Speedrunner proves insane claim after 18 years!
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- Wave Race 64 is a true Nintendo 64 classic, noted for its realistic water textures, and worked on by Shigeru Miyamoto himself. So there's no surprise that it's also a speedgame which has been competed in throughout the ages. This is the story of a speedrun which was claimed to have taken in 1999, and despite skeptics rightfully being unsure of the run, the "lost media" speedrun was found, and it was actually proven to be TRUE years later!
Step back in time and witness the awe-inspiring journey of a speedrun world record that lay dormant for years, only to be officially validated in 2017! In this captivating video, we delve into the remarkable story of the Wave Race 64 speedrun world record claimed in 1999. For nearly two decades, skeptics questioned its legitimacy, but in 2017, undeniable evidence came to light, forever solidifying its place in gaming history. Join us as we celebrate the perseverance and determination of the speedrunner, and explore the moments that led to this incredible achievement being recognized.
Videos and speedruns referenced or shown in this video;
Wave Race Sunny Beach Leaderboards: www.speedrun.c...
Illu's 1'04"167 • Illu Sunny Beach 1:04:167
Illu's 1'03"975 • Illu - Sunny Beach 1.0...
Lockwood's 1'03"326 • Sunny Beach 1'03''326
Shibby's 1'03"186 (Current WR) • WORLD RECORD Sunny Bea...
Misuken's 1'03"763 from 1999 • 1999年6月3日 ウェーブレース64 サン...
GhillieGuide's video about this story from 2017 • Legendary Wave Race 64...
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Thanks for watching, and until next time, stay true!
Why didn't Misuken just take the normal route of constantly suuing people until they acknowledged his achievement. So much easier than digging through old VHS tapes.
Lawyers can be pretty expensive. But I wonder what a new VCR costs these days?
@@MofoMan2000 Just don't try and get one repaired! I know these two guys who repair them and I've been wait for 12 years for them to finish!
@@TheTundraTerrorI think they got scammed. Lol
@@MofoMan2000haha😂 not much
@@TheTundraTerror Me too and we ended up flying my house to the top of a mountain and other adventures, like trying to get me gay married for some elaborate scheme! What a bunch of nogoodnicks.
The fact this guy had unintentionally held the longest standing Individual Level record for *any* N64 game is crazy. Makes me wonder how many other hidden champions there are.
None
Nah but I do find it unlikely. But always cool instances like that
Isai (malva00) had some IL world record in board the platforms for smash 64 that lasted from somewhere between 04-07 to 2018 !
Unironically - probably very few. It is just barely possible to individually discover as many timesaves as an entire community and then implement them as well or better than they do, while working on your own. I understand my speedgame is a bit more technical than most but even in the simplest games there are small optimizations that really need community interaction to learn.
These things happen but they can't be common.
@@Purlypurlington probably a bunch of "hidden champions" exist, but i'm sure very few have any lasting proof of it
This is the exact opposite of those "Cheater exposed after 10+ years" videos and I'm all for it, very heartwarming news.
Seeing 24 years ago on the leaderboards really puts in perspective how insane this is. Incredible video, love this type of content!
That's genuinely insane that he was better than an entire speedrunning community for 15 years, even with a suboptimal camera possibly causing extra lag. What an icon.
Camera?
@@OatmealTheCrazy FOV
The guy used a vhs to record, not a camera, a vhs burns an image into the tape inside and plays it back like the first movie projectors to create an image... Overtime dust, temperature and moisture can degrade the quality and give you what we saw in video
@@shadowing507 they were talking about the camera position in the game... not being the closer in one, thereby making the game itself have to render more. has nothing to do with the recording method.
@@Darthtanos oops sorry, misunderstanding.. not familiar with the game i shouldve just kept my mouth shut. Thought it was a generational gap thing.. sorry op
17:11 That list of rankings is so awesome. Everyone else is relatively recent, and then there is Misuken with that astonishing "24 years ago"! XD
As a dude in his early 30s who grew up on all these games, man am I glad I stumbled upon this channel. Inject that nostalgic goodness into my veins brother!
Welcome!
As someone who started with the Genesis and went on to N64 and a limited PS1, I feel ya there.
I cannot believe it actually just keeps happening
It's truly remarkable
It really does
Well my friends
lets a go
Murphy's law; it just has got to happen.. 😮😅
Chameleon here. Current Rank #16 on Wave Race 64. We are always on the look for lost media. Always nice to see people covering our small but competitive commumity. Nice video Goose.
