Turns out I missed adding in a lot of things in post, probably because it was my 17th hour of editing and my brain was fried, sorry about that, here's the info I missed: -Big Spiders cannot be revived if killed by Spore Puffs or Flashbangs, if drowned, if their health is below -8, or if fully eaten by slugcat. -Leviathan Aggression sheet has them eat everything except other leviathans and overseers -Gooieducks are named after the Geoduck clam, which is pronounced the same way, and they look like they have a massive uncut cock coming out of their shell. -Spore Puffs kill Batflies, Centipedes, Spiders, Dropwigs, Eggbugs, Noodleflies, Squidcadas, and Stowaways If I missed anything else in the editing then tell me in this thread and I'll add onto the pinned comment
I would like to mention that miros vultures will antagonize the creatures they derived from(Vultures and Miros birds). According to the wiki, regular vultures are afraid of them, but king vultures will outright kill them. Miros birds seem to just antagonize miros vultures back.
Even though they're only naturally found in the Saint's time, strawberry lizards can technically be encountered in other campaigns through the lineage system. This doesn't necessarily contradict your theories on their evolution.... it just raises a lot of questions about how lineaging works.
Correction: slugcats are New York City subway rats. This is shown by their intelligence, navigation of pipes, and ability to propel rebar with sufficient speed to penetrate concrete. This is the beginning of my theory that rain world takes place in New York City, with the dual implication that five pebbles liked pizza and that NSH may be from New Jersey (explaining his erratic behavior).
@@JODA93 He doesn’t kill you if you take a pearl. He instead has dialogue when you take one of his pearls. He says something along the lines of “Yes, help yourself. They are not edible.”
@@tiggywoovit5955 I don't think it is that far of a stretch to assume that if the Chieftain went to Pebbles after getting the citizen drone, he would most certainly be forced to give the chieftain guidance and the mark, and also couldn't hurt him. So, because of his permanent programming, Pebbles would involuntarily need to give it to the chieftain.
Moon also mentioned the scavs bring her things from time to time so while it’s likely pebbles gave them the mark of communication it’s very possible Moon has met the chieftain.
@@TheSandwhichman108 I do not think Moon is accessible at all during Artificer’s campaign but it could still be possible in some way or form… we’ll just never know how sadly.
@@kairosiscool5062 You’re right…The chieftain would have been long dead by the time Hunter arrives to (sort of) revive moon. Having been killed by Arti’s hands. She was probably still alive most likely left to somewhere very out of the way to most likely wallow in her sorrows knowing nothing she does will ever erase the pain of watching both her children die.
My headcannon for spore puffs is that they were purposed as a form of insectiside to remove pests from crops, hence them being solely located around the farms. then they had the issue of how to spread the spores over a large area consistently, hence they purposed the rain deers precursors, which had pointy feet to aerate the soil but not disturb crops, they ate the spore puffs and the spores would get caught in their wool and spread through their feces, making a very efficient automatic pest control.
@@Gront517 generally the only creatures we know to have genders in rain world is the squidcada that has 2 genders, the rest of the creatures are genderless and presumably reproduce asexually
Hey! Aspiring entomologist here, A good theory for eggbugs is that they're parthenogenic, females can reproduce or "clone" themselves without a male necessary, like surinam roaches. Another possibility is after mating, female eggbugs will lay eggs on both their backs and the males back for added security and a larger survivability rate, the brood being split up between 2 moving targets is better than 1 moving target. Considering the behavioral and anatomical differences between them and dropwigs, I disagree that they're related. The aquapedes actually closely resemble real life scolopendromorpha, mostly Scolopendra cataracta and Scolopendra alcyona, which are semi-aquatic tropical giant centipedes. Dissecting your spider theory, here's my take on it. The wolf spider and mother spider are the same species, the coalescipede being their offspring, wolf spider being the male, and mother spider being the female, the sexual dimorphism would explain the pigmentation differences. Now the spitter spider ties into your theory about them living communally, as someone who studies spiders around Canada, I've personally seen Latrodectus hesperus and Psilochorus hesperus cohabitating extremely often, most of the time even residing in the same web, their offspring hatch at similar times too, often branching out to the same areas and continuing to cohabitate. As for why we don't see juvenile spitter spiders? They mimic the behaviour of the wolf spider juveniles and join their hellish hunting tactics. Stowaways are Arthropods yeah, spore puffs attack them and their immune system, as they do with centipedes, egg bugs, etc.
To your spider take, I think you're correct, but want to add that spitter spiders could possibly reproduce differently than wolf or mother spiders as well. The venom sack things that spitter spiders shoot out are in fact not just filled with venom, but also possibly living creatures as the sacs will actively crawl away if not attached to a creature or a wall. My theory personally is that the sacs are some kind of maggot that attaches and applies the venom while the spitter spider brings the still living creature into their den for the maggots to grow up while consuming said corpse. The den being a safe and optimal environment for the growth of the maggot. Also this would explain why spitter spiders don't bite prey, since it would be bad to kill the paralysed creature when it being alive is the whole point. All in all this theory is kind of strange and it doesn't really make sense for spiders to have maggot offspring, but it's just a random pile of thoughts I gathered. I think it's pretty interesting.
