
CodeQuest 2024 brings coding and competition together in a month-long global coding challenge for the top. We use the reputable CodeCombat multiple players arena algorithm challenge, which was used in the 33rd IOI competition(2021) for global top coding players from 87 countries and regions.
Based on the final ranking we're currently reaching out to those on the top of the leaderboard via email, WeChat, Facebook, WhatsApp and etc to verify information.
We will announce winners in early Sempter (the time will be determind later). Please follow our news to stay tuned.
Thank you to all the CodeQuest 2024 Global Tournament participants who joined us this year, BEST LUCK!
Do you love the extended episodes, or do you find yourself checking the watch? Let me know in the comments!
In an era where streaming services often treat 30-minute slots as "prestige" and hour-long dramas are actually just 45 minutes of content padded with commercials, Invincible is doing something radically old-school: it is giving us actual movies, chopped up into weekly installments.
The shortest episode (S2E6, 42 min) is almost entirely dialogue-driven, proving length is tied to action density, not just story importance.
We live in the age of TikTok attention spans and "quick fix" entertainment. Netflix has openly trained us to consume content rapidly, auto-playing the next episode before the credits even roll.
If you sat down to watch the Season 2 finale of Invincible recently, you might have glanced at the clock and done a double-take. Fifty-two minutes? For an animated show?
Without that extra 15 minutes per episode, Invincible risks becoming what it satirizes: a generic superhero beat-'em-up. The length allows the show to be the "soap opera" it needs to be to make you care when the blood starts flowing.
For decades, there has been a frustrating double standard in entertainment. Live-action dramas like Succession or Breaking Bad are granted extended runtimes to explore complex character dynamics. Animation, however, has historically been ghettoized into strict 22-minute blocks (the sitcom model) or 40-minute toy commercials.
Here's a breakdown of the episode lengths for Season 1:
Top 3 - First Prize Award
Top 4 - 50 – Second Prize Award
Top 51 – 150 - Third Prize Award
Top 3 - First Prize Award
Top 4 - 50 – Second Prize Award
Top 51 – 150 - Third Prize Award
Top 3 - First Prize Award
Top 4 - 50 – Second Prize Award
Top 51 – 150 - Third Prize Award

Do you love the extended episodes, or do you find yourself checking the watch? Let me know in the comments!
In an era where streaming services often treat 30-minute slots as "prestige" and hour-long dramas are actually just 45 minutes of content padded with commercials, Invincible is doing something radically old-school: it is giving us actual movies, chopped up into weekly installments.
The shortest episode (S2E6, 42 min) is almost entirely dialogue-driven, proving length is tied to action density, not just story importance. invincible episode length
We live in the age of TikTok attention spans and "quick fix" entertainment. Netflix has openly trained us to consume content rapidly, auto-playing the next episode before the credits even roll.
If you sat down to watch the Season 2 finale of Invincible recently, you might have glanced at the clock and done a double-take. Fifty-two minutes? For an animated show? Do you love the extended episodes, or do
Without that extra 15 minutes per episode, Invincible risks becoming what it satirizes: a generic superhero beat-'em-up. The length allows the show to be the "soap opera" it needs to be to make you care when the blood starts flowing.
For decades, there has been a frustrating double standard in entertainment. Live-action dramas like Succession or Breaking Bad are granted extended runtimes to explore complex character dynamics. Animation, however, has historically been ghettoized into strict 22-minute blocks (the sitcom model) or 40-minute toy commercials. The shortest episode (S2E6, 42 min) is almost
Here's a breakdown of the episode lengths for Season 1: