Culture Punch-Out’s Mike Tyson has been defeated in under two minutes for the first time - After 75K attempts over five years, Summoning Salt says he's hanging up the virtual gloves.


Kyle Orland – Feb 9, 2025

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Getting that 1:59 in the corner took years and years of focused work.

Since Mike Tyson's Punch-Out was first released on the NES in 1987, millions of players have undertaken millions more digital matches against one of the hardest video game bosses ever, Tyson himself (or, later, the reskinned "Mr. Dream"). Only a small percentage of those players have been able to survive Tyson's flurry of instant-knockdown uppercuts and emerge victorious with the undisputed World Video Boxing Association championship. Even fewer have had fast enough fingers to take out Tyson in the first round.

In all that time, no one has been able to register a TKO on Tyson in less than two minutes on the ever-present in-game clock (which runs roughly three times as quickly as a real-time clock). At least, that was true until this weekend, when popular speedrunner and speedrun historian Summoning Salt pulled off a 1:59.97 knockout after what he says was "75,000 attempts over nearly 5 years."

Summoning Salt's record-setting sub-2:00 run

Incredibly good and incredibly lucky​

Breaking the storied 2:00 barrier on Tyson is a matter of both incredible skill and incredibly unlikely luck. As Summoning Salt himself started documenting in a 2017 video, getting the quickest possible Tyson TKO requires throwing 21 "frame perfect" punches throughout the fight, each within a 1/60th of a second window. Too early, and those punches do slightly less damage, making the fight take just a bit longer. Too late, and Tyson will throw up a block, negating the punch entirely.

A top-notch Tyson speedrun also requires well-timed dodging and ducking of Tyson's own punches, so Little Mac can get back into counter-punching position as quickly as possible. Summoning Salt says he was just seven frames off of perfection in this regard, costing him about 0.35 in-game seconds over the course of the fight.

Even with that nearly unmatched execution, though, Summoning Salt's record-breaking run would have fallen well short if not for unreasonable amounts of luck from the game itself. As Bismuth explains in a 2024 video, Tyson can pause for anywhere between a fraction of a second and up to eight seconds between punches.

Getting the longest of those delays can hamper any realistic chance of even beating Tyson in the first round. But for his sub-two-minute TKO, Summoning Salt needed almost all of those pauses to luckily come down at the minimum of eight frames (~0.4 seconds on the in-game clock)

Bismuth explains the unreasonable luck needed for a record-setting Tyson fight at around the 56:30 mark in this 2024 video.

Summoning Salt says Tyson here gave him a "perfect pattern" during his first phase of endless uppercuts, something that happens only 1 in 1,600 bouts. And later in the fight, the game's random-number generator cooperated by adding only an extra 16 frames of delay (~0.8 in-game seconds) compared to a "perfect" run. Combined, Summoning Salt estimates that Tyson will only punch this quickly once every 7,000 to 10,000 attempts.

"It's over," Summoning Salt said live on Twitch when the record-setting match was finished, in a surprisingly even tone that came over what sounds very much like a dropped controller. "I thought I'd be a lot more excited about this. Holy shit, dude! It's fucking over... Dude, am I dreaming right now? ... I'm sorry I'm so quiet. I'm kind of in shock right now that that just happened."

Where do we go from here?​

With his near-perfect combination of both skill and luck, Summoning Salt's new record surpasses his own previous world record of precisely 2:00.00 on the in-game clock. That mark, set just eight months ago, was just three frames off of displaying 1:59 on the in-game timer for the first time.

Summoning Salt was also the first runner to break the 2:01 barrier on Tyson in 2020, a feat he has since replicated just 15 times over tens of thousands of attempts. "There's essentially no difference between all of those [2:00.xx] fights and this one, except I got better luck from Tyson on this fight," he writes. "Finally, after nearly half a decade, the 1:59 has happened."