@@generalvoid1630 Oooh, interesting theory! My biggest concern and probably the biggest flaw is that offspring are extremely costly to make, in nutrition and time, why would a species evolve to "shoot" them at enemies if them surviving until adulthood is entirely dependent on the spider itself incapacitating the prey after it's paralyzed? The spitter spider does have fangs, as it grabs onto prey with the same sound that wolf spiders make when biting into the player, it just doesn't have the same lunge attack.
@@_z_873 First part, yea probably true. It doesn't really make sense. The whole theory is kind of a mess if you think about it. But on the spitter spiders having fangs, yes they do have fangs, but the fangs of spitter spiders are not as lethal as wolf spiders fangs. I didn't mean that they completely lacked fangs, but that they maybe purposefully don't attempt to kill their prey with said fangs. Unless I'm remembering wrong, wolf spiders instakill you far more often with a bite than spitter spiders, which never do so. My memory might be wrong though so take that with a grain of salt.
To add to general’s theory about spitters, in the code the sacs are called “larva” and the trail left behind is an “umbilical”. So it is indeed very likely that the sacs are a reproductive method of some kind
The red spitter spider's maggots actually crawl around and wiggle if they don't get embedded into a wall, they seem to be independant organisms rather than just venom sacs.
@@justaskeleton9087 I would agree if they just wiggled, but the sacs seem to actively crawl like maggots from what I remember from spawning them in a couple times. I could be wrong, but I think they were made to act like some kind of maggots. It could imply that spitter spiders reproduce through those parasites and bring the paralysed creature to their nests without biting, because the plan is to have the spider maggot things grow up in the still living paralysed creature in a safe and secure environment. Many insects do similar things, but this is a quite strange way to go at it.
the comment above yours (at least for me, right now) says that in the code, the projectiles are labeled "larva" and the stringy trail "umbilical", so I think you're right 😦
Eggbugs and Dropwigs being the same species is a very sound theory. I first believed that it wasn't the case because the dropwigs will eat eggbugs, yet they also seem to eat other dead dropwigs. They seem to be cannibalistic and so eggbugs being a metamophosized version or a case of sexual dimorphism is not disproven by the fact that they eat eachother. They also have very similar characteristics and they both have long antenna and 4 legs, so even if they are not the same species they would be more closely related.
I like it too, but I can’t help but wonder if the eggs on an egg bug aren’t actually eggs at all. Slug cats are called slug cats even though they are neither slugs nor cats so it might be possible that the eggbug’s name is misleading. Idk what the eggs might actually be though.
@@papapiggie6697 Theory, they are false eggs, they have the properties of a normal egg, but won't hatch. They are both on their back and dropped when killed/hit to make more presentable to predators and give the bug and actual eggs a chance to escape.2 reasons to support my theory: 1. It would be a good explanation for the blue colouring of the egg, it's to make it stand out and to make it look like other food, specifically the blue fruits. 2. Why else would it have the eggs protruding from from their back, it's easier to drop. you could say that it's dropping is a way for it's offspring to escape and survive, but than why don't they hatch like real cockroaches and are so easy to see
haven't finished the vid yet, But On Noodleflies (and Popcorn Plants): There is evidence that Noodleflies have adapted to use their sharp proboscis both as a weapon and to open Popcorn Plants in what is likely a symbiotic relationship since there's expired/opened popcorn plants in the backgrounds of areas where Noodleflies are most common. My guess is that the Popcorn Plant's seeds are actually fruit (white = flesh, red = seed) containing seeds and when Noodleflies eat them, the seeds are not digested, but when Slugcats eat them the seeds are destroyed because they crunch the seed up. Or maybe Slugcats simply swallow them whole too cause' the animation is really short. Could be that Popcorn Plants are only visible above ground while reproducing and the bodies of the plants are subterranean. Noodleflies could be really goopey arthropods bc they appear to have 8 limbs. (3 pairs of reduced legs, 1 pair of wings) During Saint's time the Noodleflies seem to have gone extinct so the Popcorn Plants have adapted to rely on wind/storms/extreme changes in pressure or temperature instead. Edit + more info: Correction: Noodleflies have 2 pairs of wings and 3 pairs of legs Evidence towards Noodleflies NOT being arthopods is that they don't have segemented bodies, but if I remember correctly Moon claims that all remaining life descends from bioengineered organisms so... The wiki also claims that the Noodlefly's needle can't break open popcorn plants so this could just be an oversight/game design purposes OR Noodleflies actually drink the nectar from the flowers of the popcorn plant and by the time slugcats seem them it's post-pollination.