I hope 12:20 Chris Murphy sees this and goes "Oh hell no I have that on tape" and brings it out in to the world hahaha
I would also love to know how these records were “confirmed.”
@@cjmedina5661I mean records from 25 years ago were probably verified by asking “Is this real?”
Polaroids were the go to for proof back then
Chris Murph needs to deliver the evidence asap! 😂
@@josephmother2659paired with a small -bribe- donation
The magazine part does prove that he was capable of it in 1999. If he only presented the VHS tape, it could've been recorded today, the fact that he had old magazines with his name proves that he is likely not lying about the recording being from 1999.
@Dr.Quarex this right here is why the speed running community is a joke nowadays. Two sources of proof Ignores it continues to champion the new modern darlings.
@Dr.Quarexyeah, it would be Insane to claim a fake time in 1999 and then match the exact fake time 18 years later
To be fair, and as was mentioned in the video, magazine records prove literally nothing because they're more often than not just kids claiming fake times and getting them approved. While that doesn't necessarily means that all the times could be fake, like in this case, it goes to show that these scores alone don't really amount to anything of value.
@@Mimagito That is my point, the scores are meaningless, but in this case they justify the claim that he got this recording in the 90s since it shows that he was active in the 90s, and they show his exact time.
@@Obi-WanKannabis Yeah I don't believe dumb shit like that sin e photos and videos were needed to submit that back then in a time when photo manipulation didn't exist.
This put a legitimate smile on my face. These last few years have been really rough on the speed running community with all the cheaters and scandals happening lately. I'm not a speed runner myself, but i love watching people hit these amazing records.
So to hear a story of someone claiming of setting and holding a record for a decade and a half is a bit of a bitter pill to swallow as a 1 in a thousand that does it. But to prove themselves? and at that, utterly destroying more than a decade of records? This man was a true legend.
Absolutely crazy that a 24 year old record is still 14th. Truly a speedrun ahead of its time
TBF he did sit down for a whole session of attempts and recorded it. Guy was dedicated.
@@BodywiseMustard he recorded it so he could submit to the magazine presumably
Seeing "24 Years Ago" on that leaderboard is nuts. Guy's a legend.
I'm pretty sure that there are many unknown champions out there, who just don't give a damn about recognition and were just players. Like... I remember when i was 15 and playing games like screamer all day, on some circuits, the laps were so perfect that i would run against the ghost car over and over concluding that there was no way to make it better. This was before i had internet and anyway, i never seeked to be part of any community... Heaven knows how many people secretly hold insane records and never gave a damn about it!
Wow, Misuken, what an absolute legend. A 15 year untied world record.
I'm betting that there are way more of these cases than people think. There were tons of N64s out there with plenty of competitive people playing before the current age of speed running and online rankings.
Yep. A couple people recently shared 2 Mario kart shortcuts that they knew for years and years because they just assumed the speed running community had found them. Well the community hadn’t and they led to new world records.
Im sure there must be, I've watched Summoning Salt's videos about Mario Kart history, I was a kid in the 80s and we found several shortcuts that weren't "discovered" by speed runners until the 2000s. Watching those videos I was like "why aren't they taking the shortcut?" and then later in the video they find it. I wonder just how much knowledge was discovered by us original 80s gamers, then lost to history as we moved on to new games and has still yet to be re-discovered
@@Purriahwhich shortcuts? Is there a video
@DanielTojcic I think it's mario 64 rainbow road red shell shortcut and another one I forgot
Yes! Exactly what I was thinking. In it's day a game like Wave Race was being played by hundreds of thousands or maybe even millions of people. I'm sure the Wave Race speedrun community is thriving and all, but it's still a drop in the bucket comparted to the numbers of players back in the day. And given that Sunny Beach is the first track and is so short, that's a LOT more cumulative playthroughs than could ever be attempted by today's community. I bet more than a few good-not-great players might have even just stumbled into a top time now and again given the sheer numbers.
Dude that is unreal. How many times did the kids on the block lie? And this dude was legit, taping himself with a VHS recorder, while Bill Clinton was still president of the United States. What a gem, man. That video proof that he found just catapulted him to a new level of speedrunning history, having an untied record for like 15 years. That's CRAAAZY. And so while it's less likely with a game like Goldeneye, only because it was reviewed more stringently and frequently over the years due to being a game of such lasting value, it is nonetheless jaw-dropping and legendary. Thanks for bringing this story to us, this was a real treat Goose!
