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Bored Panda got in touch with the person who asked this question the first place and they were kind enough to share some more details with us. We were curious to hear what prompted them to make the post.
"Lately, I’ve been down the rabbit hole of real-life cheat codes on YouTube, and a bunch of them actually worked. I figured the Reddit community would have some great ones to share, so I posted the question out of curiosity."
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Need to cut through red tape? Who do you think manages most of it? Your paperwork can go through quickly or can sit on a desk for a few days... or even get "lost".
Back in university, I needed a paper signed by several faculty. I knew some didn't like each other and some were only in at certain times of the day. I asked the department secretary for advice on who to approach and when - rather than give me that info, she said "just leave it with me, come back this afternoon". Saved me a lot of time (she really did not need to do this, but we were friendly), and every one of the faculty would sign anything she told them to.
I've also seen a guy destroy himself. I was working and we were doing interviews. I walked in to the CEO's office - he was just finishing an interview with a candidate. Never found out how it went - the CEO's secretary walked in and told him "if you hire the guy that just left, I quit.". The CEO gave her a questioning look, but she simply put up a hand to indicate "not saying any more". CEO tore the guys resume in half and theatrically put it in the garbage. Secretary walked back to her desk. I never did find out what he had said or done to her, but he trashed his interview before it even started.
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This can also work as a student in HS btw.
The thread ended up with thousands of comments, so we wanted to hear why they thought it was so popular. "I think it resonated with people because everyone loves the idea of having an edge in life, and there's another reason — many experienced redditors uses little tricks like these in their lives, and this post was a great way to ask for them and start implementing them."
#7

Hear me out. I hate flying, the stress of getting to the airport waiting in line TSA. Uncomfortable seats and the rushed nature of the whole experience.
I’m on an Amtrak right now. They have full dining and bedrooms you can take. The cafe I figured would have little snacks, nope they’ve got burgers breakfast sandwiches and a menu bigger than I’ve seen at actual food places for reasonable prices.
Seats are comfortable, like first class comfortable on a plane for a fraction of the cost, and I’m the cheapest one. There’s chargers where some airlines I’ve taken didn’t have them. The ONLY downside is it takes longer to get where you’re going but it’s so enjoyable I wish my trip was longer and it’s 5 hours. I may never fly again.
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"That's why I got a lot of valuable comments, and I'm definitely going to use them. The variety and quality of responses definitely helped boost its popularity, and I think a lot of readers appreciated how surprisingly insightful these answers were. And these cheatcodes can work for most of the people, I think that is also the reason for its popularity," they shared with Bored Panda.
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1.) Compliment them on something they do well. Be as specific as possible.
2.) Ask them for advice on how you can also do this thing well, just like them.
3.) Actually listen intently to their advice and apply it.
4.) Follow back up with them and share the great results you experienced by applying their advice.
5.) They will love you, root for you, go out of their way to help you, and will always give you the benefit of the doubt when you f**k up. Hell, they may even offer their daughter's hand in marriage. So, only do this w people who you want a genuine relationship with. Its that powerful.
There is not a single person on this planet who is impervious to this tactic if done sincerely.
Lastly, they shared their favorite comment and some parting thoughts. "One that stood out to me was someone saying, "When you do hard work, you get luckier", I'm amazed how people think so creatively. I’m really honored the post reached so many people—over 7 million views! It’s amazing how a simple question turned into a massive pool of life advice. I’m glad it brought value to so many readers."
#13

When complimenting women you don't know or perhaps just aren't close to, as a man, compliment something they had active control over. Say, a choice in eye-makeup. Or perhaps color-coordination of their outfit. Even a logo.
Complimenting body parts is risky as you don't really know in what ways that person might feel insecure about themselves, AND, it shows you're actively creeping.
Every time I tell a woman her nails look cool, their faces light up. I like being remembered as the guy that noticed something she went out of her way to do.
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I’m not sure I have a good metric of whether it works as a “cheat code”, but personally I would sure feel great if somebody told me something nice a co-worker or colleague or friend said about me when I wasn’t around.
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People who get upset or are belligerent often, we tend to just tune them out. Their baseline is 'a*****e', they're always yelling and cussing, so it's not even noticed, just background noise, like "boy who cried wolf".
But when a nice, quiet person starts yelling and cussing...*everyone* notices.
Sweet Deborah, who's always cheerful and nice and pleasant to everyone - when she gets upset and starts crying, everyone thinks "that is **wrong**" and immediately drops whatever they're doing to try to set it right.
Not just yelling and cussing, either. When the quiet man who never speaks does speak up, people listen. Because it's unexpected.
#19

I may not be Stephen King or Brandon Sanderson, but I am a competent writer.
I got there by writing s**t work and reading great work and accepting criticism and people telling me my work was s**t. I did this for thirty years.
Whatever you want to be good at, keep doing it. Everyone who is great at something got good at it by being s**t at it.
**So put in the practice regularly, even if you suck at it.**.
#20

You know when you’re walking along a narrow street and there’s someone coming toward you, and you end up doing that awkward little ‘will I go this way or that way’ dance with them until you finally get the f**k out of eachother’s way?
Excruciating right?
Well, I’ve not had to do that s**t for decades. Because instead of looking that person in the face on approach, I very purposefully look over one of their shoulders, indicating without words on which side I intend to pass them.
That easy little visual cue works every f*****g time.