@@maniandbeanohunter is described as “karmically imbalanced” by the game, which is why he can die permanently; so it still doesn’t explain how species can go extinct.
Imagine if all the modified creatures were the Ancients' school projects that they just released into the wild. The ones that survive living on in the environments of the games.
I love whenever Das says "Look at this list on screen" despite the fact that there isn't a list on screen (just amazing art made by amazing artists) Even though you goofed up on that, I still loved the video Das! Keep up the good work!
Same, although it's kind of weird how this was supposed to be the flora conclusion on rainword and although it accomplishes that through dialog it doesn't have the the same level of editing as the past version
@@airplanes_aren.t_realtbf he did have to write 30+ pages of wildlife analysis and it took 3 months. hes probably tired of this video at this point (edited for spelling)
I always figured the Long Legs were corrupted Inspectors, as the Inspectors' function seems to be error checking of some kind and would be the most likely organism for Pebbles to modify in order to modify his own programming.
Probably not, when you kill inspectors their hardlight body explodes leaving behind just their robotic eyes. The rot is most likely a modified amalgam of all the different biological parts of Pebbles, maybe just the processing strata that just happened to gain mobilitym
I think it was more of a starting from scratch situation. What sort of insane supercomputer would perform extremely risky procedures on the only thing that would defend him?
The presence of the grapple worms in Metropolis with the chemotroph theory could be explained by the cut content for Metropolis and a bit of Moon's dialogue: they just eat whatever nutritious bits they find in the abundant dust in the city. The equivalent to the rain/night cycle would've been a dust storm as mentioned in one of those dev commentaries, and Moon does also mention that dust just regularly falls out of the sky, so that could possibly provide enough food to the grapple worms living in the city that get their food from eating whatever tasty minerals/chemicals that make up the dust.
1:18:57 Do you think it’s possible that the Guardians are doing the complete opposite: Encouraging the Saint to ascend all the creatures in the room plus the Guardian itself? I don’t believe we see any passive creatures in Rubicon outside of Guardian rooms, as well as 0 scavs in the entirety, so it’s possible that the Guardians take the creatures that cannot ascend and lock them in the dens until the Saint rocks up to make sure they get to ascend 1:21:34 While you’re probably right about everything else, the golden colour for Echoes is probably just void stuff since Saint has the golden look despite not wearing gold adornments Damn, what a video. This was worth the wait, with really nice art and editing (apart from one or two missed pictures I guess). Hopefully this one hits the jackpot as well!
I think there's nuance to the echoes, because Saint doesn't get a face ornament or whatever on the end screen even if he gets the golden tentacles, so maybe the echoes do fuse with some of their stuff
@@Kipyena It's possible the golden tentacles gain their colouration from the void/void fluid itself, since, y'know. anything close to the void sea is *aggressively* yellow.
@@RivLabs I wasn't going against this, I actually think the same about it since Rivulet's demon core when activated shows it's made of refined golden void fluid (And I'm not even talking about rubicon here)
@@Kipyena Ooh absolutely true! I didn't even think about how the mass rarefaction cells are literally void fluid batteries until you pointed that out (I don't have an excuse im just stupid)
Maybe Grapple Worms are a purposed organism? And the Ancients used their silk (or whatever the hell they shoot out) for stuff like clothing back in the day. No idea how plausible that is, but it might work 🤷♀️ Grapple Worms could've also been a toy for younger Ancients. I like this theory because it's fun imagining Ancients swinging Grapple Worms around like sticky hands lmao.
I’ve always thought of the long thing the worms shoot out as a tongue that travels through its body. Also I personally imagine ancients playing with a grumpy slugcat
this doesn't track at all unfortunately. they are tongues and not silk, from the color to the sound they make that matches other tongue slingin' weirdos in the world
Almost everything is a purposed organism according to moon. The purpose of the grapple worms could have been anything though, remember that a lot of time has passed, and scugs, a pretty advanced creature capable of tool use, descended from sentient pipe cleaners (just imagine shoving some mutant mouse down a drain to eat a clog). If something like that is now engaging in significantly more complicated behavior, who knows what weird thing grapple worms used to do. They could have been tape measurers, or living decoration, some organisms were even just components of a tool hidden within a box. Still though, the grapple is way too fleshy and definitely not silk. The toy theory is much more likely. Maybe they also made good yoyos.
Caramel Lizards intrigue me. In real life, it takes an extremely long time- even on a geological timescale- for animals to evolve new limb pairs. Typically, such things are actually repurposed existing limbs. I know Rain World's grasp on evolutionary biology is tenuous- especially since any number of these could be purposed organisms- but I like to think the Caramel Lizard is actually the most *primitive* form of lizard alive today. This would all be explained if all lizards originally had six legs, but most of them were reduced to vestigial remnants, completely inside the bodies of modern lizards. After all, a four-legged gait is quite efficient, and it's possible the lineage that gave rise to modern lizards lost the need for their third limb pair entirely. That, then, would explain why Caramel Lizards retain their third limb pair- they may have evolved stronger legs that allow them to pounce and leap, a feat only achievable thanks to having six of them.
