There are all kinds of speedrunning strategies out there, from finding ways outside the boundaries of the game world to manipulating seemingly random elements for favorable outcomes. Some of the most interesting utilize legitimate gameplay mechanics in interesting ways. In The Outer Worlds, for instance, a decent chunk of time can be saved by simply making your character a complete buffoon.
Dedicated players have been hard at work lowering their times in The Outer Worlds over the past few days, with Twitch streamer Jabo being the most consistent. Earlier today, he posted a brand new world-record time of just over 20 minutes, and itās likely heāll push that even lower with repeated attempts. As with most speedruns, Jaboās world record couples precise execution with in-depth knowledge of the gameābut near the end, itās all about having the dumbest character possible.
The Outer Worlds allows players a good deal of freedom during character creation. This includes the ability to lower stats in addition to improving them, which means itās possible to turn the protagonist into a physical weakling to make room for enhanced shooting prowess or even dumbing them down so much that it affects the way they speak to NPCs. By setting the main characterās intelligence to ābelow averageā while building out their stats, several humorous dialogue options become available over the course of the game, one of which skips a portion of the endgame.
At a point late in The Outer Worlds, players return to the Hope, the colony ship from which they were saved at the beginning of the game. After ADA, the AI that accompanies the player through much of the game, is patched into the shipās computers, theyāll be given a set of choices as to what to do next. These all involve skippingāthe Outer Worlds term for faster-than-light travelāthe Hope to a new location, and upon choosing one, the player can tell ADA that they plan to handle the skipping themselves.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNCYUKbM_JA
ADA is wary of this option, seeing as itās a highly technical process best left to supercomputers. With high enough intelligence and science skills, a character can easily handle it. But those with low enough intelligence are given a ādumbā option: āStand back, ADA. I know numbers real good.ā
And, despite a bit of back and forth between ADA and the Hope, the player is allowed to do so. They promptly steer the Hope directly into a nearby star, destroying the ship and killing everyone on board. This also nets the player an achievement labeled āSunburn.ā It also counts as finishing the game, albeit with a tragic ending.
Completing this mission normally will send players into the gameās final mission, but thanks to this useful bit of dumbassery, the story comes to a close early. Since this ending was discovered, The Outer Worlds speedrunners have utilized it to shave off a few precious minutes and push their times even lower. Itās not a huge skip, but itās easy enough to perform that its inclusion in a possible world record run is a no-brainer. Itās also possible that a new category will be created to separate runs that exploit it from the rest, depending on how the speedrunning community reacts to its potential.
No matter what happens, itās cool to see the quirks of this Obsidian-developed RPG come into play in such an interesting way.
(h/t PC Gamer)