Longer version: 200+ collective years of professional game design experience.
Used by gamers, especially Riot Games players at any game highlights created by one or some over-powered characters.
Origins: First used by ... a Riot employee, Lutzburg. In a debate on Twitter between him and a player who only plays Wukong on whether Wukong is a too weak character or not, Lutzburg used their term in a tweet, which immeadiately turned into a meme. The reason? Not only had Riot Games just released an extremely over-powered character named Aphelios into League of Legends, but also Riot has always been struglling with balancing League of Legends with unbelievably numerous complains about characters being over-powered or stronger than nothing but a minion.
On stream, a player who used Aphelios just instantly killed a full-health enemy with his ultimate move. Twitch chat: 200 years
The term used by the Russians for dead bodies of soldiers in a military conflict. Itβs also the name of a 2007 Russian film
βUnofficially, Cargo 200 is used to refer to all bodies of the dead being transported away from the battlefield, and has also become a euphemism for irreversible losses of manpower in a conflict.β (Wikipedia).
Ukraine has set up a website and telegram channel called 200rf.com - in reference to Cargo 200 - so Russian families can track down and identify their sons.
in refrence to Riot games talking about how they have 200 colective years of game design. Used to talk about overcomplicated, overtuned, or overpowered mechanics in games like League of Legends, Valorant, or TFT
The HTTP status code for 'OK' - it means your request was fulfilled without an error.
A 200 error page is usually not shown to users, but certain phpscripts may display one.
That script didn't have anything to display, so it just showed a 200 error.