Achievement Hunting
Also known as: AH · Achievement Hunter
Achievement Hunting refers to both the gaming subculture of obsessively pursuing in-game achievements and trophies, and most notably Achievement Hunter, the influential Rooster Teeth gaming division founded in 2008 that turned that obsession into a media empire. Started by Geoff Ramsey and Jack Pattillo as a simple achievement guide website, Achievement Hunter grew into one of YouTube's biggest gaming channels before dissolving in October 20231.
Overview
Achievement hunting as a practice exploded with Xbox 360's Gamerscore system in the mid-2000s, turning side objectives into a competitive meta-game. Players would grind through obscure tasks, compare scores with friends, and build entire identities around their completion percentages. Achievement Hunter captured that energy and built a content machine around it, starting with guide videos and evolving into one of the most recognizable Let's Play brands on the internet1.
The group's core cast, often called the "Main Six" (Ramsey, Pattillo, Michael Jones, Gavin Free, Ryan Haywood, and later Jeremy Dooley), became internet personalities in their own right. Their chaotic Minecraft and GTA Let's Plays defined a generation of gaming content.
Geoff Ramsey got the idea in 2008 when he realized no community website existed for Xbox achievement guides. He and Rooster Teeth CEO Burnie Burns were already competing to rack up the most achievements in their spare time, so Ramsey pitched a dedicated site. Burns agreed, and Achievement Hunter launched on July 6, 2008, sharing Rooster Teeth's web infrastructure1.
Ramsey recruited Jack Pattillo to co-host, and the two began cranking out achievement guides and Easter egg videos. David Dreger also helped get the site off the ground. Ramsey later said he'd grown tired of working on Red vs. Blue and enjoyed the creative change of pace1.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Platforms
Timeline
2023-01-15
First appears
2023-06-01
Goes viral
2024-01-01
Continues in use
2025-01-01
Achievement Hunting is still actively used and shared across platforms
How to Use This Meme
Achievement hunting as a meme format typically shows up in a few ways:
Gamerscore flexing — Screenshots of completion percentages or rare achievement pop-ups, often paired with captions about the absurd time investment required
The grind is real — Jokes about spending 40 hours on a single bronze trophy or doing something deeply unfun for a virtual badge
Achievement unlocked edits — The Xbox achievement notification overlay applied to real-life situations (graduating college, making toast without burning it, etc.)
AH quotes and moments — Clips and screencaps from Achievement Hunter videos used as reaction content, particularly Gavin Free's confused expressions or Michael Jones's rage moments
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Geoff Ramsey's original motivation was literally just wanting a website where he could look up how to get specific Xbox achievements
Ray Narvaez Jr. left Achievement Hunter in April 2015 to focus on Twitch streaming full-time, one of the earlier examples of a major YouTuber pivoting to live content
The Let's Play Minecraft series ran weekly from 2012 and became one of the longest-running gaming series on YouTube
Achievement Hunter moved into its own dedicated office separate from Rooster Teeth's main facility in mid-2015, a sign of how large the operation had grown
Frequently Asked Questions
References (1)
- 1Achievement Hunterencyclopedia