Obvious Rule Patch: Difference between revisions

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* [[Penny Arcade]] parodies this with ''[[Scribblenauts]]''. Tycho explains how the goal of the game is to get Starites, and you do so by writing the names of useful items ([[The Dev Team Thinks of Everything|over 22,000 are available]]), which then appear. Gabe picks up the game and immediately writes "Starite". One appears and he wins. Note that in the actual game, doing this produces a '''fake''' Starite that's worthless. {{spoiler|Except for the very last level.}}
 
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* Speed running times separate "any%" and "100%" runs in large part due to how plain completion is based on skipping as much of the game as possible<ref>For example ''[[Super Mario 64]]'' has 120 stars that must completed for 100% completion, with an intended minimum of 70 stars required to reach the final boss and complete the game. Since 2007 any% has avoided collecting ''any'' of the 120 stars.</ref>. After [[Tool Assisted Speedrun]] website TASVideos.org's record for [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrspyLH0IoU catching all Pokémon] in [[Pokémon Red and Blue|Gen 1 Pokémon]] game (achieved with relatively minimal glitching) was "obsoleted" by [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXIwud48Xcs a run that used one glitch over and over to catch all Pokémon in sequence] they updated their rules so that runs based on tricking a game into executing arbitrary code can not qualify for the fastest 100% completion in a "Vault" tier (pure technical achievements, minimal entertainment value) run, only any%.
 
=== Real Life/Law ===