This has just made me realise how amazing of a game this would make. Two modes: Campaign and Sandbox. The game sort-pf functions like Teardown, where it's voxel based but instead of destroying stuff, you're a building contractor that has to build a building capable of withstanding a set magnitude earthquake and as you progress through the campaign you unlock better materials, tools and equipment to make your buildings safer. Then in sandbox mode you can spawn in one of a number of preset maps and you can build unlimited stuff and start earthquakes of any desired magnitude to help test build ideas. I'd pay a solid £30 for a game like that ngl.
Totally agree with you!!! There's was a somewhat similar game called Bridge it but it was only 20% close to what you described 😁 would love to find a developer and present this idea!!
@@EarthquakeSim Well a good business case is that it would be a very one-of-a-kind game, so a good market potential. I hope some day somebody makes a game like that as it would absolutely fill my soul because I love building games and destruction games. Perfect mix plus it could also add a layer of education as to how earthquakes work and effect the environment, lots of potential
At 4:50 , that hotel is actually in my city , it used to be called the intercontinental hotel (now being called grand hotel Bucharest) and it is so strange seeing it collapse as it is one of the city's sky line icons. Also this hotel actually withstood a huge earthquake in 1977 , with a magnitude of 7.4 degrees on the Richter scale.
This is the huge gap between reality and these kids phantasies graphics without any knowleges of constructions of buildings. Well to see on the hotel in your city: I remember well pix of Bucharest heavy demaged by that massive earthquake, but the tower of this hotel was standing almost untouched in the middle of ruins of lower buildings around, which confimed its well calculated, designed, and constructed structure, resisting without any demage also such strong earthquake there.
Well thats the key thing here ...im fairly sure the real thing isnt made of square slabs ....this is only really a physics simulation and not an actual earthquake sim
Visited the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. There was a representative from the National Parks Service saying that the bridge could withstand an earthquake of about 8 on the Richter scale. Someone asked, "What if the earthquake is stronger than 8? The representative responded, "If the earthquake is bigger than 8, San Francisco will have bigger problems to worry about than the bridge" LOL
I will BREAK the NEWS for you... but first! Thank you all for the amazing feedback I've got for my recent hospital simulation! With deep feelings of excitement, I would like to announce that some of my 3D earthquake simulations will be featured in a documentary called: "Forecasting the Big One", which will be streamed on Curiosity and hopefully beyond. I have never received better news in my life and I think this is proof that hard work will always pay off. Honestly, YOU were the heart and soul of keeping myself highly spirited and motivated to produce the best earthquake simulations on TH-cam and perhaps in the world! You...Are...AMAZING because You...Created...THIS channel.😊
Soy de la ciudad de Mexico y fue muy sorprendente ver las simulaciones tanto de la torre latinoamericana asi como del puente golden gate y del los Angeles city hall.
The number 8 is probably the closest thing to what happened in Turkey last month and it’s somewhat scary how those buildings collapse with seemingly no or little warning before getting completely destroyed
Thank you!! Join everyone in promoting earthquake preparedness and safety 🙂I hope this channel will become a great resource for people around the world who live or don't live in earthquake prone areas.
There are skyscrapers with WAAAAAY more floors that Torre Latinoamerica. For example, Wisma 46, Wilshire Grand Center (62 floors), the Empire State Building (102 floors), Taipei 101 (101 floors,) and possibly the world's tallest building, the Burj Khalifa. (163 floors)
@@imsagamer4671 Couldn't find any info about 42 storey building that collapsed in the earthquake and İ think there is no 42 storey building in the earthquake region,while it's a part of underdeveloped region in Turkiye.
Someone correct me if I’m wrong but.. I thought that industrial buildings/skyscrapers had like rollers or some type of wheel system underneath them to rock the building back and forth to keep it from collapsing during an earthquake or severely high winds
Depends on the county, city, and age of the building. Some newer buildings and historic buildings do have a system, but the majority of buildings do not.