A VHS recorder is called a VCR
Typical American to use presidents as a reference point when talking about someone who is not American and has no association to America.
@@ootdega Guess what the R stands for genius.
I never get tired of hearing crazy speedrunning history about games I didn't even know exist
This might be my favorite of these videos so far just for how wild it is. There's a weird magic to those "hidden records."
Hidden records shouldn't be acknowledged. It's dumb You didn't submit the during the time. Actual record hoders wouldnt acknoledge these people. And no way of telling if they are lieing.
This video has everything:
- Eliters
- An Epic Unhoard
- Getting cucked with 15,5 years of leeway
- A newcomer blowing minds of established runners
- RützouVision
- Lost and found media
- A longest standing untied
- Lore
And the best part: it's not even about GE or PD. What a cocktail!
Who's GE and PD? New here.
@@observerf-03p.d39 Goldeneye 007, Perfect Dark. Both are FPS games for the N64. Watch Goose's Speedlore episodes to learn a wealth of info about both.
@@observerf-03p.d39 brother if you aren't trolling, GE is Golden Eye 64 and PD is Perfect Dark.
@@vietnamsemonky4082 OHHH my bad.
The only thing missing for me is a summarized breakdown of the strategies used to achieve the time to showcase what Misuken used/found a decade before others implementing them. That would be awesome.
this guy legit had the experience every 90s gamer could dream of 🤣 loving and speedrunning a game, to finding out 2 decades later that you held a world record, to actually being able to prove it and get the acknowledgement you deserve. crazy to think how different the speedrunning "lore" would've been if he got it published back then 🤔
It was 1996. I was just forced to move from my home town of San Diego to Las Vegas. An uprooted moody AF teenager who just hit puberty, I was not happy about this at all. My parent got me a Nintendo 64 and it was the first and only Nintendo I had growing up. Wave Race was the first game I got to experience. It was gloriously impressive. The graphics, to me at the time, were real enough that my mom caught be leaning my body with the rider as I was playing. Loved this game so much! Thanks for this video.
I swear to god Ryan Lockwood is like the speedrunner equivalent of Kilroy was Here. He just appears seemingly everywhere, when you least expect him
him and matt turk
One hell of a video, Goose, nice work. Makes me feel better about still having all my old VHS recordings from 2003-2005, including a long Mario Kart 64 session with Boss when we were in college.
That sounds incredible! I hope it makes it online someday (if it's not already).
Man I remember the Drake Lake course in this game was amazing to me. I always wanted to go to a lake like that in real life. It was just so peaceful and pretty and the fog was so atmospheric. The N64 had a lot of games with a 'fog' effect like that, and it made so many areas seem mysterious and atmospheric. I miss that.
A great example of limitations like render distance adding to creativity.
ah yes, the beautiful Superman 64
There is something about the graphics on the N64 and PS1 that can't be matched today. Like they did neon and light particles floating through the air really well. I think the roughness required by the limitations of the systems add to the atmosphere of the games.
It was beautiful until you slammed into one of those wooden poles 😂
My man, those lakes truly exist if you know where to look. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Canada. They are ABSOLUTELY as fun to jetski on as they look, too. I never knew how truly blessed I was to grow up where I did until I learned that most people don't have myriad of undeveloped lakes near them.
If you ever get the chance, absolutely take the time to vacation in a wooded lake area. Even if the lake is partially developed, there's a good chance a part of the lakeshore will be beautiful and untamed.
No way man. I watched your wave race video yesterday and I searched your channel this morning for more wave race content. The timing on this video is unreal. Don't get me wrong I love goldeneye as much as the next guy but anything pilot wings/wave race/1080 related is absolute peak cozy video material. Keep it up
I love synchronicity like this! Glad to give you the video you were hoping for!
I watch several channels about speedruns, about old records and their improvement. You understand very well us - retired players who spent so much time breaking strange records in old, forgotten games.
I always get a feeling of nostalgia and longing for those times after your videos.
Still by far my favorite speedrun lore channel and youtube personality. Thanks Goose.
Remember having this WR tied with Whalls back in 1998 - I dont think Ive revisited the game in over 25 years...however its been fun to watch Illu stream - Also I see theres a Japan cart and not many US carts being used for the WR anyway...wonder what the difference is just in the use of different cart versions..definitely would be fun to play again - Nice video Ryan...David Wonn was a notorious glitch master (founded many secrets within the speed running n64 games) which he doesnt get much recognition today however he was a huge lure of a player in his day...
