Gamer

Gamer title Track
Gamer is earned by winning points in Festival Games, like the Snowball Arena. It is tied to your account, not any particular character.

! Rank !! Title !! Gamer Points needed
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 * 1 || Skillz || 1,000
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 * 2 || Pro Skillz || 2,000
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 * 3 || Numchuck Skillz || 4,000
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 * 4 || Mad Skillz || 7,000
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 * 5 || Über Micro Skillz|| 12,000
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 * 6 ||  Gosu Skillz || 20,000
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 * 7 || 1337 Skillz|| 32,500
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 * }

Gamer Points Awarded for different festival games

 * Snowball fights (Wintersday): 10 points per win (You would have to win 100 times a day, for every day of the event, for 3 years)
 * Rollerbeetle Racing (Canthan New Year, Gamer Weekend, Second Birthday Celebration, Dragon Festival 2007): First place receives 7 points, second place receives 5 points, third place receives 3 points, and fourth place receives 2 points. Fifth and sixth positions receive 1 point if they finish within 30 seconds of the first place finisher.
 * Dragon Arena (Gamer Weekend, Second Birthday Celebration, Dragon Festival 2007): 5 points per win
 * Shing Jea Boardwalk (Gamer Weekend, Second Birthday Celebration, Dragon Festival 2007, Dragon Festival Redux): one point for each opponent you outscore in the Dragon Nest competition.
 * Costume Brawl (Halloween): 7 points per win

Trivia

 * The third rank of the title, Numchuck Skillz, appears to be a reference to Napoleon Dynamite. Nunchaku or Nunchucks, sometimes mispronounced as Numchucks, are martial arts weapons.
 * Used in the fifth rank of the title, Über is a German word actually meaning "above/over" well known in the online gaming industry, commonly translated in the gamer community as "super" when attached to an attribute such as "skillz." Thus, this roughly translates into English as "Super Macro/Micro Skillz." "Macro/Micro," among elite groups of gamers, refers to the ability to do many things in a game very quickly (typically a real-time strategy (RTS) or a first-person shooter (FPS) title) in a short period of time using keyboard shortcuts.
 * In the sixth rank, the word Gosu is Korean. It is a common word in Asian languages and literally means "a high hand". The term is often used to describe a person with great skill in martial arts or in Go. It has now been adopted into English because it became highly used in multiplayer games due to Korea's influence in online gaming.
 * 1337 comes from the word leet, a writing system. The word itself means "elite" but is commonly used to mock someone in online gaming. "Skillz" and the unconfirmed eighth rank, "T3h Haxz0rz Skillz", likewise originate in leetspeak.