


1 for a fake score.If the allegations of rampant cheating within mobile phone leaderboards prove to be true, then it may be that submission to Twin Galaxies is one of the very few ways to truly compete with other mobile gaming players worldwide and have confidence that the performances are legitimate. There must be something wrong with my brain, I just don't understand the mentality of hacking a leaderboard to get your name at No. I will have to double check on YouTube, I believe there is a 1100+ score on there, but I seriously doubt anyone has posted video of 2000 let alone 99,999 :D I think I score at around 80 points a minute, 99,999 would mean playing over 20 hours straight - there is no way in the world this could be done.EVER! Even 2000 points is going to take the best part of 20-25 minutes with quick play, I won't believe anyone that says that they can score 2000 unless they give video proof and for a score this magnitude I'd really prefer to see video of them at the controls or using their hand to touch play. 99,999 on iOS I would put the house on being a fake/cheat/hacked leaderboard. On Google Play the score maxes out at 2000, an I doubt any of those scores are real either. Twin Galaxies competitor John McNeill submitted an impressive Crossy Road performance to the Twin Galaxies Submission and Adjudication Process ( CLICK HERE TO SEE THE PERFORMANCE) - and serious discussion ensued revolving around the possibility of someone ever achieving a max out score of 99,999 which is what is currently reported by the game's own internal leaderboard.Īfter watching John's performance, one can see why the question of "in-app score reporting credibility" has been raised. With the addition of mobile gaming to the Twin Galaxies scoreboard, a reality seems to be emerging that the leaderboards that are traditionally built into each mobile phone game may be completely populated by cheated scores and performances.Ī recent mobile game adjudication of an iOS Crossy Road score performance has brought this conversation to light. Its updated adjudication system, TGSAP, is focused on verifying the legitimacy of any video game player performance claim. For 30+ years, Twin Galaxies has been the place where official video game player rankings and score performance records are kept.