Amazing content! I am not sure if I missed this or not, but for context, what scale earthquake are these simulations in? Or are they varied? If so, could you please put the richter scale in the corner of each simulation that would be amazing!
How about the actually recordings of a real life earthquakes as input for these disasters. You could also drop them on your fotage as of date, magnitude and the recording station.
"Hey O'Neil, mind coming this afternoon to finish the job? You see, I thought when were piling the bricks you might have found time to cement them together as well."
3:42 those buildings look and fell a lot like the ones in Turkey/Syria, are said ones similarly designed? (I’d like to see them) Also what about a classic three floor brick unit with balconies similar to said above ones?
Yes actually. The one on the right especially. Most buildings in Turkey have a sort of overhang that's supported by beams most of the time made of wood or concrete. The large space at that part, mostly for small stores, garages or other means, is the first to fall in the earthquake and this loss of support causes the rest of the first floor to experience the full weight and force of the building and then collapse, after which the entire building falls down. I don't know much about buildings in Syria especially with the situation there but in Turkey this is the issue. That and, of course, the irresponsibility towards actually implementing the building codes adopted by the government, all for saving money rather than saving lives.
There is the possibility that the person who created the simulation didn't take all of the actual physics into account. We can't simply watch this and trust it 100% as what would happen in reality.
Yep! This is just a simulation though 😁 and I think I have used a Mercalli earthquake intensity of XI, if the epicenter of the quake would be right underneath the city
I have a question.... what magnitude do you use. Do you use like 7-9 magnitude? Because i think all of the towers in this video can stay up if it was like a 1-5 magnitude earthquake
Eiffel Tower, a Gothc cathedral, sport stadium, Petronas Tower, Brooklyn Bridge, Parthenon, Washington Monument, cruise ship in port, Sydney Opera House, giant redwood
Airport, school, harbor(add some water physics), Japanese skyscraper, stadium, scene, ski resort, hospital, power plant( nuclear, solar, wind, hydropower, coal), military base, mine, construction
The thing i love about your vids is the no language barrier! Im from the uk and if you were Serbian (for example) i would still understand since its basically a simulation!
Magnitude is the magnitude of an earthquake, and how much damage it causes depends on its distance. Also, it depends on the frequency of the shaking, and buildings have their own resonance frequency, so I don't know if this video will really lead to disaster prevention.
I would like to know what magnitude earthquake your simulating. Los Angeles City Hall is now Base Isolated, and it would take a sizable earthquake to knock that one down.
That's interesting about the magnitude depicting what will be considered "the big one." The Loma Prieta quake in 1989 was "only" a 6.9 but brought down stacked freeways and caused a lot of devastating damage. The Northridge quake caused similar damage, loss of life and injuries and was "only" a 6.7. The intensity of both quakes was IX (violent). Both caused billions in damages. The point is that it seems like there would be more things to consider other than magnitude, alone, to define the "big one" like duration of the quake, the number of people affected by it, the epicenter, etc. IMO the Loma Prieta and Northridge quakes were definitely "big ones." 😊
Someone should have a serious talk with the contractors of these buildings that seem to have the integrity of foam boards, wood popsicle sticks and glue sticks.
As a Turk, I would like to say that there are many buildings that do not comply with earthquake regulations. They run away from materials for a little money and the houses are easily demolished. Actually, in the state that does not make crime inspections, an earthquake is expected in Marmara, but we are not ready at all, I don't know what to do with 60% of the buildings in Istanbul are illegally built
This is great I love watching this it's very relaxing and comfortable I'll give you an A on the video matter fact I skip that'll give you an A-Plus on the video on the sound quality it really sucks and I have sorry but I'm speaking from from my heart and it is just hurts my ears
I would like to know the Richter scale which magnitue was used in your simulations. And how about starting with a low magnitude and then increasing it. You welcome
Each video was also published separately on my channel and you can find there the magnitudes and all the details :) Best wishes and thanks for joining!!!