I love when Goose uploads, it's always an interesting watch and so well done.
I remember thinking back in the day about how there would never be better looking water than in Wave Race 64...
It's so amazing
Just wanted to say thanks for what you do for the gaming community, You help people respect and possibly even pick up a game or two with your videos. Always great to see you putting out new content and I always look forward to their release. Thank you Goose
0:39 That disclaimer saved you a lawsuit
It's so funny looking at the top 20 times and seeing like
"10 months ago"
"7 years ago"
"5 months ago"
*"24 years ago"*
"1 month ago"
Marc Rutzou approves Misuken's VHS quality.
While watching the VHS footage, I kept hearing this strange synth noise off in the distance. I don't know what it was, but it's finally landing.
longest standing single star wr for sm64 was Boil the Big Bully in 16"16 igt by Akira (2013-2023)
Sunny Beach stood for more than 2000 days longer
You need to bring the campfire series back. It was the coziest shit in the world.
"Hay - ya - teh". The Japanese surname "Hayate" pronounces the 'e' on the end. All Japanese consonants ALWAYS have a vowel sound immediately after, EXCEPT SOMETIMES "N". Now, that doesn't mean that speakers will voice the ending vowels all the time, just like you might leave off the "-g" when you go "drivin".
I hope David Wonn is doing well these days. Back in the late 90s, early 2000s, I helped him with his game speedrun/glitch website. Really unique and cool guy. Haven't heard from him in nearly 20 years.
oh wow cant believe this game popped up in my recommended. I actually test played this game. The devs or western branch or something did a bunch of interviews in texas and I got accepted. got like 20 dollars and got to play the game for a while before it came out and give my thoughts. They ended up hiring one of us 10 kids i think. Thinking back on it, that was a lucky kid.
This video brought back so many memories for me. I remember me and my brother getting this game and cruising usa as a gift from our grandmother when we were 12 years old. We didn't even own an N64. She thought they were SNES games when she bought them and mailed them to us. (lol old people) She couldn't afford to buy us the console too once we told her what she did so we spent months saving every penny we could to buy an N64. We grew up really poor so this was hard for us to do. But when we finally got enough money for it, finally getting to play this game instead of just looking at the cartridge was the best feeling ever. I wish I knew how my brother's times in this game compared to the runners of today because for years after I got bored with the game, he would play this game all the time just trying to lower his times on maps. He died a few years back so even if he would remember, I couldn't even ask him.
What a story. Thanks for sharing these memories. I can really picture just "looking" at the cartridge, anticipating playing it someday. Glad you got to enjoy it so much.
interesting to see the "fake" scores from the UK magazine, i used to submit scores back then and would have been in the issues shortly after the one pictured - and to be "confirmed" you needed to submit photographic evidence - which for the time was usually just a regular camera film photo off your tv....so very hard to fake.
as a michigan smash contemporary of the man himself, i always love hearing a good retelling of some quality shibbypod lore. nother great goose vid for my morning coffee sesh.
I must have spent a thousand hours playing this back in the day with my neighborhood friends.
I think there are a ton of world records out there that are not "official". It was crazy enough that this guy happened to be recording, happened to save it, and happened to still have it. I've done a lot of amazing things in games and I never record. I just say that was cool and move on.
Imagine Chris Murphy pops up with a video of his 1'02"694 now. :) (The very fact that they're apparently playing on the NTSC version is kind of interesting; it wouldn't exactly be trivial to have an NTSC console and TV in the UK then).
That would be truly insane!
When I saw your video in my feed, it brought me straight back to 9yr old me discovering my stepdad’s stash of N64 cartridges… WaveRace, PilotWings, LoZ Majora’s Mask, Mario Kart 64…
My stepdad’s sibling group still get together for a round of Kart 64 on the old console with a penny rattling around in it.
when you try to get another life by slotting in a coin 🧠
13:01 "Mind you, this was in the year 2017, and so this video would be 18 years old by this point" Goose, you can't do this kind of stuff to us.
Believe it or not, things from 2005 are now 18 years old! 😱
It looked like that tape was hardly hanging on, if he didn't find it when he did it could have been lost forever
Imagine if he waited another 20 years, yeah. Then maybe the visual would be too degraded to see anything!
@@GamerFolklore It makes you wonder. What if the tape degraded just a little differently and it didn't meet proof standards, but was clear enough that people generally believed it to be real
Rendering less is faster, but you have to imagine for such a tight, optimized run having a better awareness of your positioning and lines isn't trivial, especially when it took as long as it did for those playing with an optimal camera to catch up.
