100% Completion: Difference between revisions

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See also [[True Final Boss]].
 
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== Internet Series ==
* Jirard Khalil, a.k.a. "The Completionist," does 100% completions on video games, and does humorously informative videos about them on Youtube[[YouTube]], completing games like ''[[Catherine]]'' and ''[[Super Meat Boy]]''. ( http://www.youtube.com/user/ThatOneVideoGamer )
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
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** Not to mention the museum, or the town models.
** Or what about having your freaking house paid off, completely. Having your town weed free for a month, or having your house given a perfect score for style? Most of these things give you furniture in the end, but for some people accomplishing them is its own reward.
* ''[[Ace Combat]] Zero: The Belkan War]]'' had this by way of getting all Ace Records, buying all weapons and aircraft, and beating the game on [[Nintendo Hard|Ace difficulty]] with S ranks in each mission. [[And Your Reward Is Clothes|Doing so makes Ustian flags appear in the hangar]].
* ''[[Airforce Delta]] Strike'': Get all the endings and unlock all the bonus planes.
* The ''[[Armored Core]]'' series of games usually have hidden parts for your [[Humongous Mecha]] in some stages along with getting [[Rank Inflation|graded]] for beating the stage. There's also a combat arena in most games which also net you parts. Then and some games even count your mission complete/fail ratio. So getting 100% can take some time and true 100% means [[Nintendo Hard|you can't screw up once]]. Getting 100% usually gets you more parts. But the Armored Core series has a lot of [[Mission Pack Sequel]] games [[Capcom Sequel Stagnation|between next instalments]] so it means something in the end. Armored Core for Answer takes the cake by getting 100% nets you an [[Cosmetic Award|emblem.]] Then again {{spoiler|it's Nineballs emblem the game series [[Memetic Badass|memetic]] [[That One Boss]].}} Also in universe some of the characters have 100% mission success rates, but that doesn't mean anything.
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* A gamer finished up [[Dragon Quest]] IX with a 100% completion rate. Amount of hours played? 773 HOURS.
* The fifth ending of ''[[Drakengard]]'' requires that you collect every weapon in the game first, which is completely arbitrary as what weapon you have equipped [[Unexpected Gameplay Change|doesn't even matter]] to the plot of this ending. And the ending itself is rather [[Dropped a Bridge on Him|anticlimactic.]]
** [[Nie RNieR]] (which takes place in the future of the fifth ending) uses the same formula for getting all the endings, but the weapons are infinitely easier to get. Unlike Drakengard however the endings are more climactic and all [[Tear Jerker|Tearjerkers]].
* ''[[Final Fantasy X-2]]'' is the only game in the series that scores players based on how much of the game they've completed, and it's notoriously sadistic about it—miss a single obscure, time-sensitive quest, pick the wrong option in an arbitrary choice, neglect to sleep at the [[Trauma Inn]] at least once a chapter ''even though it serves no gameplay purpose'', or even ''skip a cutscene'', and you lose any hope of 100% completion. Fortunately, your completion percentage will carry over to a [[New Game+]].
** ''[[Final Fantasy VII]]'' had the Master materia; collect and master one of every kind of materia of a particular type, and you would be rewarded with a single materia that gives you all of the capabilities of all the rest of them combined, giving you more options in combat than you could possibly have otherwise. The optional bosses might count, though they generally don't give you any items that you couldn't get somewhere else.