Watch my 3D LIVING ROOM being tested for 12 earthquakes: th-cam.com/video/2mwp-qKkJPA/w-d-xo.html
No replys? Let me change that
This has just made me realise how amazing of a game this would make.
Two modes: Campaign and Sandbox.
The game sort-pf functions like Teardown, where it's voxel based but instead of destroying stuff, you're a building contractor that has to build a building capable of withstanding a set magnitude earthquake and as you progress through the campaign you unlock better materials, tools and equipment to make your buildings safer.
Then in sandbox mode you can spawn in one of a number of preset maps and you can build unlimited stuff and start earthquakes of any desired magnitude to help test build ideas.
I'd pay a solid £30 for a game like that ngl.
Totally agree with you!!! There's was a somewhat similar game called Bridge it but it was only 20% close to what you described 😁 would love to find a developer and present this idea!!
It would be nice to have missions like building apartments with multiple bedrooms or a restaurant, etc.
@@EarthquakeSim Well a good business case is that it would be a very one-of-a-kind game, so a good market potential.
I hope some day somebody makes a game like that as it would absolutely fill my soul because I love building games and destruction games. Perfect mix plus it could also add a layer of education as to how earthquakes work and effect the environment, lots of potential
@@Squareheed today you determined me to actually look for some game developers and share this knowledge!!
@@EarthquakeSim Best of luck to you mate! :)
At 4:50 , that hotel is actually in my city , it used to be called the intercontinental hotel (now being called grand hotel Bucharest) and it is so strange seeing it collapse as it is one of the city's sky line icons.
Also this hotel actually withstood a huge earthquake in 1977 , with a magnitude of 7.4 degrees on the Richter scale.
Stiam eu ca mi pare cunoscut
This is the huge gap between reality and these kids phantasies graphics without any knowleges of constructions of buildings. Well to see on the hotel in your city: I remember well pix of Bucharest heavy demaged by that massive earthquake, but the tower of this hotel was standing almost untouched in the middle of ruins of lower buildings around, which confimed its well calculated, designed, and constructed structure, resisting without any demage also such strong earthquake there.
@@shirmanchainy1298 mostly because of its shape, that’s why is so resistant
Well thats the key thing here ...im fairly sure the real thing isnt made of square slabs ....this is only really a physics simulation and not an actual earthquake sim
I'm pretty sure there's a shorter sort of version of it in Portland's Lloyd District (kinda NE of the Moda Center).
These kind of videos really give a satisfying vibe of destruction, I love your content!
Thank you so much ☺️ happy to have you here!!
@Kül Tigin I said that in simulations like these, it is satisfying. But of course, in real life, it is terrifying. I am glad you are currently safe.
@kultigin3463 I'm sorry that happened to you!
@@cryingforbread hello, I’m bread😂 idk how I found you
the burj khalifa
Such a big skyscraper!! I’ll try my friend ☺️ thank you for subscribing!!!
I just imagine it falling and crushing a whole city
@@EarthquakeSim twins tower
I will watch this dude 😎😎😎
Does holyshit
?!
Visited the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. There was a representative from the National Parks Service saying that the bridge could withstand an earthquake of about 8 on the Richter scale. Someone asked, "What if the earthquake is stronger than 8? The representative responded, "If the earthquake is bigger than 8, San Francisco will have bigger problems to worry about than the bridge" LOL
I have visited the bridge 2 years ago and I got the same answer for this question haha!
I will BREAK the NEWS for you... but first! Thank you all for the amazing feedback I've got for my recent hospital simulation! With deep feelings of excitement, I would like to announce that some of my 3D earthquake simulations will be featured in a documentary called: "Forecasting the Big One", which will be streamed on Curiosity and hopefully beyond. I have never received better news in my life and I think this is proof that hard work will always pay off. Honestly, YOU were the heart and soul of keeping myself highly spirited and motivated to produce the best earthquake simulations on TH-cam and perhaps in the world! You...Are...AMAZING because You...Created...THIS channel.😊
Soy de la ciudad de Mexico y fue muy sorprendente ver las simulaciones tanto de la torre latinoamericana asi como del puente golden gate y del los Angeles city hall.