Caramel lizards being a more primitive version would make sense, they are completely immune to the cold, which is apparently the natural state of the world, an icy landscape. They could very well be the original lizards, before they were turned into purposed organisms and went feral (or a close relative to it). The lack of extra limbs might even be from the ancients meddling. They may have just wandered into iterator controlled habitat from the snowy surroundings. Would also explain why they are found in the outer expanse, they colonized that area first, and then some occasionally trickled into iterator territory over time, and by the time of the saint campaign, they just flooded in, thriving in the now frigid conditions.
@@chitinskin9860 if your correct, this might also indicate that the areas a larger distance from the iterators are more of a tundra habitat. perhaps the world was starting an extended ice age when the iterators were first being built and those conditions remained in place in untouched corners of the world. and if we could somehow reach them we would see the flora and fauna that wouldve existed had the iterators never been built.
Here is a theory regarding the vulture grubs: They were and still very much are an engineered species, and have not been able to really evolve past that. This is either because they were a recently modified species are because their mechanical parts inhibit evolution. I also believe that the vultures may have been part of a security system for the cities, and the grubs could be used to summon them. Due to the nature of this, as the old society fell, The vulture grubs not being able to overcome their engineering, the ones that learned to hide underground are the only ones who really survived, Because they wouldn't signal vulturesby accident, which they themselves don't really have control over. I also have a theory that the grubs never really fully reach adulthood like axolotl for example, and reproduce in the larval stage, because of engineered hormone inhibitors, Because once they would turn into an adult insect they would be practically useless or outright die if their mechanical parts are only compatible with the larvae.
@@ligma6992 you mean vultures as transport units? Does not sound to comfy, but a plausible theory. By who exactly the grubs were used, is hard to tell. Especially because nothing in the game I've found hints to that. If there are some clues, do inform me though.
@@ligma6992 My idea was that the vultures were either security drones, maybe meant for catching engineered creatures that went rogue (maybe if one of the living capacitors decides to run away from the electrical grid (that's my theory on what centipedes were used for by the way)) or research capturing drones, meant for catching animals in the wild and bringing them back for study or modification testing. This means that the vulture grubs would have been used as signalling beacons by the ancients security/police force/animal control or by field researchers. But also never out of the question is that they were used for multiple purposes. I believe for that the ancient ones could perhaps at one point signal them more directly what to do once they summoned them. What indicates this to me is that vultures have one of the strictest behavioural patterns and little diversity in personality out of all animals, which pair excellently with them to be engineered for obedience and commandability.
if you combine karma flower with a grenade you get fire egg, comfirming the connection karma flowers have with the void. also the devs said the similar apperances of void worms and leviathans are not a coincidence. also what does it mean for your cycles to overlap with echoes?
Personally, I *believe* (since echoes are stuck in place through metaphysical means) they also move through *time* in a substantially different way, compared to any other... life form? I'm not sure if echoes count as alive, in the traditional sense, but you get the idea. Anyway, due to their altered movement through time, they only occasionally exist at the same time as any one other being. You could imagine this as though most things experience time as a line, whilst to echoes it is a sort of wave, only crossing through, or *intersecting with*, that line at a few points. Keep in mind this is all just my interpretation, but it's cool stuff to think about!
@@RivLabs i dont think other creatures experience time quite like a line either, dying and respawning appears to be a canon thing, when you are dying in one place over and over slugcat is canonically "stuck in a cycle"
A theory I like is that gourmand's campaign is the equivalent of a fisherman's tale. It would make sense given his ability to spit out more food than he eats. Also, karma flowers are said to be drugs
The thing with Gourmand is that it's highly likely that his campaign is just a dramatic retelling of what actually happened, explaining his exceptional crafting skills, his ability unique to him of killing creatures with his sheer weight alone, his ability to conjure up random objects *and even living beings sometimes,* his spear damage, how easily he gets exhausted, etc etc. It's likely that these hold some truth to them - Gourmand probably can craft, his weight can be used to his advantage, he gets exhausted, etc, but it's likely that most of these are very much exaggerated for the sake of a dramatic story.
