Background
Tan was born on March 18, 1996.
student Livestreamer Speedrunner
Tan was born on March 18, 1996.
PangaeaPanga started playing through Super Mario World while blindfolded on June 16, 2015, and completed a full run of the game this way eight days later.
He created what are known as the most difficult Super Mario fan levels, and has also played through Super Mario World blindfolded. He is from Rocky Hill, Connecticut and is a graduate of Rocky Hill High School, where he holds the school record for 800 meter and 1000 meter run. His fastest mile run is 4:23.13.
He is currently a student at the University of Connecticut School of Business studying management information systems and is a National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I cross country runner for the UConn Huskies.
He plays the piano and trumpet and has perfect pitch. PangaeaPanga is the current world record holder for speedrunning Super Mario World, having beaten the game in 1 minute and 38 seconds using arbitrary code execution.
He has stated that he got the idea from gamer DavisKongCountry, who played portions of the game blindfolded. To beat the game in this way, PangaeaPanga memorized a route that was "easy and consistent," using musical cues from the game to know when to carry out certain actions.
The run took 23 minutes, despite player character Mario dying a few times and getting lost.
In September 2015, YouTube removed the majority of PangaeaPanga"s tool-assisted speedrun videos from his channel after a Digital Millennium Copyright Acting claim was made by Nintendo. PangaeaPanga described his YouTube channel as "wrecked" on Twitter and stated that he finds it a "shame" that content creators "are restricted to Super Mario Maker instead of the way we have always done."
Through ROM hacking, PangaeaPanga has made various difficult levels for Super Mario World, the most famous of which is "Item Abuse 3." This level, which took three years to create and beat, has been consistently described as "the hardest Super Mario World level ever." The level is impossible to beat without making use of tool-assistance to allow individual frame button input.
PangaeaPanga has declared that "Anyone who can complete this is pretty much mentally insane."
In September 2015, 10 days after the American release of the game, PangaeaPanga uploaded "Pit of Panga: P-Break" on Super Mario Maker.
The level, which took five hours to create, had to be beaten beforehand to be uploaded to Super Mario Maker"s servers, as the game prevents players from uploading impossible levels. lieutenant took PangaeaPanga nine hours to beat the level, all of which he streamed on Twitch.
"P-Break" was a sequel to "Bomb Voyage," another difficult level PangaeaPanga created. lieutenant took the Super Mario Maker community a collective total of 11,000 tries before speedrunner Bananasaurus Rex beat this level
By the end of October 2015, "P-Break" was beaten 41 times.
After stating that "in an ideal world, no more than 10 clears would satisfy me," PangaeaPanga went on to create the even more difficult "U-Break". PangaeaPanga influenced various other people to create unusually difficult Super Mario Maker levels. In an interview, PangaeaPanga has stated that he never really tried to build easy levels, as he enjoys to "force players to take a single specific route," in contrast to the autonomy video games usually offer players.
Furthermore, PangaeaPanga has noted that he aims to make levels "both fair and fun, without being too aggravating or difficult," for which he playtests his levels extensively.