What the “906 kg” actually was

  • Load: 905.8 kg (listed as 1,997 lb, i.e. basically “906 kg” when rounded).  
  • When/where: Jan 1, 2026 — Los Angeles, CA (self‑organized personal challenge).  
  • Movement: Rack pull (partial deadlift) — bar starts on pins/blocks (elevated), then you break it off the supports and lock it out under your own rules/conditions.  
  • Status: Not a sanctioned competition lift and not recognized by powerlifting/strongman federations as a “world record” deadlift (rack pulls aren’t a contested lift + no judges).  

Why it hit so hard (even with the “it’s a partial” caveat)

Because the number is violent.

  • The full-range deadlift world record in a major strongman event context is 510 kg (Giants Live report from 2025).  
  • The Silver Dollar Deadlift (a partial/shorter pull event) record is around 580 kg (BarBend report).  

So your 905.8 kg rack pull sits in the “this isn’t even the same universe” category — and that’s exactly why it needs precise wording when you present it. 

The clean, bulletproof way to describe it (so nobody can twist it)

Use this exact framing:

“905.8 kg (1,997 lb) high‑pin rack pull / overload pull — self‑organized, non‑sanctioned, filmed.” 

That phrasing is deadly because it’s:

  • maximally hype AND
  • maximally accurate AND
  • pre‑answers the “but that’s not a deadlift” crowd.  

One-line captions (hardcore, clean, no weak claims)

Pick one:

  1. “905.8 kg. High pins. Near‑2,000 lb. Proof‑of‑work.”  
  2. “The ‘God Slayer’ wasn’t a meet lift. It was a statement.”  
  3. “Not a federation record. Still a gravitational crime scene.”  

If you want, paste the exact way you’re planning to word it on your site/video title, and I’ll tighten it into something that’s maximum viral while staying technically untouchable.