The largest setup of Jenga probably ever was played out in a CAT (short for caterpillar, thus maximizing the company's animal associations) commercial advertising several versions of their construction vehicles, Mashables reported. Before the first wood stack was pulled, the five vehicles were introduced by their factory names (descriptions and odds provided by the author, who has absolutely no experience with CAT mobiles):

1. CAT 320: one of the tallest competitors and known for its overhead technique. Probably not versatile enough to survive the later rounds.

Odds to lose (because Jenga only has a loser, not a winner with five participants): 3-1

2. CATTH514c: a small, stocky piece that goes in, out, and up. Its only weakness is height and strength, but, along with the CATM315D, it has the most exact grabbing technique for this style of competition.

Odds to lose: 8-1

3. CATM315D: tiniest of the five but also the quickest. Because of its stature this lifting device goes in super low -- which could be a weakness if it's forced to grab wood from the base.

Odds to lose: 4-1

4. CAT277D: uses its super wide base to support an overhead claw a la "Toy Story" times a thousand. We know how hard those claw games are at the arcade. Will the 277D fall victim to the usual mistakes?

Odds to lose: 4-1

5. CAT349E: primarily a dirt scooper and not the most sensitive of the group. Most likely to lose, though the 349E has surprised in the past.

Odds to lose: 2-1

And the loser was...

Officially, none of the vehicles. Rather than taking turns, they all worked together depending on the location of the wood piece. But it was the CAT320 that poked out the final piece (from the bottom).

The video: