Pokemon Emerald’s Battle Factory just became the unlikely center of one of speedrunning’s most meticulous cheating investigations.
The Battle Factory was built to expose you. You cannot bring your own team, you draft rentals, you fight seven battles, your team gets thrown away, and then you start from scratch, because that is precisely the point.
Werster, one of the most prominent Pokemon speedrunners of the past decade, ran hundreds of hours of live Battle Factory content, moderating community leaderboards, and dropping references to an unstreamed 212-win streak into conversations. And then someone checked the in-game clock.
Werster accused of faking Pokemon Emerald Battle Factory win streak
A YouTuber named MagpieLabs published a detailed investigation accusing Werster of fabricating a 212-win streak in Pokemon Emerald’s Battle Factory, one of the game’s most punishing endgame challenges, where players cannot bring their own teams and must draft rental Pokemon from scratch every seven battles.
The whole case rests on something hiding in plain sight: the in-game clock.
Because the Battle Factory forces a save at the start and end of every set of seven matches, the in-game clock advances whether or not the player is streaming, which makes it a near-perfect receipt of actual playtime.
The investigator combed through over two years of Werster’s YouTube and Twitch VOD history, compared in-game timer readings across consecutive streams, and found that the gaps between sessions left almost no time for Werster to have legitimately played the offline portion of his streak.
His 217 offline wins against zero losses also landed at statistical odds the investigation puts somewhere between 1-in-129 million and 1-in-1.5 trillion, depending on methodology, against a live-streamed win rate of around 93%. The investigation stops short of claiming absolute proof but argues the numbers rule out luck as a credible defense.
At the time of writing, Werster has not publicly responded to the accusations.
This is not the first time Pokemon’s speedrunning community has had to reckon with fabricated records, as happened when a world record Pokemon Red speedrunner was banned after confessing to splicing save states in 2024, and when a Metal Gear speedrunner aired a pre-recorded run at SGDQ rather than performing live.