Thank you so much for playing for playing the Libera Me from Fauré Requiem. Beautiful!
Your piano playing skills are truly impressive!
Thank you so much!! :) I hope you will subscribe on my other channel as well! :)
honestly as it started to zoom out it gave me a different perspective to show how buildings collapsed without the smoke and debris
After watching a few it amazes me that the first thing to typically collapse is the escape route! 😮
You are stuck. You could easily be killed by a bookcase or refrigerttor falling upon you, or being thrown out the window
the latino Tower in mexico city has withstood the earthquakes of 1957, 1985, 2017 and 2022
I subscribed because I love this so much!
thank you so much for being part of this community! let me know what you'd like to see next
Finally TH-cam recommended some interesting stuff 👍
I'm so happy you found my channel!!!
0.36 This is what exactly happened to the Cypress Freeway in San Francisco during the 1989 earthquake
The number 8 is probably the closest thing to what happened in Turkey last month and it’s somewhat scary how those buildings collapse with seemingly no or little warning before getting completely destroyed
I have just found this channel and im not dissapointed
Thank you!! Join everyone in promoting earthquake preparedness and safety 🙂I hope this channel will become a great resource for people around the world who live or don't live in earthquake prone areas.
Latina Tower at Ciudad de México has survived 3 mayor earthquakes!
Its satisfying when i look how buildings fall😍
There are skyscrapers with WAAAAAY more floors that Torre Latinoamerica. For example, Wisma 46, Wilshire Grand Center (62 floors), the Empire State Building (102 floors), Taipei 101 (101 floors,) and possibly the world's tallest building, the Burj Khalifa. (163 floors)
yep Samuel! I've done a simulation of a 108 skyscraper in Chicago :)
Question: How much magnitudes are put on the simulations?
Imagine if an earthquake collapsing 45 story building happened in real life, it would destroy a lot of lives.
@@imsagamer4671 Couldn't find any info about 42 storey building that collapsed in the earthquake and İ think there is no 42 storey building in the earthquake region,while it's a part of underdeveloped region in Turkiye.
@@imsagamer4671 42m?
*insert 9/11 here*
(Yes I know it didn't happen because of an earthquake but still)
@@MartyMcRy that reminds of something…
@@MartyMcRy the towers were 110 floors
Piano music from youself? It sounds good
Someone correct me if I’m wrong but.. I thought that industrial buildings/skyscrapers had like rollers or some type of wheel system underneath them to rock the building back and forth to keep it from collapsing during an earthquake or severely high winds
Depends on the county, city, and age of the building. Some newer buildings and historic buildings do have a system, but the majority of buildings do not.
@@dannyraiden9722 that’s honestly terrifying. Thank you for the clarity!
Amazing content! I am not sure if I missed this or not, but for context, what scale earthquake are these simulations in? Or are they varied? If so, could you please put the richter scale in the corner of each simulation that would be amazing!
I have each simulation posted separated on my channel and I also mention the earthquake intensity :) thank you so much for watching!!
How about the actually recordings of a real life earthquakes as input for these disasters. You could also drop them on your fotage as of date, magnitude and the recording station.
"Hey O'Neil, mind coming this afternoon to finish the job? You see, I thought when were piling the bricks you might have found time to cement them together as well."
3:42 those buildings look and fell a lot like the ones in Turkey/Syria, are said ones similarly designed? (I’d like to see them)
Also what about a classic three floor brick unit with balconies similar to said above ones?
