Journey Through the Mystical World of Black Myth: Wukong

DSPGaming Accidentally Deletes Kang Jin-Star with One Weird Slam in Black Myth: Wukong

Streamer DSPGaming achieves a hilarious out-of-bounds instant kill on Kang Jin-Star using Azure Dust in Black Myth: Wukong.

Two years on from Black Myth: Wukong's explosive launch, the community is still cooking up wild tales from its challenging boss arenas. But sometimes, the most jaw-dropping moments aren't planned—they just happen when a streamer's casual button mashing collides with a boss that really doesn't like being out of bounds. Enter Phil 'DSPGaming' Burnell, who in a recent clip resurfaced from the vaults, turned a brutal Chapter 3 showdown into a one-shot circus act that left even him speechless.

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The setup couldn't have been more ordinary. DSP, facing the notoriously slippery Kang Jin-Star, popped his Azure Dust transformation—a rocky, ground-pound-heavy form—and started chipping away at the boss's health. The first phase was textbook: staggering her into a corner, slowly eating through her lifebar. No alarms. No fancy footwork. Just a guy and his stone fists dealing with one of the most evasive dragons in the game.

Then the teleporting phase began, and that's where things got deliciously weird.

Kang Jin-Star started zipping above and below the stage like a lightning-charged pinball—above his head one second, underground the next. DSP kept swinging those big, dumb rock attacks, hoping to connect. The hit didn't look special. In fact, it looked like a complete whiff. But the next thing anyone saw was the boss's health bar evaporating from around 70% to zero in a single interaction.

No dramatic combo. No ultimate ability. Just *pop*, and the boss's entire existence was revoked. DSP's confusion was palpable. "Wait, what just happened?" his face seemed to scream, as the victory fanfare played. You could almost hear the game's invisible referee blowing a whistle and pointing to the boundary line.

So what sorcery was this? The short answer: out-of-bounds detention. In that teleporting state, Kang Jin-Star remains fully vulnerable to damage. She's tough to hit because she's literally phasing through the floor and air like a glitched-out celestial, but the hitbox on DSP's ground-pound attack was generous enough to push her model into the forbidden zone beneath the arena. And in Black Myth: Wukong, if you shove an enemy past those famously strict invisible walls—even a boss—the engine treats it like a bottomless pit encounter. Instant death. It's the same rule that sends the Destined One flying into oblivion if he takes one wrong step near a cliff edge. Only this time, the dragon got the short end of the spatial staff.

"I mean, hey, she had it coming!" you might say. After all, dodging her rapid-fire teleport strikes and lightning barrages while respecting her personal space is a recipe for controller-snapping rage. The fight demands patience, spatial awareness, and a lot of healing gourds. DSP just stumbled into the one exploit that turns the tables completely. Some players have tried to replicate the cheese since—positioning her near arena edges during the transformation phase—but it's a finicky trick that depends on precise timing and some good old-fashioned luck. Back in 2024, developer Game Science was quick to patch similar boundary breakers in Chapter 3's cliffside areas, so any current attempt (as of 2026) would likely result in a very alive, very angry Kang Jin-Star swatting you out of the sky.

That hasn't stopped the clip from becoming legendary in its own right. It's the kind of organic, "you'll-never-believe-what-just-happened" moment that livestreaming was built for. DSP's utterly bewildered reaction—zero excitement, just pure, unfiltered confusion—made it meme-worthy. In a game all about mythical tricksters and unexpected transformations, pulling a fast one on a dragon via an accidental stage ejection feels almost poetically fitting. Sun Wukong himself specialized in bending the rules of heaven and earth; seeing a mortal streamer accidentally invoke the same chaotic energy would probably make the Monkey King crack a wry smile.

Here's a quick breakdown for anyone still scratching their head:

  • The Setup: DSP uses Azure Dust transformation against Kang Jin-Star (Chapter 3).

  • The Weirdness: During her teleport phase, a random slam connects.

  • The Result: Boss's health drops from ~70% to 0 instantly—likely pushed out of bounds.

  • Why It Worked: Enemies knocked into out-of-bounds areas die instantly, same as the player.

  • Can You Do It Today?: Very unlikely. Patches have since tightened collision and boundary checks.

The incident also highlights something utterly charming about Black Myth: Wukong's design philosophy: even two years later, its invisible walls and physics interactions remain a source of both frustration and delight. While some players decry the strict barriers as immersion-breaking, moments like this remind us that those barriers can be weaponized in hilarious, unforeseen ways. It's the ultimate "feature, not a bug" argument wrapped in a boss-speedrun package.

So here's to you, DSP. You didn't out-skill Kang Jin-Star; you out-weirded her. And in a game where gods and demons respect nothing more than a clever hustle, that's a victory as legitimate as any perfect dodge streak. The community might still be debating whether this counts as a legitimate win, but one thing's for sure: the highlight reel gods were definitely watching that day.

Catch the full clip if you need a good laugh—just don't expect Lady Kang Jin-Star to roll out the welcome mat if you try it yourself. She's been holding a grudge ever since.

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