By now, it’s become increasingly common knowledge that certain players like to race through video games to see who can complete them the fastest. A small niche of players even hold records for speedrunning MOBAs.
A picture of Roshan, a neutral minion named after the bowling ball of one of the original Dota mod’s designers
The first Super Mario Bros. has been beaten in under five minutes. Dishonored 2, which came out earlier this month, has already been completed in nearly half an hour. But games like League of Legends have records as well. Someone beat a match against five bots solo in just 6:07. And last week, a player by the name of Mekarazium defeated Dota 2‘s Roshan in just 1:33.
In Dota 2, teams compete to see who can destroy the other’s base first. In order to do this they kill enemies, as well as other players, for experience and gold, level up, and buy powerful items. On this road to getting more powerful and trying to push in on the enemy team, players fight over a particular creature on the map called Roshan. Computer-controlled and hostile to both teams, killing the beast nets the players who did it not only a bounty of gold and experience, but also an extra life.
When Roshan is killed it drops an item called the Aegis. Whoever holds the Aegis is automatically revived when they die. This grants a huge advantage to the team who controls it, giving them in essence an extra person on the team for as long as the item lasts (the Aegis will eventually disappear, used or not, signalling that Roshan has respawned and can be killed again).
So Mekarazium set out to see how quickly it was possible to beat Roshan. Booting up an empty game he selected Ursa, a bear who’s attacks stack damage early on making it possible to kill the beast at level 1. In a normal game, players will try to get a few more levels and a particular item before trying to kill Roshan because 1.) it’s very hard and 2.) if the enemy team spots what you’re doing you’re as good as dead.
In a high level Dota 2 match, the Roshan pit is the site of many tense team fights
But Mekarazium wanted to show that it was theoretically possible to do it at the very start of the game. Using only healing salves and hit and run techniques, he was able to do just that, killing Roshan with just a bit of life left scarcely 90 seconds into the match. The fastest time previously was more than double, and utilised a completely different strategy.
When I asked Mekarazium if this strategy would work in a real game, the TL;DR version of his answer was simpy “No.” He’s played Dota 2 for thousands of hour and doesn’t think it’s viable at his level of play. At the same time, by showing that it’s actually possible to do, Mekarazium hopes that other players down the skill ladder will take note and thing of the game differently. Too many players simply look at what character builds and tactics the pros use, and then try to emulate them no matter what the circumstance, he told me.
Anyone who’s played the game for any length of time knows exactly what he’s talking about, with random players in public matches trying to execute high level plays despite having none of the other necessary pieces in place. Instead, Mekarazium wants to see people approach the game with a more open mind and think in terms of things they can know and control, like how quickly one hero scales compared to another during a match, and how to gauge who has the advantage 1v1 match-ups in the game’s early phase.
Pushing against the limits of how quickly Roshan can be killed is simply a way of illustrating this more empirical approach to playing Dota 2.
Comments
One response to “Speedrunner Wants To Change How People Think About Dota 2”
Use to speed run Dungeons in Guildwars 1. Was great fun making builds and thinking out side the box how someone can solo or 2 man areas on the hardest mode that would take 8-12 players normally to complete.
Completing the 12 man areas faster then 12 man groups could with 2 people was great fun.
Sadly i find alot of games lacking a challenge like Guildwars 1 since there were so many skills to choose from and the enemy skills you had to watch out for as well. Now days most games are dumbed down so everyone can play them making them less enjoyable.
its why raiding came out in guild wars 2. because people wanted a challenge and the rewards from speedrunning dungeons were slack.