Elon Musk stands accused of pretending to be good at video games. The irony is delicious Keza MacDonald

The Guardian 

Last year on Joe Rogan's podcast, Elon Musk claimed to be one of the world's best Diablo IV players – and surprisingly, the leaderboards backed him up. For those that haven't had the pleasure, Diablo is one of the most mercilessly time-intensive video games out there; you build a character and carve through armies of demons, spending hundreds of hours refining skills and equipment for maximum hellspawn-cleansing efficiency. I played it for maybe five hours last year and immediately quit, for fear that it would consume my life. Most of the people who play it are young, often male, and have plenty of time to themselves to spend on the internet and playing games – so, the exact demographic of many Musk stans. It suited these hardcore gamer guys to believe that someone who tweets all day and runs several businesses was also an elite player who poured hundreds of hours into Diablo.