Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Speed Demos Archive (SDA) is a website dedicated to video game speedruns.SDA's primary focus is hosting downloadable, high-quality speedrun videos, and currently has runs of over eleven hundred games, with more being added on a regular basis.
Games Done Quick (GDQ) is a semiannual video game speedrun charity marathon held in the United States, originally organized by the Speed Demos Archive and SpeedRunsLive communities. Since 2015, it has been handled by Games Done Quick, LLC. [2] Held since 2010, the events have raised money for several charities.
Ian Bogost, creator of Cow Clicker, similarly notes that "Cookie Clicker isn't a game for a human, but one for a computer to play while a human watches (or doesn't)." [5] Cookie Clicker has been said by reviewers to be addictive, [1] [2] and its fanbase have been described as "obsessive" [15] and "almost cultish". [2]
Narcissa Wright (born Cosmo Wright, [2] July 21, 1989 [1]) is an American speedrunner and co-founder [3] [4] of the website SpeedRunsLive, which allows speedrunners to race with one another in real time.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Of all the Quake done Quick speedruns, Quake done Quick with a Vengeance is the most popular. It features the entire game completed in 0:12:23 on “Nightmare” difficulty (the hardest difficulty level). [5] This run succeeded Quake done Quicker and the original Quake done Quick movie, in which the game was completed in 0:16:35 and 0:19:49 ...
This record is the first time a human has achieved the best result with respect to "frame rules", however there is still time to save in 8-4, the game's final stage. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] Orland describes Niftski's video showing a heart rate of 188 BPM, and his tearful reaction following the run, telling himself to "Get oxygen, dude". [ 12 ]
TASBot is a tool-assisted speedrun mascot created in 2013, [1] developed by a team led by dwangoAC. A replay device takes a list of controller inputs which it then sends to a console such as a Nintendo Entertainment System or Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) directly via signals to the controller ports.