Elon
Musk
is
a
busy
man
right
now.
He’s
supposedly
running
X,
SpaceX,
Tesla,
and
Neuralink,
all
while
actively
campaigning
for
Trump.
But
despite
those
myriad
concerns,
Musk
still
finds
the
time
to
play
Diablo
4.
He’s
even
said
he’s
pretty
good
at
it,
claiming
in
a
recent
interview
with
Joe
Rogan
that
he’s
in
the
top
20
of
Diablo
4
players
—
a
feat
that
apparently
only
two
Americans
can
claim.
If
this
sounds
like
the
unearned
boasting
from
the
same
guy
who
claimed
his
Cybertrucks
are
bulletproof...
it
is.
The
Pit
is
a
timed
dungeon
in
Diablo
4.
Players
are
given
15
minutes
to
clear
out
monsters
and
the
final
boss,
with
each
death
shaving
an
increasing
amount
of
time
off
the
overall
timer.
Players
who
can
complete
The
Pit
earn
endgame
materials
used
to
improve
their
gear,
and
since
this
is
an
endgame
dungeon,
the
fights
are
pretty
difficult.
Clearing
the
dungeon
as
fast
as
possible
is,
therefore,
a
decent
indication
that
you
can
Diablo
pretty
good.
In
fact,
there’s
a
leaderboard
ranking
players
by
their
Pit
completion
times
which
is
the
basis
for
Musk’s
claim.
If
you
check
out
the
Pit
leaderboard
at
helltides.com,
sure
enough,
at
the
time
of
publication,
Elon
Musk
is
sitting
smack
dab
at
number
20.
There
are
no
official
leaderboards
for
The
Pit.
Helltides.com
is
not
affiliated
with
Activision
Blizzard.
These
rankings
are
based
on
screen-recorded
runs
submitted
by
the
players
themselves.
And
the
number
of
submissions
used
to
create
this
list?
881.
To
be
fair
to
Musk,
clearing
The
Pit
in
2
minutes
and
45
seconds
is
no
mean
feat.
It
shows
that
he
knows
what
he’s
doing
(or
that
he
at
least
knows
how
to
look
up
optimal
builds
for
his
class
on
sites
like
IcyVeins.com.)
But
it
strains
the
hell
out
of
credulity
to
claim
he’s
in
the
top
20
Diablo
4
players
in
the
world
based
on
a
list
made
up
of
only
881
people.
Steam’s
concurrent
player
count
alone
shows
the
game
sitting
at
11,000
players.
In
an
interview
with
The
Verge,
Fayz,
co-owner
of
helltides.com,
agrees
with
Musk
calling
himself
a
“top
20”
Diablo
4
player.
“It’s
the
best
global
list
we
have,”
Fayz
said
over
Discord.
“Elon’s
claim
is
valid.”
But
Fayz
recognizes
the
leaderboard’s
limitations.
“It’s
as
comprehensive
as
it
gets
in
terms
of
recorded
Pit
runs
with
video
proof,
since
our
community
always
alerts
us
when
new
top
runs
are
recorded
and
posted
on
social
media,”
Fayz
wrote.
“But,
there’s
no
way
for
us
to
know
about
Pit
runs
that
aren’t
recorded
and
shared.”
Musk
is
one
of
many
billionaires
who’ve
made
lofty
but
unverifiable
claims
about
their
gaming
prowess.
In
a
TikTok
video
for
Pubity,
Mark
Zuckerberg
recently
boasted
that
he’s
“close
to
grandmaster
status”
in
Civilization
and
that
it’d
surprise
him
if
anyone
in
the
world
could
beat
him.
In
2017,
the
New
York
Times
reported
that
Travis
Kalanick,
the
former
CEO
of
Uber,
“once
held
the
world’s
second-highest
score
for
the
Nintendo
Wii
Tennis
video
game.”
(This
led
to
an
interesting
deep-dive
from
Ars
Technica,
which
concluded
Kalanick
was
wrong.)
Musk
could
have
legitimately
claimed
exceptional
ability
in
Diablo
4
and
left
it
at
that.
But,
as
is
usually
the
case
with
billionaires,
his
ego
got
in
the
way,
leading
him
to
make
statements
that
just
aren’t
supported
in
fact.
(Originally posted by Ash Parrish)
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