In 2013, Super Mario 64’s speedrun player teleported to
Mario due to an unknown bug while playing the
game, dramatically shortening the time.
The problem was that this bug was an irreproducible bug.
In the end, the bug was reproduced or a reward of 1.2 million won was paid to the person who figured out the cause, but even if it was reproduced in frame at the same time using the
emulator, the cause of the
bug could not be found.
But it turns out that the cause is cosmic radiation.
High-energy radiation particles flying into Earth due to a huge explosion from a distant universe are called cosmic radiation.
While the player was playing Mario 64, the neutron of the cosmic radiation changed the Z-axis data from C5837800 to C4837800.
instantaneously jumps into the air, leaving the spring.
This kind of cosmic radiation can only be consumed as a simple interest, but sometimes it causes fatal accidents: the 2008 Qantas Airlines crash.
In October 2008, when Qantas Airlines’ altitude data from Singapore to Perth, Australia was changed to unknown reasons, the
sharp drop of about 200m in 20 seconds, and dozens of people were later injured in emergency landing.
After the incident, equipment that shields space radiation in aircraft became mandatory.