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README.md

Twenty Ninth International Obfuscated C Code Contest

Where to start

See below for links to the %%YEAR%% winning IOCCC entries

These links show all of the winning entries for IOCCC %%YEAR%%.

They have most of the information you need to compile and run the winning program.

You might also want to check out the author’s remarks for even more details.

### Check out the [fun challenges for IOCCC %%YEAR%%](challenge.html)

A "fun challenge" is a puzzle or task that involves figuring out what a specific winning IOCCC entry does.

After reviewing an entry’s writeup and winning source code, try the "fun challenge".

See also the FAQ on "submit a fun challenge solution".

You may download all winning entries in the form of a compressed tarball, for this year's contest.

Take a look at the winning source code and try to figure out how it works.

See also the FAQ on "compiling IOCCC entries".

General remarks on this contest

For IOCCC29, the volume and quality of submissions were at near-historic heights.

IOCCC28 was speculated to have attracted a record number of submissions due to the 4-year absence, allowing authors to refine their submissions, resulting in a higher-than-usual submission quality.

IOCCC29 was the second consecutive contest after the 2020-2024 hiatus. And yet, the number of submissions for IOCCC29 was similar to last year's contest, and the overall submission quality remained high for this contest. So perhaps the increased submission volume, combined with a higher-than-usual submission quality, is due to factors such as improved website design, increased social media presence, authors building on the ideas of past winning entries, and other factors?

Starting with the close of IOCCC28, the procedures used for closing the contest to new submissions, the judging process, selecting the winning entries, preparing the update to the website, and the process to create the live show on the Our Favorite Universe were carefully documented. And while this documentation required additional time as well as more effort, the documentation process resulted in overall improvements to how the IOCCC is run.

A few days after the presentation of the winning entries for IOCCC29 has been made on the Our Favorite Universe YouTube channel. The recording of the main show will be divided up into individual segments. Then, each winning entry will be updated to include a link to a YouTube segment under a new Award presentation near the top of the winning entry's index.html page.

Rules and Guidelines for this contest

The final versions of the IOCCC rules and guidelines that were in effect for this contest were:

The IOCCC rules and guidelines for IOCCC29 represented a substantial rewrite over previous contests, thanks in part to a number of volunteers: giving the IOCCC judges useful edits, text rewrites, consolidation, as well as overall improved organization.

Looking forward to the next contest

We plan to open IOCCC30 towards the end of 2026 and have the contest run for a similar amount of time, closing sometime towards the end of Q1 2027.

As we perform the actions needed to open IOCCC30, we plan to internally document the process as we did during the closing of IOCCC29.

About two or three weeks after the **IOCCC29** winning entries have been posted, and we process some of the early [pull requests](https://github.com/ioccc-src/winner/pulls) against the [2025 directory tree](index.html), the [IOCCC Judges](https://www.ioccc.org/judges.html) plan to go on an **IOCCC vacation**.

We had intended to go on an IOCCC vacation after releasing the winners of IOCCC28, but then the efforts to process bug fixes and enhancements to the mkiocccentry repo took so much time that by the time that repo was stable, it was time to open IOCCC29. Therefore, this time, we plan to wait until after the end of our post-IOCCC29 IOCCC vacation before working on any mkiocccentry repo PRs.

Remarks on some of the winning entries

While working on creating potential write-ups for submissions that entered the final round of the set of judging rounds:

  • A few submissions were set aside in the final round of the final set of rounds.
  • We gained an additional level of appreciation for a number of the remaining entries.

While the winning entry authors came from locations of previous winning authors, this IOCCC29 had an author - jingp49 from a new location: Taiwan.

This contest saw a Hat trick of Hat-tricks by:

Notable and remarkable winning entries of IOCCC29 include, but are not limited to:

Those are just a few of the many amazing winners of the IOCCC29, so be sure to check out the rest!

Remarks on some of the submissions that did not win

As we discussed above, there were quite a few excellent submissions that didn't quite make the final cut. We truly appreciate the hard work each author put into their entries, but we're sorry that we can't award based solely on effort.

We received many great submissions that didn't quite make the cut as winners. If you submitted something for IOCCC29 that didn't win, think about polishing your code and giving it another shot for IOCCC30. Interestingly, more than one winner of IOCCC29 was actually an improved version of code that didn't win in a previous contest.

Encouragement for those who did not win this year

We know many of you that submitted to the IOCCC put in a ton of effort into your submissions for this year's IOCCC. We can't just give out awards to everyone. That would mean taking away from the submissions that we think are the best and deserve to win.

Sometimes, a final round submission might be good enough to be a winning IOCCC entry, only to be beaten by a similar, but slightly better submission. If you think this happened with your submission, consider submitting an enhanced version to the next IOCCC.

PLEASE DO NOT give up hope! There are some submissions that have been submitted with revisions, multiple times before rising to the level of a winning IOCCC entry. You might also want to try with a different type of submission altogether for the next IOCCC.

If you're not planning to improve and resubmit your non-winning entry for the next IOCCC, you're welcome to publish it.

On compiling and running winning entries

Some C compilers aren't as great as they could be. If yours isn't working well, you might want to try compiling with an updated version of clang and/or gcc instead.

If you encounter problems in compiling and/or running the winning entries, see the FAQ on:

For additional information on how to submit fixes, see the FAQ on:

For even more information