7 Hazañas de Videojuegos tan Increíbles que Parecen Imposibles (PARTE 3) - Summary

Summary

This is a possible summary:

The text is a transcript of a video that showcases some of the most incredible feats in video games, such as:

- Beating San Andreas in 15 minutes with a glitch
- Killing enemies with only a knife in Call of Duty and Skyrim
- Creating cryptic and impossible levels in Mario Maker 2
- Recreating Middle Earth and Metroid Fusion in Minecraft
- Defeating Calamity Ganon in 11 seconds in Breath of the Wild
- Finding out that Michael Jackson composed music for Sonic 3
- Fixing a bug that changed the smoke effect in Mario 64

The video ends with a request for likes and a link to other videos.

Facts

Here are some possible facts extracted from the text:

1. Scientists in South Korea have achieved a nuclear fusion reaction at 100 million°C for 30 seconds.
2. A player named only use me knife has accumulated more than 30 thousand kills using only the knife in Call of Duty games.
3. A level in Super Mario Maker 2 called The Level With The Longest Access Code has 10 to the power of 566 possible solutions and no clues.
4. A project called Minecraft Middle Earth has recreated the main locations of The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit with more than 14 thousand fans over 9 years.
5. A trick discovered in GTA San Andreas allows players to skip the game to the final mission by starting a vigilante side mission at a certain point.
6. A player named Detach has been working on recreating Metroid Fusion in vanilla Minecraft for more than 7 years.
7. A user named Master Torch has defeated Calamity Ganon, the penultimate boss of Breath of the Wild, in just 11 seconds using ancient arrows and a glitch.
8. A group of fans called Chaos X has been trying to fix Sonic from 2006, widely considered the worst Sonic game ever, by improving graphics, loading times and gameplay.
9. A bug in the code of Super Mario 64 causes Mario to propel himself into the air with smoke coming out of his back when he falls into lava, instead of showing the intended texture.
10. A fan named Ceevil spent more than 20 years trying to prove that Michael Jackson was involved in the soundtrack of Sonic 3.