(logo chimes) - [Falcon] A lot of video games are about achieving the impossible, whether that mean narratively, or in terms of the player's skill. Hi folks, it's Falcon,
and today on "Gameranx," 10 gamers who unlocked
the impossible trophies. Starting off with number 10, somebody in "Final Fantasy
14" became the first to unlock all 2,751 achievements. Now this one's actually a
fairly recent development chronicled by a Reddit post from a user named PrismaticParrot, shows that a player
from the Garuda server, specifically a Japanese
player, is now the very first and only "Final Fantasy 14" player to have gotten every achievement
there is in the game. The post omitted the player's
name for privacy reasons, but if you look at the
rankings on Lalachievements or other sites that track
"Final Fantasy 14" achievements, you can figure out who it is pretty quick. It's the only person who
has all of the achievements. The director of the game, Naoki Yoshida, not only congratulated, but also said that he's going to come
up with an achievement that's very hard specifically
for that player to attempt, which is cool. At number nine, a "Red Dead Online" player reached Rank 1000, and
it only took 9,200 hours. Yeah, a player by the name of Fuwih, if I'm not saying that correct,
Fuwih, I apologize to you, but your name is Fuwih. He detailed some of how,
which a large amount of it is playing with friends. He thought grinding alone
would be really boring so he generally played with friends, and another big thing is that
he did not play other games. Fuwih says that the only
game he tried last year was "Elden Ring." And given this happened
in October of this year, pretty unlikely he spent a
lot of time in "Elden Ring." 9,200 hours, I don't know
if I've done anything for 9,200 hours in my life. I know for a fact I've
been alive for 9,200 hours. I mean, I've been alive a
lot more hours than that, but like, this is my job and I'm positive I have not spent 9,200 hours recording and maybe playing various
games for the purpose of work. Wow, I mean, when you think
about it, that's crazy. That's so much time, and
that's not even like, what the accomplishment is. The accomplishment is the level 1,000, but I'm just impressed he played the game that much, honestly. At number eight, an absolute lunatic took about a thousand hours
and got every achievement in every "Assassin's Creed" game. A guy by the name of Fatal Dark Prince, sharing his gamer score
of a hundred percent on 13 different games. But it was noted in
the replies to the post that there are more than 13 games. However, Fatal Dark Prince counted the Ezio Collection as one game, even though it's three games. It's "Assassin's Creed 2,"
"Assassin's Creed Brotherhood," and "Assassin's Creed Revelations," and they are listed in
this list due to being, I assume a single
purchase, as a single game, which to be completely honest,
has kinda odd implications in terms of exactly how
that's being tracked. But I mean, that's a discussion
completely outside of this. To have done this in a
thousand hours is crazy. Like "Odyssey," "Valhalla,"
hell, "Origins," those are much longer
games than the other ones. I mean, I'm sure that there are people that have spent a thousand
hours in "Valhalla." I mean, it's not everybody's cup of tea, but I'm sure there is. At number seven, a
"Fallout: New Vegas" fan got every single
achievement in one sitting, and let's go ahead and talk about how, yeah, I mean, 75 achievements not the biggest base of
achievements to draw from, but it's a lot, and Vegas
is a pretty big keyword for those achievements too. Some of them being completely luck based because they're tied to the casinos. The guy who managed to pull this one off goes by ItsJabo, and it took him 11 hours and four minutes, which I mean, might as well be a a speed
run in terms of achievements, which is appropriate because ItsJabo has also speed ran "Fallout 3." So he's clearly pretty
familiar with the whole how "Fallout" works thing, and that's absolutely why
he was able to do this. But still, that's impressive. 11 hours and four minutes to do 75 achievements
in "Fallout:New Vegas." Not just the base game, the DLC as well. Good job, ItsJabo. At number six, a guy took nine years to get the 100 Exalted
Reputations achievement. It's pretty self-explanatory
as to what the achievement is. It's raising a hundred
reputations to exalted. And user, EndlessIrony, posted
it to WoW eight months ago saying, "This is the closest
I've felt to beating WoW." And some people might say, "Well, you can get that achievement in much less time than that,
and I'm sure that that's true. That doesn't change the fact that somebody spent nine years doing it. I mean, is this a speed run
or a record of any kind? No, but it was a nice community moment when this guy posted this
to the "WoW" subreddit, and everybody was encouraging
and it got some traction. And you might say, why is this on an impossible trophies thing? Do you do this? I don't. I have not raised a hundred
reputations to exalted in "WoW." I have not raised a single
reputation to exalted in "WoW." So for a normal person, this is of course a very prestigious achievement, honestly. Quite frankly, this would
have been impossible for him if he had not spent nine
years on it, and he did, and that's incredible, honestly. At number five, there's
only one guy out there who has managed to platinum "Mountain Blade II: Banner Lord." That's right, go to psnprofiles.com, go to "Mountain Blade II: Banner Lord," and you will see that the
Platinum Club is a lonely one. It is occupied by one, a
user by the name of Ogronin. See, part of the problem with this game is that some of the trophies are bugged. Apparently, you may have
to execute a clan leader to get the heartbreaker trophy,
but there's a definite issue with the best served cold one where you fulfill the
requirements for the trophy. However, it doesn't trigger the trophy. There's a complicated
process that you can do to get the best served cold trophy, which involves having some
clan members in your party that are unequipped of all things, them dying in a battle