Food for thought.
When a Japanese kid tells you that he accomplished something you thought was impossible in video games, it's safest just to believe them. :P
Even some random person having an old VHS tape, to show proof, that is wild. Respect to this Japanese runner.
This is the type of “what if scenario” we all fantasize about for our speed games, along with “what if some random person knows a speedrunning skip the community doesn’t and either isn’t aware of the community or just assumes we already know about it (this actually happened in MK64 with the RR red shell skip as many people know)?” It’s so satisfying to see that fantasy realized on such a hilariously large scale, resulting in the longest IL WR in N64 history. Thank you always for your superior N64 wisdom, Goose.
Seeing pretty recent speedruns from months back to within 10ish years, then 24 years ago, he's fantastic
ahhh the good ol 18 years long time hoard. A true classic!
I speedrun all games for 950'000hours and got 529'000 wr's in each game. But in all honesty things like this makes me wonder how many wrs we missed out on.
I love how at 0:38 we get an AI pic of two strangers we definitely do not know in any shape or form and they are not recognizable in any way.
Seeing those comments from over a decade ago is why I feel data preservation is so important. It might just be data for most people but being able to search up stuff like that is like opening a time capsule. The fact that I can still go right now and watch Jesse Cox and TotalBiscuit's Terraria series is just amazing to me.
actual God Gamer of his time, i would love to see more hidden gems like this, just imagine the whole reason this was discovered was because the guy didnt even knew that people still play the game competitive.
How many of us could’ve possibly had WR runs back then, but we’ll never know because we just competed with our buddies in the same room with us.
This time the video cassette actually started in second gear.
Great video as always! Underappreciated youtuber
The -e at the end of Japanese words is not silent how it would be in english. Hayate is pronounced like Ha-ya-teh
12:15 Now watch Chris Murphy come outta the blue and show his 1’02” time was actually real 😂
That would be truly insane.
A lot of us were doing crazy stuff on our games in the 90s, and early 00s even, and had no idea the competition went beyond our own console best times, or cool tricks we found out playing so much.
Are the NTSC and PAL versions different in regards to timing?
after finding out that misukens record was played on the same day I was born, I feel somehow connected to it and made me enjoy this way more
I don’t know how many people are going to watch this and have any sensitivity to the footage but I really appreciate you going out of your way just to make sure that people have a heads up
Keep it up with the great content Goose.
Thank you so much! All the best to you ❤️
I love that during the last lap the degradation spikes compared to lap 2, I'm pretty sure Misuken themself played that lap over and over back in the day thinking to themself "holy shit, I actually did that?".
This should also count as a Guinness world record for "longest uptime for a speedrun".
9:06 THANK YOU so much for the photosensitivity warning. Sadly, not a lot of people think about those of us who suffer from photosensitivities.
Personally, rapidly flashing lights can cause me sharp physical pain. However, most people still only think photosensitivity is a form of epilepsy, so I am often disregarded.
Thanks for looking out for us ^_^
0:40 😂 That fine print cracked me up! Thanks!
In a way, it doesn't surprise me that unclaimed times from the 90s are recently resurfacing. The Web was a much smaller community back then, and not everyone had access yet. For those of us fortunate enough to be online during those times, it probably seems inconceivable that a Net Search for something as simple as "Mario Kart" would yield fewer than 30 results, most of which led to fan sites circa 1996. Kudos on this "lost" finding.
Honestly I think Waverace is one of the most underrated games. It was my sisters choice for the n64 game per year my mom would buy and we had SO much fun with it as kids. Awesome to see how people still want to keep all these games alive
man, how satisfying that must have been to find that vhs tape after having been buried away for so long
your videos are always top quality, but this one is among your finest! thank you for this ride!
Thank you! I actually agree, sometimes the story and vibe just come together, and you really "feel it" in that you're making a good video.
Leave it to some Japanese kid playing video games in his basement in 1999 in complete isolation to unknowingly hold a WR for 15 years.
no matter who says what this is the best speedrun history channel on youtube by far....
Karl Jobst is way better
@@fade2black001 Karl covers more broader speedrunning topics and lots of current day big speedrunning history while Goose is more niche. No need to compare two legends who speedran the same games and are actual friends.
I remember my mate and I playing Chuckie Egg on the BBC Model B back in 1983/4 and we played, two-player, taking turns and we were averaging scores of 200k+ every game ... then one day we saw Chuckie Egg on TV being played in a tournament and they stated that the WR was ridiculously low compared to our scores (around 100K ??) and we were both .. WHAT?!
