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Guinness world records gamers continue to surprise the gaming community with some of the strangest and most impressive achievements ever documented. While some records focus on skill and speed, others are based on endurance, collecting rare consoles, or completing unusual gaming challenges. From multi-day gaming marathons to enormous retro collections, these accomplishments show just how creative gaming culture has become.

10 Guinness World Records Gamers Actually Broke
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One of the most famous gaming records belongs to Okan Kaya, who played Call of Duty: Black Ops II for more than 135 hours. The marathon lasted nearly six straight days with only short breaks allowed under Guinness rules. The challenge required careful planning, sleep management, and constant supervision to become officially recognized.

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Antonio Romero Monteiro owns the largest video game collection ever documented, with more than 24,000 games. The archive includes retro cartridges, modern releases, rare collector editions, and handheld titles from multiple generations of gaming history. His achievement became one of the most recognized collecting milestones connected to Guinness World Records gamers.

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Speedrunner The Happy Hob became famous after completing Dark Souls without taking any damage. The run demanded perfect timing, detailed memorization, and extreme concentration during every fight and movement sequence. The achievement later became one of the most impressive accomplishments associated with Guinness World Records gamers.

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Billy Mitchell became the first person officially recognized for achieving a perfect score in the original Pac-Man arcade game. In 1999, he reached the maximum possible score of 3,333,360 points by clearing every level perfectly and collecting every bonus item available.

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Carrie Swidecki became one of the most recognized rhythm gamers after breaking the Guinness World Record for the longest video game marathon on a dance game. She played Just Dance for more than 138 hours, turning competitive rhythm gaming into one of the most physically demanding categories in gaming culture.

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Ibrahim Al-Nasser earned a Guinness World Record after successfully connecting more than 400 gaming consoles to a single television. His setup included retro systems, modern platforms, custom switchers, and complex cable management designed to keep every console functional. The massive gaming station quickly became one of the most unusual achievements associated with Guinness World Records gamers.

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Hungarian gamer Szabolcs Csépe, also known as “GrassHopper,” earned the Guinness World Record for the longest videogame marathon after playing Dance Dance Revolution for 144 consecutive hours in 2024. The challenge lasted six full days and required strict Guinness-approved break schedules.

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Lisa Courtney from the United Kingdom earned a Guinness World Record after building the world’s largest Pokémon collection. Her archive included more than 20,000 items ranging from games and plush toys to rare cards and limited-edition merchandise. The collection became one of the most famous archives associated with Guinness World Records gamers and gaming memorabilia culture.

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Speedrunner Piotr Delgado Kusielczuk, better known as “The Mexican Runner,” became famous for completing every officially licensed NES game released in North America. The challenge involved finishing more than 700 games over several years and became one of the most unusual endurance accomplishments tied to retro gaming.

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Michael Thomasson gained worldwide attention after owning one of the largest and most valuable video game collections ever assembled. Before selling it, the collection included more than 11,000 games and was estimated to be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, making it one of the most expensive gaming collections connected to Guinness World Records gamers discussions.

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He is the author of the widely recognized book Sara la detective, a title currently available in major bookstores across Argentina. His expertise lies in crafting compelling narratives and high-impact content for diverse platforms, blending creative storytelling with strategic communication.