Forget everything you know about binge-watching TV. Alejandro “AJ” Fragoso has you beat.

He has everyone beat, in fact: He just set the binge-watching world record.

Last Friday, Fragoso holed up in a Midtown Manhattan apartment with two others and several witnesses to start what would become a nearly four-day attempt at making binge-watching history. In the end, his record-seeking peers peeled off and only Fragoso survived to complete the 94-hour ordeal, breaking a Guinness World Record set just a month earlier.

Pity the poor Austrians who watched 92 hours of TV in March.

Fragoso’s TV playlist included episodes of Battlestar Galactica, Twilight Zone, Curb Your Enthusiasm and Bob’s Burgers, among other shows.

And although it was part of a marketing ploy for multimedia software-maker CyberLink — which repeatedly plugged its software in a statement announcing the record-setting event — the experience was nonetheless torturous, Fragoso said.

“Around the second day we started having minor hallucinations we started seeing writing on the screen that wasn’t there,” he told local TV station WPIX. “You forget there’s an outside world at that point you’re trapped in this tiny room.”

Participants were granted five minutes of rest for every hour of TV they watched, a Guinness official said. That’s according to a video recorded by Tech Insider, which was on hand during the attempt.

In interviews recorded with the site, Fragoso described having waking dreams.

Molly Ennis, one of two people who joined him in the effort, described experiencing stomach pain.

“I feel terrible. I think we both are having stomach aches,” she said in the video.

She also jokingly described frustration with witnesses to the event, who watched the group and took notes based on their actions. Ennis was disqualified after roughly 60 hours when she broke eye contact with the TV to check Fragoso’s ringing phone, according to the video; Fragoso was taking a power nap during an allotted break. “I’m kind of upset,” she said in the video. Ennis hung in as emotional support for Fragoso.

Fragoso and Ennis were joined by Louise Matsakis, an editorial fellow with Vice’s Motherboard.

Here’s how she described her experience:

“By the end of the day, my eyes ached from looking at the TV, and I was in a terrible mood.”