Some other things to note: 1) Stowaways are indeed some sort of arthropod (perhaps even a terrestrial barnacle), as they're vulnerable to Spore Puffs. Same with Squidcadas. 2) Miros Birds don't drown underwater while Miros Vultures do. 3) Strawberry Lizards apparently exist outside of Saint's timeline via lineage dens, suggesting that they're from a different area entirely. 4) For some odd reason, Firebugs eat Slugcats if their relationship code is any indication. 5) Eggbugs are afraid of literally EVERYTHING. As in, the only things they're not afraid of are Batflies and Firebugs, the latter of which they will go out of their way to harass and vice versa. 6) Miros Vultures prefer cold regions over dark regions, hence why they seemingly leave Shaded Citadel to live in Bitter Aerie. This also explains why they spread outside of Bitter Aerie during Saint's time. 7) It's not a coincidence that both Garbage Worms and Leviathans resemble Void Worms in some aspects. Take that as you will. 8) Unlike a majority of other Hunter creatures, King Vultures don't come back during the later time periods. This is shared with the two Scavenger variants. 9) Mother Spiders also don't die to Flashbangs. 10) After Survivor's time, the Noodlefly parent in Outskirts disappears, but the babies are still there by Rivulet's time. Your guess for why this happened. 11) Caramel Lizards are also immune to Worm Grass, but Green Lizards are still stronger. This implies that Caramels are perhaps lighter and more endothermic than Greens. 12) FP and LM have their cans designed in a T-shape. Essentially, FP is the horisontal top part while LM is the vertical bottom part.
2) Perhaps the Miros Vulture's gas vents are connected to their respiratory system in some way, meaning that when submerged, they can drown while Miros Birds can't? Though that would raise questions about why the Miros Vultures need air in the first place, and I don't have any ideas on that one :P 11) Is it possible that the wormgrass immunity is due to some characteristic of their scales/skin, and the caramel lizards have either evolved from greens and thus inherited that trait, or convergently developed it? (I don't have anything interesting to add to your other points, but they're all very cool to learn, thank you!)
8) Like the RW wiki pointed out- it's likely that elite scavengers are gone due to not having access to the resources necessary to have such heavily equipped soldiers, since electric spears probably require materials found only in the iterators to be crafted. Also, a interesting detail is that Chimney Canopy is the only region which consistently has elite scavengers, outside of the Metropolis and the Wall during night time. As for king vultures, I have no idea, my best guess is that they got outcompeted by the more efficient vultures, since king vultures would probably require more energy and food due to their large size and use of the arpoons
@@Ceiling0redza or perhaps, due to their more complicated mechanical components, the king vultures either "break down" faster, relative to normal vultures, or require some kind of facility to be created, the likes of which i doubt would continue to operate up into Saint's time.
I have a personal theory, more a headcanon, that wormgrass are perhaps unwanted weed (mainly because they are carnivorous) that grew unchecked after the ancients went to buy milk. Also, the green coloration of kelp in shoreline is possible to be them doing photosyntesis, since said region has light and that all other regions they live in are pitch black, since they would be way easier to spot in the open so they rely on photosyntesis as a way to complement their diet
I always imagined worm grass WERE the crops. They were likely harvested for a filling food, but when the ancients left, they started to prey on the nearby purposed organisms that were meant to maintain them (e.g rain deer were like uhhhhhhh,,,,,,, giant fertilizer-dropping machines) Also “ancients went to buy the milk” summarizes literally everything that happens in rain world.
@@Whydoiexisthere- To be honest, when I got into rain world I had the same idea of the grass being the crops. Also lol true, the milk was so good that their entire civilization just vanished
(talking about red lizards) "they likely claim large swaths of territory, and fight other individuals for merely entering, except the two of them in outskirts i guess they're just married or something" *meanwhile red lizard fighting noises play in the background as said married couple tears each other to shreds*
My theory for the firebugs is that their a now extinct species of purposed organism made by the ancients to carry void fluid, now only appearing in rubicon since it’s fragment like nature even if their all dead now
They must still be alive, since, if I recall, Gourm can 'craft' their fire eggs and Gourm crafting is probably really just exchanging two items in his stomach to spit out something he stored.
1:09:14 Its also pretty important to note that it was confirmed by a developer that there is a connection between void worms and leviathans. There is likely a overarching purpose for them rather than to kill everything nearby them
Absolutely amazing video! Only one thing I can think of that I disagree with, and thats the conclusion about Worm Grass' mouths. The blue circle feels more akin to the digestive surfaces of, for example, a flytrap, secreting enzymes and eating a creature without swallowing it. Only instead of holding it in place via two mouth-like lobes, Worm Grass hold it in place with some kind of adhesive, each individual "blade" of grass adhering to its prey at once to digest it slowly and painfully. This could also explain two oddities about them. When a creature has even 1 worm grass attached to them, even if they are completely out of the patch and above ground, they may still die if it does not let go. They are literally being digested alive. Additionally, perhaps Green and Caramel Lizards repel worm grass either through the "extreme smell" mentioned in the video, or- what seems more likely in my opinion- perhaps they evolved skin designed to be difficult if not outright impossible for the Worm Grass's adhesive to grab ahold of.
It puts a big smile on my face that my leviathan art made it in with such a large chunk to boot, really proud of that piece and super glad to be a part of such a fantastic video!