Yes actually. The one on the right especially. Most buildings in Turkey have a sort of overhang that's supported by beams most of the time made of wood or concrete. The large space at that part, mostly for small stores, garages or other means, is the first to fall in the earthquake and this loss of support causes the rest of the first floor to experience the full weight and force of the building and then collapse, after which the entire building falls down. I don't know much about buildings in Syria especially with the situation there but in Turkey this is the issue. That and, of course, the irresponsibility towards actually implementing the building codes adopted by the government, all for saving money rather than saving lives.
This is awesome!!!!!
I honestly thought the 3 story house would hold up a little bit better, looking pretty modern and being built under California building codes.
That's exactly what I was going to say, I even laughed because the chimney didn't fall
There is the possibility that the person who created the simulation didn't take all of the actual physics into account. We can't simply watch this and trust it 100% as what would happen in reality.
@@User-jr7vf I mean yeah, but I expect a lot of the pyshics are real, considering they're using a physics engine.
Una interesante animación
No me esperaba que saliera la torre latinoamericana
3:56 This building (buildings that look the same) is located in Belgrade, Serbia (Cerak Neighbourhood). I go there every week and it's iconic.
this cured my anxiety, thank you.
I am so happy to hear that!
5:59 the latinoamerican tower was actually designed to resist earthquakes, It has a nod designed to survive a 8.5 earthquake on the Richter scale
Yep! This is just a simulation though 😁 and I think I have used a Mercalli earthquake intensity of XI, if the epicenter of the quake would be right underneath the city
I have a question.... what magnitude do you use. Do you use like 7-9 magnitude?
Because i think all of the towers in this video can stay up if it was like a 1-5 magnitude earthquake
0:12 - LOL @ the car falling apart in the driveway
The first video i watched!
it's actually teach us every safe places in these situations
so sad. rip to all the victims. 🙏
Eiffel Tower, a Gothc cathedral, sport stadium, Petronas Tower, Brooklyn Bridge, Parthenon, Washington Monument, cruise ship in port, Sydney Opera House, giant redwood
Airport, school, harbor(add some water physics), Japanese skyscraper, stadium, scene, ski resort, hospital, power plant( nuclear, solar, wind, hydropower, coal), military base, mine, construction
love this
Thanks for being here!!!
The double decker highway one actually happened in California back in the 80s-90s
The thing i love about your vids is the no language barrier! Im from the uk and if you were Serbian (for example) i would still understand since its basically a simulation!
You are absolutely right!!! I think that's why this channel is growing so fast❤️
I live in Chicago😇
@@EarthquakeSim I live in the UK! 😁
@@C.H.K.N_tenders i in poland
I love these intense silent movies from 1920
The building is really flexible, it's really surprising
0:48 we have a double decker highway here in the Philippines and I think it may collapse that during the earthquake
0:39 This reminds me when the highway collapsed in San Francisco during the 89 Earthquake
Wow kinda scary how the staircases seem to be the first to go
This video cured my prostate cancer
五重塔でのシミュレーションは一度見てみたい。
I think it would be cool to see a comparison of a building first without any earthquake proofing and then after with it.
0:50 isnt this what happened at the san francisco earthquake
Go to the emergency exit stairs they say.
Meanwhile stairs: first to collapse
can you do a cliff house earthquake simulation?
Magnitude is the magnitude of an earthquake, and how much damage it causes depends on its distance.
Also, it depends on the frequency of the shaking, and buildings have their own resonance frequency,
so I don't know if this video will really lead to disaster prevention.
I want the Willis Tower from Chicago next :D
I have done it already❤️
Search for my video with the title "108 floors skyscraper vs San Andreas"
What magnitude earthquake is this
I got recommended this after the another earthquake in Syria and Turquía
Yep! It is sad to see so many aftershocks affecting those regions...
what app do you use
How do you make this video and look so realistic
I'm using Blender 3D
What an amazing channel! What software do you use to simulate this?
I am using Blender 3D :)
@@EarthquakeSim ah, that’s cool, I should try something like this when I have time. With school I haven’t had any time to mess around with blender :(
0:38, this seems oddly familiar.
