![]() ![]() Every dot, every powerpill, every ghost, every fruit. (Bear in mind that in order to get a perfect score, you have to arrive at this point on your first man. You are the loneliest gamer in the world at this point – no one can help you, you are fighting your own mind – if it wonders, you’re in trouble.Īnd then of course, finally, the infamous “split screen” at screen 256. You have to get a pattern in your head, learn it, and execute it 235 times over and over and over. ![]() The powerpills don’t work and the ghosts cannot be eaten. What follows from screen 21, are 235 boards of the same thing. In some instances you have one second to eat all four ghosts. These screens vary in speed, and also vary in terms of how long the ghosts turn blue. Since then, six other players have attained the maximum score in increasingly faster times.įrom my perspective, there’s three stages to achieving a perfect game:ĭuring the first 20 boards, you eat dots and powerpills, and the ghosts turn blue and you can eat them, along with all the other dots and fruit. The first person to achieve this score was Billy Mitchell of Hollywood, Florida, who performed the feat in about six hours. Here’s how Wikipedia describes a perfect game of Pac-Man:Ī perfect Pac-Man game occurs when the player achieves the maximum possible score on the first 255 levels (by eating every possible dot, power pellet, fruit, and enemy) without losing a single life, and using all extra lives to score as many points as possible on Level 256. After some 32 years in the making, UK player Jon Stoodley achieved a live perfect score on Pac-Man on August 22nd 2015. ![]()
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