
Chinese Teen Sets New Rubik's Cube Record at 3.71 Seconds
Xuanyi Geng just solved a Rubik's Cube in an average of 3.71 seconds, breaking his own world record and proving human hands can move faster than most people can blink. The Chinese speedcuber's incredible feat shows how far dedication and practice can push human potential.
Imagine solving a Rubik's Cube before you finish reading this sentence. That's exactly what China's Xuanyi Geng can do, and he just proved it on the world stage.
On April 26, 2026, at the Deqing Small & Special competition in Huzhou, China, Geng set a new world record by solving a 3x3x3 Rubik's Cube in an average time of just 3.71 seconds. His five attempts clocked in at 3.79, 4.33, 3.61, 3.74, and an astonishing 2.80 seconds.
Following official World Cube Association rules, judges removed his fastest and slowest times before calculating the average. Even with that lightning-quick 2.80-second solve excluded, his average still shattered expectations.
This isn't Geng's first time at the top. He broke his own previous record of 3.84 seconds, which he set just three months earlier at the Beijing Winter 2026 event in January.

Why This Inspires
What makes Geng's achievement so remarkable isn't just the speed. It's the consistency. Solving a puzzle with 43 quintillion possible configurations requires muscle memory, pattern recognition, and intense focus working together in perfect harmony.
His journey shows what happens when natural talent meets relentless practice. While most people struggle to solve a Rubik's Cube in minutes or give up entirely, Geng has trained his mind and fingers to work at speeds that seem almost superhuman.
The speedcubing community continues to push boundaries that once seemed impossible. Just a decade ago, a sub-five-second average was considered nearly unreachable. Now, competitors like Geng are inching closer to what might be the human limit.
Young people around the world are watching Geng's videos and picking up their own cubes, inspired to see what they can achieve with dedication. His success proves that breaking barriers isn't about waiting for someone else to do it first.
At an age when many teens are still figuring out their passions, Geng has already mastered his and become the best in the world at it.
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Based on reporting by Google News - World Record
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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