A player who suddenly advanced from 8000th to 4999th place was indeed very eye-catching.
The top 5,000 has always been the watershed among high-level players.
The reason for saying this is that the top 5,000 rankings have been fixed for a long time - except for the fall of some players, which led to a natural rise in the rankings, there is almost no player who has surpassed others by relying on subsequent copy points. It is just an internal change among the top 5,000 high-level players.
But the meaning of this is unclear, it was done by a player with a random nickname and a string of numbers.
It was not a natural change in the ranking, but a forced rise due to the huge increase in points.
If you look more closely, you will find the meaning behind this ID, which once caused a bloody storm on the player forum - the "Rookie King" player who appeared on the rookie ranking list the fastest and disappeared from the ranking the fastest.
Of course, a "Rookie King" may not be worthy of the attention of all players. After all, among the top players on the list now, which one did not have a glorious history as a rookie
But the appearance of this "newcomer king" on the overall score list really means something different - how long has he been in the dungeon? Even a player who has just left the "newcomer period" has rushed to the overall score list in one fell swoop, breaking the situation where the top of the list has been monopolized by old players who entered the survival game early for many years.
Such speed and such momentum can only be described as "shocking".
Moreover, the players in the official forum were getting more and more thrilling the more they dug. It only took the content of one copy to jump from the 8,000th place to the 5,000th place.
The integral is linearly increasing, and this can be easily captured by varying time.
—I recalculated the approximate points that caused his ranking to change like this.
In the end, he could only let out a sigh of relief.
… 70,000 points.
It only took the time to update a copy!
This should at least be an S+ level copy, and have an S+ level personal evaluation, right
To some extent, the conclusion reached by the players was not only correct, but also very accurate, but soon someone refuted it. The reason for the rebuttal was simple, but it seemed very tenable.
—Have you ever seen an S+ level copy
Although it seems to be just one level higher than A+, S+ is definitely the nightmare of all players. Even the top player on the leaderboard cannot say that he can enter the S+ dungeon 100% safely.
No matter what kind of player, anything that comes close to S+ means a life-and-death challenge, which means they are extremely unlucky. Advanced players may be willing to encounter ten A+ level dungeons rather than be associated with this level of death difficulty.
In this kind of dungeon, it is already a fluke to be able to pass it, not to mention getting an S+ personal rating. Many people can brag about getting an S+ rating in a C-level dungeon for the rest of their lives, but an S+ rating in an S+-level dungeon is only a theoretical possibility and is generally not included in the scope of discussion.
There is another situation, that is, in the gambling city of Hell City, you can win a lot of points in one go.
But even if it is a casino, it is opened by players, and someone has to pay for the chips, not just out of thin air. The players checked roughly and found that none of the top players suddenly went bankrupt, and many large casinos they found were still operating as usual, which shows that this high player who came from nowhere definitely did not grab a large amount of points from the casino.