The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe devs are cheekily calling out achievement cheaters with a meme that spawned from a 2019 debate around the FromSoftware game Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice.
For some context, the original Stanley Parable has an achievement called 'Go Outside' that unlocks when you don't play the game for five years straight. The new Ultra Deluxe edition includes a follow-up to the achievement aptly named 'Super Go Outside' that doubles the time requirement to 10 years. Naturally, that means it's impossible to unlock until 2032 unless you break the rules and set your console or PC's clock forward a decade, and of course there are folks doing exactly that.
The developers at Crows Crows Crows noticed that 3% of players on Steam have unlocked the achievement, and they weren't shy in expressing their disapproval.
You cheated not only the game, but yourself.You didn't grow.You didn't improve.You took a shortcut and gained nothing.You experienced a hollow victory.Nothing was risked and nothing was gained.It's sad that you don't know the difference. pic.twitter.com/kcAbHVNPsuMay 8, 2022
Again, in case you're missing some context here, the developers' tweet references a popular meme that wouldn't exist without Sekiro, a PC Gamer article, and one sarcastically uppity FromSoftware fan. See, when the game launched there was a lot of talk about its difficulty and the "right" way to play it, and in the middle of everything PC Gamer shared an article where the author admits to beating Sekiro's final boss using cheats and not feeling bad about it (the gall!). In response to the story was this viral comment, which the author admits was only partly sincere:
"You cheated not only the game, but yourself. You didn't grow. You
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