AGDQ (and honorably) –
How do you catch fakes when it’s easier than ever to manipulate video?
Steven T. Wright –


Ever since the first two hopeless MIT geeks battled it out in primitive progenitors like
its tenth anniversary (this January), where runners are invited to show off their skills on-stream to raise funds for organizations like Doctors Without Borders. Outside the outsized spotlight of this biannual spectacle, however, the competition rages on platforms like Twitch, where determined runners stream their attempts to break into the all-important leaderboards hosted on Speedrun.com. However, in certain walled-off corners of this tiny world, members of the community have begun to publicly question the legitimacy of certain competitors and records, wrenching open a Pandora’s box of controversy that some runners feel threatens the entire foundation of the hobby as they know it.In many ways, Anti’s fakedGTAruns might stand as a microcosm of the ever-present specter of cheating that has lurked under the surface of the hobby for years now. Speedrunning fans know the script: first came the announcement, then a half-hearted apology, where Anti admitted that at leastsomeof the runs were cheated. Next came the backlash against the moderators from fans of Anti’s streams, who stated that the apology was a sign of growing maturity. That was, of course, followed by the backlash to the backlash, when the moderators decided to make the ban permanent after analysis of anti’s older runs connected that the speedrunner’s confession was far from complete and that the cheating was far more widespread than initially claimed. Eventually, after the initial explosion of drama, Anti’s runs were scrubbed from theGTAcharts, and the controversy ebbed away.According to YouTuber Ben “Apollo Legend” Smith — himself a divisive figure in the world of speedrunning, largely due to his fiery fusillades against some of the biggest players in the space like GDQ — incidents like these are part of a growing trend of trusted, even prominent runners being exposed as fraudsters in sub-communities that they themselves helped build. But while the level of scrutiny that Smith and fellow content creators bring to bear on these alleged cheaters is certainly a new development, the concept of cheating is not. In fact, it’s almost as old as the hobby itself; oneGoldenEye
**************************************** (runner was faking his runs as early as the late ‘ s. So as the world of speedrunning continues to grow larger and larger today, Smith worries that the methods that cheaters employ will only grow more sophisticated — and, with enough time, perhaps they will become entirely undetectable.“I think people have probably been cheating as long as speedrunning has existed,” Smith says. “I think it’s only natural. But as more people come into the hobby, that number only grows. It’s a pretty big problem, in my opinion. ”
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