causes the crash, and that bug can happen at any time past a certain level as the game enters what is called "overflow." Overflow occurs when an integer variable, limited to 255 on the classic NES console, "rolls over" back to 0. In many cases, especially with old NES games, this integer variable controls the level that's displayed, the color palate, and many other aspects of the game. When this number rolls over, players can expect to see graphical glitches or even experience crashes. In short, the game simply doesn't know what to do and this point is called the "kill screen."

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When competitive Tetris players go for the crash, they clear lines in a specific order. This order of clearing lines tricks the game's code into continuing, thus allowing the player to progress further. Many other competitive Tetris players have crashed the game at various points, but Gibson was the first to do it at such a high level. There are many other points about the game's code that are taken into consideration, and spreadsheets have been made to assist players in reaching those high levels.

For now, Willis Gibson remains the only player to reach level 157 on original NES hardware. How long that remains true is up to the rest of the competitive Tetris world.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments!

WRITTEN BY Jess
EDITED BY Jess
IMAGES SOURCED FROM Tetris-Assembly-8086 - Sportskeeda
7 Comments
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 3:34 PM
Congrats on your first article!

I was rubbish at Tetris, although it was pretty much the only game I played on my Gameboy back in the day. That music…. Didn’t it also make it into the pop charts at one point?
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 3:36 PM
I also remember playing it on Gameboy! I honestly think the music was the best part.
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 3:59 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2-9wvKD1z4

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- - - Updated - - -

I also remember playing it on Gameboy! I honestly think the music was the best part.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ5E2xwCZCw
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 4:03 PM
Even if i wanted to, i couldn't play as well as this kid...
Very good article Smile

A little further information:
Video of the original game (42 minutes): https://youtu.be/J9oVQ43j22g
Info on the controller technique used (10 minutes): https://youtu.be/n-BZ5-Q48lE
The linked video by AGameScout is also very good to get more background info on the "defeat" of the game.
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 5:13 PM
It's amazing how far we have come with Tetris really. Once upon a time Level 29 was the only killscreen anyone cared about becuase going any further seemed impossible. Hyper Tapping and rolling have now allowed humans to reach such insane levels that we are reching something that the developers would have thought was so far off they would never have to worry about anyone reaching it. I've some people talking about letting Tetris having multiple kill screens, including one where you it up to Lv 255 and reset it round to 0 but the work required to make it there and avoid the kill screen that Blue Scuti hit is insane but a decade ago reaching this kill screen was also said ot be insane so who knows.

An absolutely insane record and the fact he dedicated it to his dad mkes it extra special. If he wants I can see this kid having a good job in QA and Game testing or even just the pro Tetris scene. Amazing work by this kid to get here first, he will always hold this record and no one can take that away from him and seeing the whole gaming area but especially the Tetris scene celebrate this kid and his achievement all together. I just hope all the rolling dosen't mess his hand up in a few years.
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 5:19 PM
I'm sorry... (not sorry)... it's such a banger!



Big Grin

(btw...Doctor Spin was none other than Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber! unbelievable)
Mon 08 Jan, 2024 5:54 PM
I had Tetris on the Original Gameboy, had the gameboy from Father Christmas back in 89! Fun fact the gameboy still works to this day!
they just don't build them like that anymore! Anyway, I never managed to complete Tetris,
my wife was playing it (gameboy version) on our Retropie few months back and she got to the end,
if you hit 10,000 points I think it was, you get a rocket blasting off into space then put your name into the scoreboard and start again!
This was what she got, 30 odd years later and this was completely new to me!