2:12 I always thought they ate popcorn plants with how they have a spearlike mouth and can easily replicate the force of a thrown spear with their dashes. The fact that they're one of the few things bigger than you that doesn't see an immediate reason to kill you also made me think they're herbivores, but this is all just my speculating.
Gory theory: they wiggle through the digestive system of extremely large creatures, consume the prey they were digesting, comepletely depriving said creature of nutrients, killing it, then wiggling out with a full belly. (I watch animal documentaries btw)
Small detail but at 0:40 I like how they moved the Circle with the egg instead of taking the easy route with a static image. It’s a really nice touch and shows how much effort was put into this video
I noticed a long time ago noots seem oddly perfect as the natural consumer of seedcobs. Most regions that have them tend to have seedcobs (along with dead ones) laying around, and their attack strat along with hummingbird-esq energy needs make them perfect for opening and consuming seedcob. Additionally this explains why the adults attack each other, as they need entire fields of cob to survive and compete for resources.
It’s possible they also may share a symbiotic relationship with rain deer in this case, as seedcob is most likely the only food that can sustain such a large creature. Gas apples do not seem big and nutritious enough to feed such a large animal and are most likely consumed to combat parasites. The noots may open seedcob and feed off it, while deer feed off the cobs opened by noots.
I just googled it and apparentely they're not insects, here's some copy paste : "They are actually more closely related to lobsters, crayfish and shrimp. "
@@hollowfromsky Um ackshually... that's also wrong. Insects are more closely related to lobsters, crayfish, and shrimp, all being in the clade tetraconata (aka pancrustaceans), those two belonging to either the hexapod (insects, springtails, etc.) or decapod (lobsters, shrimp etc.) groups. Centipedes are myriapods along with millipedes and some other things, separate from tetraconata. However while they aren't as close to each other as hexapods and decapods, they do belong to the same higher clade, mandibulata, being a sister group to tetraconata, making centipedes more closely related to insects and lobsters than spiders and horseshoe crabs. Isn't taxonomy fun? To make things more simple, tetraconata usually have a set number of legs (hexapods have 6, decapods have 10, etc.) while myriapods have no specific number of legs (one centipede may have 30 legs, another may have over a hundred) but it's usually a lot, hence the name.
Dragonflies have a behavior where they attach to the tail of the other, this is how they breed, I believe the noodle flies exchange food instead of gametes through attaching to the parent's tail
Fun fact: I accidentally grabbed a baby noodlefly and the mother killed me, and it scared me so bad I had my back at the bottom of my chair, my heart was beating out of my chest, had a headache, gritting my teeth, and had a comically fearful expression on my face. I now have a mini panic attack every time I see a mother nooddlefly 😁👍
Something strange I’ve noticed about noodles is their interactions with other adult noodleflies. For some reason, they will actively attack one another, making for some pretty cool battle royale scenarios. Anyway, tech-wise I think this is due to noodleflies attacking creatures that harm their children, and other adult noodleflies might interact with babies in a way that triggers this. If we’re speaking biologically I think it has to do with their reproductive behavior. They probably reproduce asexually, and in an effort to make sure that their genes survive multiple generations, they will attack other noodleflies to prevent them from producing more gremlins than them. In summary, adult noodleflies try to support their ego by killing others
I may be late but a fact: I met lots of of blue and white noots both in arena and campaigns that I just learned they were rare. Blue one look gorgeus but I never saw a blue juvenile
2:12 I always thought they ate popcorn plants with how they have a spearlike mouth and can easily replicate the force of a thrown spear with their dashes. The fact that they're one of the few things bigger than you that doesn't see an immediate reason to kill you also made me think they're herbivores, but this is all just my speculating.
This makes sense... But that's just a theory, A GAME THEORY.
Gory theory: they wiggle through the digestive system of extremely large creatures, consume the prey they were digesting, comepletely depriving said creature of nutrients, killing it, then wiggling out with a full belly. (I watch animal documentaries btw)
Or entomovores
@@retro_guyy1015ur pfp looks like 5p from far away
@@hollowknightenjoyerit’s from adventure time 💀💀💀💀💀
1:17 oh shit attenborough has a stroke :(
Nooooo
Rocksksksskkskskksksks
hes getting old
Take a drink every time this guy says noodle.
I'm in hospital because of alcohol poisoning...
@@FotoStudios418 WEAK!