Summoning Salt discusses the difficulty of beating 2:13 on Tyson in 2020, months before setting a then-record time of 2:00 himself

Ironically, just before posting his first 2:00.xx fight in 2020, Summoning Salt posted a video discussing in part just how difficult it was for speedrunners to beat Matt Turk's 2007 record of 2:13 on Tyson. "For years it was just this impossibly fast time that the top players just couldn't get close to," Summoning Salt said at the time. "Of course other top players fought Tyson years later, but their best efforts came up short... they couldn't touch it. It stood alone."

Summoning Salt is now just over a second off of the tool-assisted speedrun record of 1:58.61, which uses emulated gameplay to fight a theoretical "perfect" bout every time. But after spending years on what he writes "is the greatest gaming achievement I have ever accomplished," Summoning Salt seems ready to hand up his virtual boxing gloves for good.

"I have no plans to ever improve this time," he writes. "It will be beaten by somebody one day, likely by matching this fight and then getting better luck in phase 3. I have no interest in competing for that, but am extremely proud to have gotten the first sub 2 ever on Mike Tyson."
 
This is the opposite of an achievement. This is an indictment of the human race.

It took more time for him to win against Mike Tyson in a videogame than it did for Jake Paul to start a boxing career from scratch and win against Mike Tyson in real life.

TSRD.

 
It took more time for him to win against Mike Tyson in a videogame than it did for Jake Paul to start a boxing career from scratch and win against Mike Tyson in real life.
I mean honestly I doubt that's a big achievement either since Tyson is way past his prime though I still think he'd still destroy Jake Paul if the fight wasn't fixed.

Also @Bucephalus could you give me the source of that MATI stream? Must have missed it.
 
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And here I thought I was insane for trying to beat M. Bison with Chun Li and quitting after getting creamed 75 times in a row. Of course, this was back in 1992 when I didn't have a job, bills, rent, or a pressing need to leave my house after getting back home from school. Speed running is autism with a turbo button and I'm glad I never felt the need to play a game after I'd beaten it.
 
I mean honestly I doubt that's a big achievement either since Tyson is way past his prime though I still think he'd still destroy Jake Paul if the fight wasn't fixed.
The fact that he was even able to arrange the fight with Mike Tyson is more of an achievement than this guy wasting his life grinding away at a videogame. Yeah, Mike's not in his prime, yeah, Jake would absolutely get killed if he was, no question about that. But we're comparing a boxing match with 65 million concurrent viewers and the biggest gate in U.S. history to an autistic man pressing buttons on an NES controller and hoping for good RNG for five years straight.

There's no equivalency.

Also @Bucephalus could you give me the source of that MATI stream? Must have missed it.
It's old. January 1st, 2021. Timestamp should already be set up, but if it isn't, skip to 1:24:28. Had to dig it up because I remembered the anecdote about Dear Leader accidentally bullying Karl Jobst off of YouTube.

 
If that fag Jake Paul can do it, assuming it wasn't rigged, anybody can now.
The paul match was frustratingly and cartoonishly rigged. I don't know why people came out of the woodwork making video essays trying to deboonk people saying it was rigged by basically following the script of "oh well tyson is past his prime! he's old and had health issues beforehand! even if it was or wasn't paul would have won anyways"! There was a moment in round 1 where tyson accidentally almost lands his signature knockout move but clearly pulls it last second and then for the next several rounds he just block spams letting paul get little bips in that don't really do much damage but get points. Nobody really brings it up anymore but they did when the match first aired. This of course also neglects the fact jake paul was wearing expensive designer boxer sorts and the entire fucking event was being run by a company owned by the pauls.

Tl;Dr some guy beating NES mike in the first "recorded" 2 minute go as goofy as it is is probably infinitely less bullshit than the paul match.
 
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Not to deny the skill that went into this, but in fifty years when everyone who grew up with this game is either dead or elderly, is anyone going to give a shit about this? Are your grandkids going to be impressed that you spent so much of your life dedicated to accomplishing this, or are they going to think grandpa is a bit weird and sad?
 
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