Same. Some fanarts are interesting, but not necessarily canonical imaginations of the actual sprites of the creatures, so it would have been nice to see the original sprites for each as well. But as you said, it's a great video nonetheless.
I think grapple worms have sticky tongues and shoot them out to catch debris, bugs, etc, and then wipe their body across their tongue as they move to the side, eating as they go, and once they retract one of the tips it'll also bring whatever debris or animals it landed on to the mouth as well. Basically I think they have a weird method of filter feeding.
One thing that confused me about the pain cones is that’s it’s defence mechanism is on its own worthless, but thinking about it, many pain cones tend to grow in places where worm grass grows, so if you get caught by the defence mechanism in a patch of worm grass, you are dead, almost certainly so the worm grass could be the reason that such a defence mechanism was adapted.
Could neuron flies be what had to adapt and evolve into a jellyfish? Idk if this makes sense but I like your theory about them having evolved from a sort of device or power source.
I commented this on the original video, but I'll put it here it again. I think the grapple worms feed on electricity, and use the tounges to ground a source together and feed on the energy going through them. This explains why they're almost on 5p. This can also explain why they sort of randomly search, like they're going for a good position. And it gives them an original purpose, like an emergency wire for dangerous discharges, which are a common thing.
1:43:56, plants do use spores, bryophytes, (mosses) and ferns and such are not seed bearing plants as they evolved before that adaptation, they instead use spores. (Bear in mind I’ve only just started plant science in university so I’m hoping that I just remembered that right)
The cicada theory for the squidcadas sounds good. I’d also like to note they move forward, tentacles first. Irl squids jet around backwards using vents near their “heads”. Hazers act this way, and they’re squidlike. So, why don’t squidcadas move this way? They’re not squids. They crawl like insects. Edit: Also, about the overseers, perhaps they use magnetism to move quickly. Roller coasters use magnets to accelerate to high speeds in a small amount of time. I know it’s a bit of a stretch, but since Rain World is so heavily industrialized and metallic, I don’t want to dismiss it.
My theory to explain this is that since everything likely evolved from a purposed organism (including squidcadas you can see from the weird metal plate in their head) the ancients basically put some DNA from one animal into the other (wings onto a cuttlefish) for some reason at a guess squidcada used to be delivery drones (problem with this is why wouldn't they just use drones though idk)
I’m guessing they came from some form of deep sea squid (something like a vampire squid) their main form of propulsion is two specialized fins on the sides of their heads and only use their jet as a last resort. If squidcadas came from a similar creature it’s not too crazy that they lost the ability to use their siphons as a propulsion method simply due to the fact that air is not dense enough to be used in the same manner. As for the hard external plate on their head, perhaps their ancestors had a hood similar to a nautilus. It could also be a portion of their internal shell that has become external for whatever reason, (squids have a flexible internal shell called a gladius while cuttlefish have a Cuttlebone that is far more rigid) it’s also possible that it has become far larger in order to support their bodies outside of water, this would also explain why they are so cumbersome when they aren’t flying as moving an “armored” body around with such short tentacles would not be very easy outside of water. But that’s just my take from what I know about earth squids. Edit: autocorrect thought I wanted to say ridged when I meant rigid lol
its fundamentally flawed to base anything off the name. wormgrass is called worm grass and is certainly not a form of grass. it is simply a name for our purposes, not an indication of anything in universe.
7:09 possible explanation for why vulture grubs summon vultures even if they eat them: they could be parasites who mature/reproduce within the vulture's digestive system ? which is why they actively seek out getting eaten, but only by that specific animal similarly to jewel wasp larvae
I have a theory on noodleflies, the "babies" might actually be all males, not only feeding on but also mating with the larger females, and like some animals, become female after a while and then grow into their larger female forms
This is also a theory I’ve had for a while. Doesn’t explain how if you shelter with a noodle egg you get babies imprinted on you that follow you around, but I like that theory better than there’s just no males we can see
About miros vulture laser. Long time ago I have seen strange weapon in another game - sword of the stars. There were a weapon that emits harmless ray that causes explosion at the end. I asked a physics student about such possibility. And he taught me that something like this is actually possible at least in theory. Some sort of chemical reaction at the end of the ray.
While this is way higher quality something i really do miss from the previous video is in-game clips showing the behavior as you are describing it, felt it added a lot.
