Slaughtering hundreds of innocent rodents in Dune: Awakening can reward you with a unique achievement, as long as you put up with being called a monster by other players.
There are achievements in games that require us to perform immoral, cruel, and unforgivable (or shameful) actions. One of them can also be found in Dune: Awakening. As a "reward," the player who obtained the rare trophy was hailed as a monster by the community.
One of the rarest achievements in Dune: Awakening is "The Divided Messiah." To get it, you need to cook 100 dishes with the desert mouse Muad'Dib. So far, only 0.1% of all players have managed to do it, which is really not many.
Why is this percentage so low? The problem is that Muad'Dibs are very hard to find. Many players claim that despite spending dozens of hours in Dune: Awakening, they have never come across these mice. Others, on the other hand, don't have the heart to kill a fluffy rodent.
Two days ago, on July 9th, a player with the nickname Top-Consideration692 achieved the achievement in question. He boasted about his feat on Reddit, and his post provoked a lot of reactions, mostly humorous, referring to him as a "monster."
I see them all the time on the open sand and I know that you can collect them, but I would never dare to do it.
You monster.
You are a psychopath.
100 hours played and never seen a cooking option.
This is an achievement; or rather a way to check if someone is a psychopath, so let it remain so.
This is not the only very rare achievement in Dune: Awakening. There are two more achievements that only a handful of players have earned: "Miner" (requires mining 10,000 units of all resource types using a hand mining tool) and "Master Assassin" (for eliminating 500 soldiers from a rival clan).
Dune: Awakening is available exclusively on PC, but the console version release is planned for next year.
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Author: Martin Bukowski
Graduate of Electronics and Telecommunications at the Gdańsk University of Technology, who decided to dedicate his life to video games. In his childhood, he would get lost in the Gothic's Valley of Mines and "grind for gold" in League of Legends. Twenty years later, games still entertain him just as much. Today, he considers the Persona series and soulslike titles from From Software as his favorite games. He avoids consoles, and a special place in his heart is reserved for PC. In his spare time, he works as a translator, is creating his first game, or spends time watching movies and series (mainly animated ones).