Embarcadero Freeway
Amazing style it reminds me a td game that i played and thats how they simulate it cool
What category earthquakes are these
you'll find the categories in all my separate videos on the channel :)
@@EarthquakeSim OK
I would like to know what magnitude earthquake your simulating. Los Angeles City Hall is now Base Isolated, and it would take a sizable earthquake to knock that one down.
that is true! in this video the building is not isolated
Maybe indicate the magnitude?
That's interesting about the magnitude depicting what will be considered "the big one." The Loma Prieta quake in 1989 was "only" a 6.9 but brought down stacked freeways and caused a lot of devastating damage. The Northridge quake caused similar damage, loss of life and injuries and was "only" a 6.7. The intensity of both quakes was IX (violent). Both caused billions in damages.
The point is that it seems like there would be more things to consider other than magnitude, alone, to define the "big one" like duration of the quake, the number of people affected by it, the epicenter, etc. IMO the Loma Prieta and Northridge quakes were definitely "big ones." 😊
Someone should have a serious talk with the contractors of these buildings that seem to have the integrity of foam boards, wood popsicle sticks and glue sticks.
As a Turk, I would like to say that there are many buildings that do not comply with earthquake regulations. They run away from materials for a little money and the houses are easily demolished. Actually, in the state that does not make crime inspections, an earthquake is expected in Marmara, but we are not ready at all, I don't know what to do with 60% of the buildings in Istanbul are illegally built
Sad for turkey and syria :(
I like this👍👍
Thank you so much for watching!!😁😁 where are you from?
@@EarthquakeSim I'm from thailand^^
What r u using to simulate those stuff
What's the name of the game if you may know I want to play an earthquake simulator like this😅
What software do you simulate this earthquakes?
I’m using Blender 3D
you should to the twins and NYC
Do statue of Liberty
Thanks for letting me know!!!
This would be a fun game
I love that I can use my creativity in infinite ways :) Games are typically limiting creativity...but not Blender :)
Please do a Burj khalifa 🥺🥺
What strength earthquake does this simulate?
oh,I see now why I can't use normal ladder when big earthquake strikes.
Skyscrapers are probably one of the strongest and safest buildings if earthquake will hit.
On a seismograph what type of earthquakes would this be
What is this app/website u use to do this!
I need to know :D
Hey! Thank you so much for reaching out! I am using Blender 3D + fracture modifier + bullet constraints builder BCB. Where are you from?
@@EarthquakeSim Are you American or British?
@@Archduke.William.21 American originally born in Romania
Now imagine the lego breaking sound effect over all of this
That is so true!!!
Is steel structures available? Also I want to use some of the models in my projects.. Is it possible to download them?
what kind of projects are you doing? I can upload some of my Blender models on Google Drive for you
@@EarthquakeSim could you send me your email address and I will be sharing details.
@@bellacastron my email address is found at the end of the video description 🙃
It would help if we knew what the earthquake magnitude was presented here.
0:07 : The car for no reason : I’m dead 😅
do both of the world trade center tower one and tower 2
The 2nd one I was surprised that it wasn't the soft ground floor that went first. Watching footage from Turkey that seems to be the weak point
Cool vieo kep going
This is cool i hope is a game!!:)
AT&T building in Nashville, Tennessee
This is great I love watching this it's very relaxing and comfortable I'll give you an A on the video matter fact I skip that'll give you an A-Plus on the video on the sound quality it really sucks and I have sorry but I'm speaking from from my heart and it is just hurts my ears
Please make one for Taj Mahal
I would like to know the Richter scale which magnitue was used in your simulations.
And how about starting with a low magnitude and then increasing it.
You welcome
Each video was also published separately on my channel and you can find there the magnitudes and all the details :) Best wishes and thanks for joining!!!
May I know the magnitude of the Earthquake? Are they all of the same magnitude?
What magnitude quake is this?
Soft storey next please
What kind a building is that