One thing that I always found interesting is that after downpour gave lizards personalized hisses, yellow and cyan lizards ended up sharing the same ones. And this might be kind of a wild guess, but I'd like to imagine that due to those hisses' electronic nature (which also help contextualize both their abilities and traits) both are different breeds of partially cybernetic guardian lizards, cyan for Pebbles' superstructure and yellow for Moon's. (WHICH coincidentally matches those iterators' ID colours related to their chatlogs, inspectors and overseers) This would more or less explain their proximity to the respective superstructures, as by the time Moon starts malfunctioning, or around the time Spearmaster's campaign takes place, yellow lizards, while still very much present around her struts, would start migrating away from her now more dangerous and unstable environments to other places, such as Pebbles' superstructure where their social nature could overpower cyan lizards' abilities, forcing the latter to hide away. There might be a few "buts" with this train of thought but I think it's an interesting way of explaining their weird electronic hisses. Other cool things to note! - Dev commentary mentions Miros Vultures prefer cold climates, that's why when moon collapses and the top of her superstructure stops generating heat, turning into bitter aerie, Miros Vultures that haunted Pebbles' and her underhangs migrate there. That's why they also appear in Glacial Wasteland/Saint's Garbage Wastes. - Centiwings' aggression level are not random! They start out ambivalent but the more time you spend around them (while they're focusing on you and not another creature in proximity) they begin to grow impatient of you, seeing you more as a nuisance or a threat. Only when provoked that way, or through direct aggression, they become hostile. - The lime past garbage wastes pearl mentions a mix of tiny purposed organisms and microbes inside the acid digestion tanks, which accidentally create violatile substances. Moon suggests those could (however unlikely) integrate into the surrounding ecosystem, which caused some theorizing that Artificer could've accidentally spent too much time around them and thus have gained her explosive abilities. - It is very interesting to note that Spearmaster can't siphon nutrition from Garbage Worms (suggesting they're more mechanical than organic), Rain Deer, Stowaways' bodies (which cause the spears to fall, presumably because of their gooey thickness, but Stowaway' tentacles still can be fed from) and Overseers (probably because they aren't tangible enough?). They CAN however siphon it from Inspectors and Guardians, suggesting not only that both have some (possibly inorganic) nutrition to them, but also given how spears stick to Inspectors, that their holographic bodies (and also Overseers' by extention?) are made of something akin to "hard light", kind of like hyper light from Hyper Light Drifter? Maybe? - You forgot to mention Albino Vultures NOT A TRUE RAIN WORLD FAN BOOOOOO (jk)
A thing I've noticed about the Leviathan is that they look awfully similar to the worm like structures you see in the background of shoreline. Although this theory is kind of a stretch.
I actually have an idea for the bubble weed, from what I can tell it grows in areas which flood during rain cycles or have varying water levels, so what if the plant has the air bubbles as a way of storing air containing both CO2 for the plant and also O2 which so happens can be used by other creatures, so the plant may breath during floods. Probably a bit of a long shot but i just wanted to get the thought out.
I definitely think slugcats are of equal intelligence to humans. The mark allows them to understand a foreign language, and the things the iterators communicate to them are all very complex. It doesn't gift intelligence, so given that what the iterators say to them all make total sense to them- or at least they seem to, since the game usually doesn't give us meta-knowledge and so we probably don't get any more from the dialogue than they do- this means they are at least as intelligent as us, just less advanced. Which makes sense. Scavs have already taken the niche of a full tribal civilization. There's not much room for anything else to take it. As for skin slime, while they do look really shiny in some of the art, and the evidence I'm going to present isn't super solid.. I'd like to mention that in the dating sim, it is made clear that Rivulet's clammy skin is very unusual. So assuming that the people who wrote the script consulted the original designer of the slugcat, it would seem that slugcats have dry, hairless skin- except for Saint and Rivulet, who have fur and slime respectively. It's also possible slugcats have a very thin layer of fur since, while they implied they are normally furless in the dating sim, humans also have a bad habit of implying areas of the body with thin hair are hairless when they are not. But, for now, the best assumption is that Saint is an outlier and other slugcats lack fur.
Rain world should have a dlc called dry-world where it’s millions of cycles gone by since the iterators fell and the rain caused by them has dissipated causing extreme heat and dry climate idk thought it would be cool
@@colfy3961 yeah,it would expand the cosmology of rainworld so stupid redditors don’t say “rainworld is flat and there are no other stars or planets in the rainworld universe”
Seems you missed the Hunter Long Legs in the Rot section. Though it only appears in the Gourmand play through and they are pretty rare due to their creation method, so I guess it doesn’t really matter.
Considering that the Wheel Flower glows like void fluid and that it allows you to access cycles and memories not normally accessible without the Flower I would assume that Flower itself is akin to some type of blessing from the Void. Also taking into consideration the fact that these Flowers seemingly grow in places of importance (Example being the Perma Flower growing where the hunter dies and the Flower that grows right before the hole that survivor and monk fell in), it feels like the Flowers are just gifts from the void. Another reason the flowers are related to the void is because it just let's Artificer see Echoes, something straight up from the void itself, which isn't possible without the flower.
