This absurd Hearthstone turn is taking 40 hours, and you can watch it live

Prophet Velen Hearthstone Header

Approximately 5 hours ago, one brave player decided to exploit Hearthstone’s rules to set a world record no one else considered setting. With a sequence of plays that ought to be impossible, he's setting the record for the longest turn in a game of Hearthstone ever. It’s been five hours, and the same turn is still going, estimated to last for a total of 40 hours. Why? Because he can, obviously. What’s more, he is livestreaming the turn with a timer until it’s completed.

All that was left was to play all nine Arcane Missiles cards at once, which will activate one at a time, and have the enemy play a card called Ice Block that keeps them from dying until the next turn. Approximately 240,000 missiles and 40 hours later the turn will end, the player who’d just been pummeled for two days straight will die to fatigue damage. GG.

Update: I originally thought this was pulled off by two people, but the stream crashed for a short time and was showing the epic turn's setup, which clearly shows mastermind Mamytwink going between two computers to make it happen. I have updated the text to make it clear it was only one person.

Update 2: We've entered hour 37 and Hearthstone's EU server (where the turn is taking place) is now down for maintenance, but the missiles are still firing. During server maintenance, in-progress games are allowed to finish after which both players will be disconnected. It's unclear whether there is a cap on that, however, as I doubt a game has stayed in-progress multiple hours into a maintenance session before and the end of this turn is estimated to still be over seven hours away.

Tom Marks
Tom is PC Gamer’s Associate Editor. He enjoys platformers, puzzles and puzzle-platformers. He also enjoys talking about PC games, which he now no longer does alone. Tune in every Wednesday at 1pm Pacific on Twitch.tv/pcgamer to see Tom host The PC Gamer Show.