Of course, we were not videoing our sessions (why would we?!) but it was still nice knowing we were both better than the WR at the time :)
Goose is a pretty cool guy!
eh makes n64 youtube videos and doesn't afraid of anything.
uhoh nobody tell him
Ugh. I wish I had video footage of it. Many years ago when I was probably 12-13 years old I grinded Australia on Cruis'n World N64. Nintendo magazine or whatever was having a competition and people could submit times with a screen shot of the finish screen. To this day I know that I hold the best time I've ever seen. After all the trick time reductions were calculated into the time it came in at ~15.00 seconds. Like 11 seconds faster than the closest thing I have seen on TG. I have no reason to make this up and as a kid I just didn't know how to submit a picture to a magazine.
Someone being vanquished by proving his record with evidence 18 years later, insane!
Jeez, gg Misuken, always so fun to watch these videos, thanks Goose
Damn I havent seen OP delivered it was a good day in years lol
Best thing about this proof as well is that he had over 90 minutes of footage, not just the single run. Showing he was truly dedicated to speedrunning the game, not just getting a random lucky run. He actually had numerous 1:03 times in the video as well.
Crazy to see this come to light!
This reminds me of the saying that my grandfather told me. For everyone that you know who is the best. There are 10 more that you don't know about who are even better.😮
It reminds me of another saying "the guy who could cure cancer is likely working a minimum wage job right now" basically saying that there are lots of people who could do great things, but their life situation hasn't led to them discovering their potential.
@@JimMilton-ej6zi The phrase that I was speaking of is that there are a lot of people who accomplish incredible feats, but nobody pays attention or sees what they do. Until that day, somebody says they're the best, and everybody believes it. Then somebody just comes out of nowhere and just smacks them down.
thanks for the warning I put on my eye patch as my left eye is very damaged and could watch the video without issues or risk of seizure because of your courteous warning, thank you I truly love people like you who go that extra mile so as not to harm people like myself
Glad you appreciated it 🙂 Many others ridiculed the warning, but I know old VHS footage can flash around a lot, and be quite hard on the eyes! ⚠️
@@GamerFolklore well the others are simply wrong because of your warning I was able to enjoy this video without a migraine or worse so thank you for thinking of us photosensitive people, we appreciate anyone who looks out for us.
It’s so crazy how people think speed running was invented after the internet in like 2001 with Mario 64. We used to time each other with a stopwatch in the 80s and see if we could beat Mario under 5 minutes. I remember my first Mario 2 sub 20 that I timed on my Casio watch in 1995.
Amazing video!
You could argue that if he had posted proof of his record earlier then the speedrunning community would have learned from his techniques and caught up faster, but at the same time it took them that long to achieve as a group what he had done on his own so much earlier, which is still really impressive.
i guarantee you some of the craziest runs in games have never been seen by anyone
I thought I was the only person who ever played this game. glad to see there is a whole community around it
Hey Goose!! Keep it up! Not sure why your channel hasn’t blown up but we all will keep watching!!!!
The start up music from early Windows for extra 90s experience.
Thanks for the Photosensitivity warning! Paused until my wife left the room haha!
I LOVE HOW THE VHS FUCKS UP MORE AND MORE THE CLOSER IT GETS TO THE 1:03.763 DUE TO HIM CONSTANTLY REPLAYING AND WATCHING IT OVER THE YEARS!
Watching you cover this story on a edition of "speednews" actually inspired me to start speedrunning this game. After a few years, many PB's and a few world records to my name, I can assure that Misuken's understanding of how to efficiently play Sunny Beach, was way ahead of it's time. Just by looking at the run you can tell it was real, every decision adds up.
man, the implications of this run, the misuken actually finding and backing his claim from a run 2 decades ago or he is a some level of deity to properly create a 90 min video file with accurate derogated VHS effect along with 90 of high level gameplay to get the precise time he mentioned.
either way he earned my respect
My friend and I used to pass this cartridge back and forth every week improving on each others' records back when this came out across several years. It's not even close to unthinkable that people were doing high 1:03s back then, I wouldn't be shocked if we had one. Speedrunning existed back then, just not everyone was recording it or thinking it mattered. Granted, to definitively log it into the history books requires strong evidence, and this story is awesome. Just wish kids these days wouldn't just assume kids back then weren't doing difficult time trials.