![]() The video ends with Tai calling his son to dismantle the tower. "This man's patience and serenity when his kid comes over and sets dominos on the table is astounding!" one user commented. Guinness World Records shared a video of the mind-boggling record on YouTube, where Tai can be seen making the block. ![]() Tai completed the amazing tower in only two hours and he achieved the record on May 13 this year. Read: 10-year-old Bags Guinness World Record For Solving 196 Math Problems In One Minute | Watch And the best part about this achievement? The tower stood for a total of nine minutes before Tai’s son knocked it down in a satisfying triumph," Guinness World Records said in a release. Surprisingly, the center remains hollow where the first standing Jenga block is placed. "The most incredible part of the tower is that as Tai builds, he expands it outwards from the single Jenga block, giving it a bottom-up pyramid appearance. Read: Indian Teen Sets Guinness World Record For 101 Side-to-side Hops In 30 Seconds Tai used several packs of Jenga blocks and stacked them in a very calculated and precise format to build the 'physics-defying' tower on one vertical brick. ![]() In September 2020, he removed 32 blocks from the stack in 60 seconds. According to Guinness World Records, Tai used his extra time during the coronavirus lockdown to create an insanely cool block tower, breaking his own previous record of stacking 353 bricks on one piece in 2019. Nate McEvoy, another Wausau native, broke the world record for the most Jenga blocks removed from a tower in one minute. He balanced a whopping 1,400 Jenga blocks. Andagain With patience, determination, and a whole toy store’s worth of Jenga blocks, this boy from Salmon Arm, BC broke the world record for the most blocks stacked on a single piece. "He can just do on his own with his own natural raw abilities.Tai Star Valianti, a resident of Pima, Arizona recently broke an extraordinary record after he managed to stack 485 pieces of Jenga on top of one vertical piece. Twelve-year-old Auldin Maxwell has built his way, brick by brick, into the Guinness Book of World Records. "He's very special and very talented," she said. Kelly Murray, Maxwell's mother, says she's excited but not at all surprised by her son's accomplishment. He celebrated his victory by toppling the pillar.Īccording to Guinness World Records, Maxwell has kept the final Jenga block he laid at the tower's top in his room to commemorate his feat. After taking a 30-minute break, he was finally able to pile all the 600-plus blocks in one go. The Grade 7 student at Shuswap Middle School says he was nervous while it was being filmed so that he could provide Guiness world records with proof of his feat. "I created different types of patterns on the ground I could make, and then I tested it out and I will see which ones work and which ones can hold the most on stuff," Maxwell said. WATCH | Auldin Maxwell building his Jenga tower to break Guinness world record It was indeed a fantasy turning real after hours of practice and three failed attempts to smash the record set by Arizona's Tai Star Valianti, who placed 485 Jenga blocks on an upright brick in July 2020. "I was just really happy because my dream probably came true," he said. 2,306 Views 0 Comments 0 Favorites Flag Share Tweet Flip Email Pin It Embed: Use old embed code. "My heart was pounding," Maxwell told Sarah Penton, host of CBC's Radio West, about his feeling of putting the last chip on the stack at home the evening of Nov. Uploaded Reporter accidentally knocks down the Jenga World Record set up. The Most Number of Jenga Blocks Balanced on Brim of Hat counted to 53 was set by Kyle Hanley at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States on October 31, 2011. Last Friday, Auldin Maxwell, 12, received an email recognition from the reference book publisher for his achievement two months ago, building a tower of 693 tiny bricks - equalling 13 Jenga sets of 54 bricks each- on top of a narrow piece of wood. A Salmon Arm, B.C., boy has made himself famous by breaking the Guinness world record of balancing the most Jenga blocks on one single vertical block.
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