Short answer up-front: People are losing their minds over Eric Kim’s 513 kg rack-pull because the lift checks every box in the modern “go-viral” playbook: the numbers smash historical reference points, the footage looks like CGI, the story hits multiple identity tribes at once, and the controversy keeps the comment threads on fire. When a single clip triggers awe, debate, and a flood of remixes all at once, the algorithms keep pushing it—so the hype loop feeds on itself.

Below is a deeper dive into what, exactly, makes this one partial pull such a cultural super-nova.

1 – The Numbers Obliterate Context

1.1 Heavier than any full-range deadlift—ever

Kim’s 513 kg bar beats the official all-time deadlift record of 501 kg by Hafþór Björnsson by 12 kg, even though his lift starts at knee height  .

1.2 Pound-for-pound insanity

At ~75 kg body-weight, that’s 6.84× BW—far beyond the 4–5× BW coefficients that classify “elite” in powerlifting tables  .

Translation: spectators are watching a guy the size of an MMA feather-weight hoist more iron than 200 kg strong-men. The brain short-circuits—and hits share.

2 – The Clip Looks Cinematic

  • Bar whips like spaghetti, plates flex, Kim roars barefoot and belt-less. Viewers can feel the danger and the rawness in a 10-second loop  .
  • High-contrast, single-angle framing keeps the moment meme-ready; dozens of creators stitched the footage into “1,131 LB—HOLY GRAIL” breakdowns within hours  .

When spectacle + brevity line up, attention economies reward it.

3 – It Lights Up Multiple Tribes at Once

TribeWhat they seeWhy they repost/comment
Strength nerdsA leverage masterclass that re-opens the rack-pull vs. deadlift debateThey love technical arguments 
Natty/gear watchdogs“No one does 6.8× BW raw… is he enhanced?”Endless “Natty-or-Not” threads keep traffic spiking 
Meme lords“Gravity has left the chat” overlays, 1-million-play TikToksCatch-phrases spread faster than facts 
Other strongmen & coachesJoey Szatmary, Sean Hayes, etc. publicly tip their hatsSocial proof from big names amplifies reach 

4 – Controversy = Free Engagement

  • Rack-pulls are partial lifts, so purists cry “doesn’t count,” while pragmatists argue overload value  .
  • Strongman pages point out that 18-inch “partial deadlift” records already exist (e.g., Novikov’s 1,185 lb), which adds historical context and more debate  .

Every “it’s fake,” “it’s real,” or “it’s useless” comment adds oxygen to the algorithmic fire.

5 – Algorithms Love Extremes

Forbes has documented how platforms systematically up-rank content that triggers strong emotion—shock, awe, or outrage  . Kim’s lift hits all three, so the recommendation engines keep recycling it into fresh feeds long after the first wave.

6 – Human Psychology Loves Super-Human Feats

Watching impossible strength lights up the same dopamine pathways we use to celebrate our own victories  . Viewers “bask in reflected glory,” feeling a jolt of pride or inspiration—even if they’ve never touched a barbell.

7 – Practical Ripple Effects

  • Coaching content boom: reaction videos morph into tutorials, driving ad revenue for third-party creators  .
  • Program sales & merch: lifters adopt rack-pull variations hoping for similar gains; meme T-shirts (“Gravity Left the Chat”) pop up overnight  .
  • Mainstream media runway: legacy sites ignore partials at first, but the snowball effect all but guarantees future features when editors catch up.

8 – Kim’s Own Blitzkrieg Distribution

Kim doesn’t wait for journalists—he posts raw clips, follow-up essays, and influencer shout-outs across YouTube, X, TikTok, and multiple blogs within hours  . That “everywhere at once” strategy saturates timelines before skepticism can cool the hype.

Bottom line

Awe-inducing math + cinematic visuals + multi-tribe identity hooks + algorithm-friendly controversy = viral inevitability. Until someone shows a lighter lifter moving heavier iron—or definitively debunks the feat—people will keep caring, sharing, and arguing. And that, in the attention economy, is the record to beat.