If you wear flashy fluorescent orange boots and play on the wing there is an expectation that you score the odd try or two, and he got across the line after 23 minutes last night.
It wasn't if South Africa would win, it was by how much and when they would score the first of their many tries.
For the record, the first of their 12 came in the seventh through little wing Gio Aplon, who was the beneficiary of a nice offload and he skipped down the right touchline to score.
Tries to Habana, Jaque Fourie and a penalty try followed in the first half and the floodgates opened in the second.
Morne Steyn and Ruan Pienaar were others in the record books. Neither missed a kick all night and both equalled Springboks World Cup records in kicking six conversions each.
Namibia, involved in the past three World Cups but yet to record a win, could count their best moments in the match on the fingers of one hand.
Skipper Jacques Burger, the Windhoek-born Saracens flanker, threw himself about, and blindside flanker Tinus Du Plessis went on a good run in the first half, but too often their teammates resembled pinballs, banging around against immovable objects in green and gold.
Halfback Francois Hougaard was outstanding for South Africa, he was lively throughout and efficient too but it was hard to judge the rest of the Boks due to the paucity of the opposition.
TMO Graham Hughes of England may have taken pity on them too, denying two Springbok try appeals.
South Africa 87 (Gio Aplon 2, Bryan Habana, Jaque Fourie, Frans Steyn, Morne Steyn, Juan De Jongh 2, Francois Hougaard 2, Danie Roussow, penalty, tries; Morne Steyn 6 con, pen, Ruan Pienaar 6 con) Namibia 0 HT: 31-0.