I now have permanent liver cirrhosis
DO NOT! YOU WILL DIE!
*proceeds to die*
Small detail but at 0:40 I like how they moved the Circle with the egg instead of taking the easy route with a static image. It’s a really nice touch and shows how much effort was put into this video
I noticed a long time ago noots seem oddly perfect as the natural consumer of seedcobs. Most regions that have them tend to have seedcobs (along with dead ones) laying around, and their attack strat along with hummingbird-esq energy needs make them perfect for opening and consuming seedcob. Additionally this explains why the adults attack each other, as they need entire fields of cob to survive and compete for resources.
It’s possible they also may share a symbiotic relationship with rain deer in this case, as seedcob is most likely the only food that can sustain such a large creature. Gas apples do not seem big and nutritious enough to feed such a large animal and are most likely consumed to combat parasites. The noots may open seedcob and feed off it, while deer feed off the cobs opened by noots.
@@conquestanddeath4406 the question is how big the rain deer really is, considering it has a lot of fur.
OH NO.
I didn't realise those were eggs.
That explains a lot.
So they kept attacking you?
To continue on with insects, you should do centipedes next
maybe
Are centipedes insects?
I just googled it and apparentely they're not insects, here's some copy paste : "They are actually more closely related to lobsters, crayfish and shrimp. "
@@hollowfromsky Rain World centipedes only have superficial similarities with real centipedes anyway.
@@hollowfromsky Um ackshually... that's also wrong. Insects are more closely related to lobsters, crayfish, and shrimp, all being in the clade tetraconata (aka pancrustaceans), those two belonging to either the hexapod (insects, springtails, etc.) or decapod (lobsters, shrimp etc.) groups. Centipedes are myriapods along with millipedes and some other things, separate from tetraconata. However while they aren't as close to each other as hexapods and decapods, they do belong to the same higher clade, mandibulata, being a sister group to tetraconata, making centipedes more closely related to insects and lobsters than spiders and horseshoe crabs.
Isn't taxonomy fun?
To make things more simple, tetraconata usually have a set number of legs (hexapods have 6, decapods have 10, etc.) while myriapods have no specific number of legs (one centipede may have 30 legs, another may have over a hundred) but it's usually a lot, hence the name.
in my 21 hours of story, and 108 hours of arena, I have only seen a single blue noodlefly
Dragonflies have a behavior where they attach to the tail of the other, this is how they breed, I believe the noodle flies exchange food instead of gametes through attaching to the parent's tail
Fun fact: I accidentally grabbed a baby noodlefly and the mother killed me, and it scared me so bad I had my back at the bottom of my chair, my heart was beating out of my chest, had a headache, gritting my teeth, and had a comically fearful expression on my face.
I now have a mini panic attack every time I see a mother nooddlefly 😁👍
The forbidden spaghetti
Please do more David Attenborough rain world nature docs!
I really love these creatures. And what i love the most about them is eating them.
Something strange I’ve noticed about noodles is their interactions with other adult noodleflies.
For some reason, they will actively attack one another, making for some pretty cool battle royale scenarios.
Anyway, tech-wise I think this is due to noodleflies attacking creatures that harm their children, and other adult noodleflies might interact with babies in a way that triggers this.
If we’re speaking biologically I think it has to do with their reproductive behavior. They probably reproduce asexually, and in an effort to make sure that their genes survive multiple generations, they will attack other noodleflies to prevent them from producing more gremlins than them.
In summary, adult noodleflies try to support their ego by killing others
I love this, thank you.
This is one of the greatest videos ever made
This was great, good job.
now this is some real biology
I may be late but a fact:
I met lots of of blue and white noots both in arena and campaigns that I just learned they were rare. Blue one look gorgeus but I never saw a blue juvenile
The adults are harder than 2 scavs
I thought the stripe was just the light. Bruh I’m stoopid
This guy's voice reminds me of the narrator of animal planet
Because it is. It's an AI based on David Attenborough's voice.
The thumbnail.........
By the way there can be found adult noodleflies with red eyes full of angory
i love them
best narrator ever
Ok Attenborough
noodlefly
I wonder if noodle flys taste like noodles
i wish of this can u do the slugpup? plz Floive :(
that thumbnail 💀💀💀💀
Yknow what would be fun?
Centipedes or egg bugs
Do one on the Garbage worms or a white/black lizard
i saw a blue adult
Что за милый дедушка делает эти видео?