A Geometry Dash streamer named cuatrocientosgd came within one click of beating what many consider the game’s most difficult level ever created. After navigating seven minutes of precise jumps and split-second timing, the player died at 99% completion during a live stream, bringing him to tears.
The level Furious Flames is #618 on the community’s Demon List, a ranking of the hardest verified levels in Geometry Dash. Only 36 people have ever completed it. Most extreme demon levels last two to three minutes. This one stretches to seven, turning each attempt into an endurance test where a single mistake means starting over from zero.
The death happened during what players call a “mini ship straight fly” section near the very end. These sections require holding steady inputs while navigating tight spaces. After nearly perfect execution for seven minutes, the streamer’s ship collided with an obstacle on what appeared to be the final required input.
Heart rate data shown on stream painted a clear picture of the pressure. The overlay showed the streamer’s pulse climbing to 180–190 beats per minute as they approached the end. These readings aren’t unusual for top Geometry Dash players during intense moments, but they show the physical toll of high-level play.
The immediate aftermath was difficult to watch. The streamer’s reaction was intense enough that someone, likely a parent based on viewer comments, entered the room to help calm them down. The emotional response makes sense given the context. Seven-minute attempts mean fewer practice runs. Each death costs more time. Each close call hurts more.
Community members quickly labeled this the worst fail in Geometry Dash history. While that claim is hard to verify across the game’s decade-plus history, the combination of factors makes it exceptional. The level’s unbeaten status, its unusual length, and dying at literally 99% create a perfect storm of gaming pain.