against an enemy army, you raising an army, killing the army that killed your clan members,
and executing everybody. And if it doesn't work,
they advise that you save before doing any of it, and
just simply repeating this cycle until it works. It's really involved. It requires you do it against clan leaders, blah, blah, blah. There's stuff that I don't
personally understand about it. It's a glitch, so my understanding of this description of things here may not be the correct understanding for anybody out there
who's attempting to join the one person "Mountain
Blade II: Banner Lord" PSN Platinum Trophy Club. Good luck with that. At number four, a "Destiny
2" player by the name of Xemo soloed all four Root of
Nightmare encounters, which are raids that are
designed to be taken on by a team of players. It's looked at as a three
person minimum team. But he didn't just complete
them all on his own, he completed them all without dying. It's a solo flawless run, and Root of Nightmares isn't like, the absolute most difficult
thing in the game. It's not even close. It's got the word nightmare in it, but that doesn't mean that
it's an actual pure nightmare. But it's very difficult,
and there are other people who have done these things
individually flawlessly, but never all of them at once. That's really what's impressive here. Xemo really blew it outta
the water with this. It's just a mastery of the skill necessary between all of the different
mechanics, the crowd control, which is a big thing in in these raids. It's an impressive feat. Like, Xemo really
deserves some props here. At number three are the impossible
offline mode achievements in "Ninja Gaiden 2 Sigma" on PS3. Most people assume you
can't do this one alone, but a user by the name of
Sergen proved otherwise. Now the thing about it is,
these are online missions. When he made this post about
doing it in January 24th, 2017, he shows how to do it
both with an AI partner, or with a second PS3, and like, basically, he uploaded videos to
refute the popular opinion that you can only do these achievements with a great partner. To be fair, it is very, very difficult. This is like, a thing a lot
of people consider to be like, 10 outta 10 in terms of difficulty. As hard as it gets. At number two, it took five
years of constant play, but a "League of Legends" player by the name of PhiliFreundlich. (stutters) Phili that. I'm sorry, I can't say
your name correctly. I mean, this guy, I can't say his name, but he's real good at this game. He achieved level seven mastery on all champions in the
game, which is a lot. Now, I'm not saying this
one's completely impossible. I'm sure that other people could do it, but the fact that it took him, you know, five years of constant
playing should indicate how few people are going to do it. Because there are gonna be people who play "League of
Legends" for five years. That's for sure, not even a question. But that's five years of
focus on this specific task, not on like, playing the thing you like doing the most, which is crazy. I wouldn't play a game
for five years doing that, but a big congratulations
goes to this guy. Like, this guy at this
point has an understanding of "League of Legends" that
very few people attained, and that's cool, well done. And finally, at number one,
we mentioned Platinum Trophies and how they can be difficult on one game, but there's one guy out there, Ikemenzi, who has the most platinum
trophies of all time with 8,723 of them. And it's not just that he's got a bunch of easy trophies either. He's platinumed a lot of games that are considered ultra
rare to have the platinum in. I mean, this is some serious dedication, and I don't really know
how to talk about a guy who has a platinum trophy
in tons of different games because you can talk about any one game, and getting a platinum in it for a fairly long period of time. Like generally, the
achievements we've talked about in this video have been about one game. The amount of platinum trophies he has is equal to the amount of games
he has platinum trophies in. That's how that works. That's crazy. I got a couple of bonus
ones for you here as well. A YouTuber by the name
of That Friendly Guy reached the maximum level in "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2" without killing any other players. Basically, the point is avoiding danger, and surviving matches, and winning enough of 'em to level up. I mean, it's a interesting
challenge to give oneself, and he did it. Next is a guy who unlocked the infallible trophy
in "Fall Guys" in a day, which devs called near impossible. Guy by the name of SlothyJrr
didn't just pull this off, he pulled it off while streaming. The stream was hosted
by his friend CaseyMeow, and it was the result of a streak that was pretty much crazy,
and he didn't even realize that he was within spitting
distance of an achievement. He didn't even know it was an achievement. He said he won four games in
a row on his friend's stream, and then people in chat started
to mention the achievement and how hard it is to get. So going into the fifth game,
he knew about the achievement and was trying to get it, and he did. And then finally, Todd Howard has perhaps the rarest achievement of all. There's an achievement
that only Todd Howard has. A real achievement on his account. It's called the Lifetime
Achievement Award, and it is an actual achievement. It's not a, you know, thing
that they said at the awards. No, it's actually on his account, and it actually was a program that he had to run on his computer signed into his Xbox account
that tied itself to his account and gave him that achievement. I think that's the funniest part about it. Like, they sent him something to run. They didn't just like put
a trophy on his account. They were like, "No, no, no, we gotta have you run this thing." Like, they didn't have to do that. I think that that was
probably for him specifically. Like, just give him
something to feel good about, which he said by the way he did. And that's all for today. Leave us a comment, let
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right here on "Gameranx".