Stanley Parable was a beautiful but strange game. This strange game also had a performance as strange as itself: “Go Outside”, that is, Get Out.
To get that success, you had to run the game once, and then not touch the game for five years. So when you run the game before 5 years are up, the meter resets and it takes another 5 years to get my success. When you think about the game itself, it was a different and kind of meaningful achievement at the time. On the Internet, you can find a wide range of messages to get this success, from calendar holders to countdowns.
Of course, it should be said that a significant number of the winners cheated, so the game’s performance rate on Steam is around 12.5%.
The Crows Crows put the same feat in the Stanley Parable Ultra Deluxe, but this time by increasing the time. For this success called “Super Go Outside”, you should not touch ultra deluxe for 10 years after closing it. So the earliest date to achieve this feat is 2032.
But when you look at Steam, the percentage of players who have achieved this feat is over 3%, with cheating, of course.
Angry, the Crows Crows crows posted:
“You fooled not only the game, but yourself.
You didn’t grow up. You haven’t improved.
You didn’t get anything using a shortcut.
You’ve won an empty victory.
You didn’t risk anything and you didn’t get anything.
It’s a shame you can’t tell the difference.”
This message, as Can reminds you, is a meme that has emerged and become popular at the time of Sekiro. A Twitter user uploaded the words to him after one of the PCGamer writers wrote, “I finished sekiro using a trick and I don’t regret it.”
I don’t think the Crows Crows shared that message as a joke, personally, more than 3%; they probably didn’t like it either. They had a great opportunity to use the meme, but 🙂
The team later responded that “this message discriminates against time travelers,” explaining that a time travel player must go through specific stages to achieve this achievement, and commented, “I don’t think 3.3% of players do that, dude.”