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The following are the official speedcubing world records approved by the WCA as of 15 February 2025. [46] Note: For averages of 5 solves, the best time and the worst time are dropped, and the mean of the remaining 3 solves is taken. For events where only 3 solves are done, the mean of all 3 is taken.
Mean: 14.05: Tommy Cherry: Rubik's WCA European Championship 2024 (25-28 July) 13.48 / 14.42 / 14.24 3×3×3 Fewest Moves Single: 16: Sebastiano Tronto: FMC 2019 (15–16 June) — Aedan Bryant Ashfield Summer Challenge 2024 (23 June) Levi Gibson Jacob Sherwen Brown Rubik's UK Championship FMC 2024 (26 October) Mean: 19.67: RadomiĆ Baran
The following are the official speedcubing world records approved by the WCA as of 15 February 2025. [39] Note: For averages of 5 solves, the best time and the worst time are dropped, and the mean of the remaining 3 solves is taken. For events where only 3 solves are done, the mean of all 3 is taken.
Speedsolve at a speedcubing competition. Speedcubing (or speedsolving) is the practice of trying to solve a Rubik's Cube in the shortest time possible. There are a number of speedcubing competitions that take place around the world. A speedcubing championship organised by the Guinness Book of World Records was held in Munich on 13 March 1981. [82]
Max Park (born November 28, 2001) is an American Rubik's Cube speedcuber.Widely regarded as one of the greatest speedcubers of all time, Park is one of only two speedcubers ever to win the World Cube Association World Championship twice (the other being Feliks Zemdegs), winning in 2017 and 2023. [1]
On March 10, 2018, Hays became the first person to solve a 7x7 in under 2 minutes in competition, breaking the world record with a time of 1:59.95. [14] On August 10, 2019 Hays posted a statement indicating his retirement from elite speedcubing, shifting his focus to enjoying speedcubing as a hobby rather than a sport. [15]
He is a two-time former speedcubing U.S. Champion, runner-up World Champion in 2011, and runner-up North American Champion in 2024. He held the North American record for the average of 5 Rubik's Cube solves almost continuously from 2009 to 2014, during which time the record dropped from 11.11 seconds to 8.27 seconds. [1]
Vincent Sheu has been an active speedcuber since 2006. [8] He typically uses the CFOP method, a layer-by-layer system popularized by Jessica Fridrich in 1997. [9] In 2011, Sheu tied the existing world record for a 2x2x2 single solve with a time of 0.96 seconds at the Berkeley Winter Cube Competition. [10]