Cuphead fan speedruns the game while climbing a mountain

The challenging puzzle platformer is even more stressful during arduous hikes.

Not many games are infamously difficult like Cuphead is. It demands pixel-perfect platforming technique and in-depth knowledge of all boss encounters. Speedrunners love the challenge, though only one was willing to speedrun Cuphead while climbing a mountain.

Early last week, speedrunner EazySpeezy uploaded footage of this awe-inspiring act on YouTube (thanks, PCGamesN). As you probably already figured out, it took some (ridiculous) jury-rigging. It involved duct-taping a laptop onto a backpack, then getting someone to wear this contraption while EazySpeezy followed behind playing. Other people partaking in the hike did callouts for tree roots or rocks, so EazySpeezy doesn’t trip and eat dirt mid-speedrun.

The playing field was Mount Mansfield, the tallest mountain in Vermont, coming in at 4,395 feet above sea level. Apparently, EazySpeezy’s trek began at roughly the 2,790 mark, which is brutal even when you’re focusing. Let alone while playing one of the most demanding video games out there. Whenever any dangerous obstacles got in the way, EazySpeezy paused the game because getting hurt while doing something like this isn’t worth it.

Check out EazySpeezy’s uphill climb of Cuphead below. 

Amazingly, he completes the entire run. It lasts roughly three hours and 40 minutes, which is just a tad longer than a typical 30-minute speedrun of Cuphead, but let’s cut EazySpeezy some slack – even if there were several hours during the trek where he wasn’t playing. Many of us can’t finish this game from the living room couch without getting upset.

If you’re new to speedrunning, Games Done Quick holds marathons twice a year for charity. The latest event, SGDQ 2022, recently brought in more than $3 million for Doctors Without Borders.

Written by Kyle Campbell on behalf of GLHF.

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The 5 best announcements from Summer Game Fest 2022

Didn’t watch the full presentation? These are the highlights you really need to know about.

Geoff’s Keighley’s E3 replacement, Summer Game Fest, took place last night and we saw brand new trailers for a bunch of video games you can get excited about both this year and next year. Street Fighter 6, Cuphead, and Call of Duty were all present, and those aren’t even the games that we’re highlighting today. 

Here is our list of the best announcements made during Summer Game Fest 2022. Make sure to add these releases to your calendar.

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The Cuphead Show will launch on Netflix next month

1930s cartoons in February, somehow.

The Cuphead Show  will finally premiere on Netflix soon. 

On Tuesday, the streaming giant announced that The Cuphead Show’s  first season will go live on Feb. 18, 2022. Season one will contain 12 episodes, each about 12 minutes in runtime a piece.

The series is a  video game adaptation  of Cuphead, an action platformer that came out in 2017. It was quite the critical and commercial darling at the time, evident by its  86 Metacritic  score for the Xbox version. Cuphead  eventually made it on PS4, Nintendo Switch, PC, and macOS.

A trailer for The Cuphead Show  also went live Tuesday, which you can check below. The biggest name attached to the show is undoubtedly Wayne Brady, who plays the villainous King Dice. 

Netflix has a pretty decent track record adapting video game licenses as of late. Arcane: League of Legends  was a massive hit on the platform, so much that a  second season  is already on the way. 

It’s hard to say if The Cuphead Show  will reach similar levels of prestige. Still, if nothing else, Netflix has shown they won’t (necessarily) pump out more  terrible video game adaptations — we have more than enough of those.

Written by Kyle Campbell on behalf of GLHF.

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