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Russian Escape From Tarkov Streamer named “h4rd111” Gets Kappa Before Everyone Else

He had to have been cheesing the quests, though :).

Russian streamer by the name “h4rd111” got the last and most wanted piece of the grind in Escape From Tarkov. That is the Kappa Container, which is now a level 55 quest. His achievement left everyone else baffled; as per his official stats, he managed to get the Kappa Container in around 500 raids. Evidently enough, he ran over the previous Kappa champions,  404_HuangYE (currently 53), Viibiin (49), and ThaTAce__(48).

For some reason, this streamer skipped some challenging quests without portraying them on his official Twitch channel. Even between the second to last and last stream, he skips from level 52 to level 55, which doesn’t give us room to speak about its integrity. Below you can find the completion of the Collector quest and acquisition of the Kappa container.

Apparently, there are plenty of quests that have been added as a requirement before getting the Collector quest. All level 45 quests are now required to be completed, and some of them require eliminating PMCs more than else. Cheesing quests in Escape From Tarkov is entirely possible, especially when it comes to eliminating PMCs instead of Scavs. If perpetrators select identical servers and queue at the same time, they have a huge chance of spawning together.

Escape From Tarkov’s latest 0.12.12.30 update has been decent so far. I thought Kappa won’t be obtainable without seeing Lightkeeper, the main star of this patch. Well, I was wrong. Being driven by one very same objective, the Secure Kappa Container is the most desired item in the game, especially for those that never got it before. This container has 12 slots, three more than the Edge of Darkness’ Gamma container.

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Angel Kicevski

I am ANGE1K. I started playing video games a long time ago. In a blink of an eye, I became a hardcore gamer. A couple of years later, I traversed to the professional Counter-Strike 1.6 scene. After the competitive ERA, I managed to find the gaming industry amusing and started working on FGR. 8 years after founding FGR, my mission remains the same. That is to discover secrets within the gaming industry, create guides for all the games I play, and provide you with some important news. Oh, yeah, I post tons of patch notes too. At the time, I play everything that seems reasonable to play, make content about it and help gamers to the best of my abilities. P.S. Last time I counted how many hours I've spent in video games turned out to be 13+ years. And that was a long time ago too. Almost 24/7 in front of PC. If you need anything, feel free to contact me on X!

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