169 points

Not true. A few months ago, a kid played Tetris until it crashed. Technically beating the game.

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91 points

When you quit the game, you lose. When the game quits instead, you win.

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44 points

In Russia the game quits you.

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43 points

Summoning Salt has a great video about it, if you have 2 hours to kill.

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20 points
*

I watched that video when it came out and it sent me down a rabbit hole of speed running and gaming retrospectives that was so deep I now can’t even sleep without my gaming videos. I don’t even play games and haven’t in many years but I’m so deep in the shit now even my daughter questions my watching habits wondering why I watch this stuff but don’t actually play.

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12 points

Ah the ole summoning salt a roo. I feel like we’ve all been down a similar rabbit hole. I went down one with one of his many Mike Tysons punch out videos lol

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25 points

More recently, by avoid the crash states, “rebirth” has been achieved, which is where the level overflows and wraps all the way back to level 0.

So, true. The game is infinite unless you screw up and die

eta: timestamped link

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22 points
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No he glitched it on purpose. classic tetris game doesn’t stop. it goes forever until you lose.

however after certain level there is specific glitch that stops the game and it’s up to you can choose to not do it and play forever, or get multiple chances to delay it few more levels then do it to glitch and crash the game. That’s as close as you can get to “beating” the game

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2 points
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Fittingly, hacking the system to one’s advantage is part of the Russian mindset too.

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2 points

Except for Willis.

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1 point

By now the new way to play it is to reach higher and higher levels while not triggering any crashes.

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31 points
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A shitload of early games only method of defeating the player was simply to be come more difficult or faster until the player ran out of lives, especially during the early years of video games in the ‘70s and ‘80s. This is not a feature unique to Tetris at all.

The only real difference is Tetris’ longevity, which has far outlasted the Soviet Union it originated from.

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29 points

You can finish the game by hitting a memory overflow bug very far in the game under specific conditions. Just look up finishing Tetris…

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6 points

In the NES version, yeah

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4 points

Yeah people act like the grand master edition doesn’t have a following or a credits bonus level.

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It does have an ending tho. And until recently, when a 13 year old kid managed to do it, the end of the game was only achieved by machines/AI. Tho, to be fair, the ending is basically just going so far that the game stops working.

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19 points

Isn’t it a lot more like a capitalist treadmill? Work hard to make number go up! It is in fact beatable in the sense that the number can’t actually go up forever, eventually the system crashes.

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8 points

This description of capitalism perfectly reflects soviet communism as well, tho

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6 points
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Truly, reaching singularity is the end goal

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Tetris as a commentary on transhumanism.

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4 points

the ending is basically just going so far that the game stops working.

Seems even more appropriate for a game from the Soviet Union.

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0 points

you do realise that are hundreds of Tetris games where you can play endlessly?!?

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6 points
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Virtually endlessly. What they’re talking about is, AFAIK, the actual original (not actually original, but NES) Tetris. It was meant to be infinite, but at some point the numbers get too big to store, and the programming starts breaking down. Some games might be able to keep going indefinitely, just resetting/looping some numbers, and in modern games it might take years, centuries, or even universal lifetimes to reach that point, but almost all “infinite” games will break down at some point.

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5 points

they’re talking about the nintendo entertainment version of tetris, which is the most popular competitive version of tetris.

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4 points

original Tetris was made on Electronika 60, very few people played that version.

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