Loved the video, wish there was more gameplay footage found in it though like the first two wildlife videos, cause they actually show what the creatures actually look like in game rather than just showing art by a group of artists as the base for all the assets. I get that it gives more room to show the art but it’s one thing to see something but I think it misses the entire point of rainworlds meticulously crafted system to show the creatures and plants moving. Like the absolute dread one feels when a monster kelp begins moving towards you or the blinking by a daddy long legs. I also would’ve loved a bit more analysis on some of the slugcats; the main additions to downpour. One theory I had was that hunter and spear master are quite similar in structure in the sense that spear masters (assumed) calcium spears are a form of turbo cancer that is benign and under control by spear master as seven red suns has shown more knowledge on how to fabricate purpose organisms. Could also be why hunter has a deadly turbo cancer as he was created in a rush to help moon. Idk I’m just ranting. Love the video but it just feels less quality than the first two
@@MarijnBontje Lizards are closer to a size of 1 to 3 meters from what I understand. They're not small and their heads are probably big enough to fit most of your head inside. From all I've seen Rain world is a completely hostile environment, where basically everything could kill an adult human without much effort.
my understanding of the snails or pop-beetles as I've more often seen them called, is that their pop is more mechanical in nature, possibly building up tension in their shell and releasing it like a mantis shrimp. The most likely way I can see this working is if their shell is a continuous hard spiral plate that coils tighter, slipping past itself with loud cracks and then when fully compressed released all at once.
Also the flashbang plants strike me as likely being a defensive evolution from a purposed organism: their original purpose being simply as a lantern, evolving the ability to violently and rapidly expend their stored bioluminescent chemicals when damaged once survival outside of a plant pot became an issue.
Das, I think Stowaways are related to Grapple Worms, but have evolved to be stationary predators, and also evolved their sticky tongues into the venomous tendrils that they hunt with. I also think that they could be a mature version of the Grapple Worms.
i like to imagine that leviathans are purposed organism created by the ancients to mimic the void worms the reason being the body structure (large , slim with many fins) with the head being a dead maschine. like what if there were anchients who wanted to talk to the echos like ask what ascention was like? was the anything? how does void fluid feel like? but mostly what did the void worms look like in order to make their own version of the void worm in another way to ascend (witch probably didnt end to well) witch is aslo why the leviathans eat everything its just doing what the ancients wanted of them
Games like Rain World really inspire me. The creature designs are so simple yet creative and have helped me a lot with when designing my own fantasy creatures. And the way the world treats you like an actual part of the ecosystem instead of a main character is really cool. While I haven’t finished the game yet I honestly can’t recommend it enough, very fun and challenging.
Great to finally see this come out, I've been looking forward to it. And i'm sure this will make its way on to my: "Really long videos to play in the background while I'm doing other stuff playlist" after I've given it a proper viewing first.
A theory on the caramel lizards: Due to green lasers being resistant to red lizard bites, caramel lizards may simply be a cross-breed species between the two who has managed to completely outcompete their green ancestors, most likely also because the green lizards were not cold resistant enough to survive the snowstorms.
Red centipedes do actually live with smaller orange ones, you can see this in subterranean and pipeyard. They also don’t attack the other centipedes so I’d say it’s very likely that the red centipedes are the final growth stage of the more common centipedes. The reason you don’t see many of them would be that most centipedes simply don’t live long enough to reach that stage of their life.
My theory with yellow lizards instead of radio signals could be vibrations, when a yellow lizard spots you it makes a weir noise and it wiggles it head, probably producing vibrations that the alpha can "translate" to the others
Like that one ball in underhang I think has a ton it could be a short or long range radio that kinda just stopped working and the cretures decided to escape and use the antenna for pact tatics
I think you missed this, but there also seems to be a morphological relationship between jetfish and vultures - a vulture with its mask off looks a **lot** like an overgrown jetfish, with the same two weird little mouthparts; the vulture's "wings" would then be more like an adapted form of the jetfish tentacles, and they both seem to be propelled through "jets" of fluid (water or pressurized gas). Given how much more "artificial" the vultures are, I think it's likely that jetfish are closer to the ancestral, less-modified form.
The name Slug Cat was adopted by the game dev himself back when it was just him working on a simple game. He made an entire devblog when he started the project in like 2012. Theres a video by Curios archive i think. He called them some kind of bear creature when someone commented on youtube "Slug Cat!" and he said we would never call them weird bear creatures again. Many of the animals have different features, that doesnt mean theyre anymore or anyless than what they are.
53:30 That, the fact there is a massive world we will never see, and that everyone in the game we see means nothing is very sad, and it made me depressed.
12:09 idk how, but I saw a lantern mouse in industrial next to a batfly. It wasn’t eating it though? Could’ve been because it’s mortally terrified of slugs, and I got too close.
Turns out I missed adding in a lot of things in post, probably because it was my 17th hour of editing and my brain was fried, sorry about that, here's the info I missed:
-Big Spiders cannot be revived if killed by Spore Puffs or Flashbangs, if drowned, if their health is below -8, or if fully eaten by slugcat.
-Leviathan Aggression sheet has them eat everything except other leviathans and overseers
-Gooieducks are named after the Geoduck clam, which is pronounced the same way, and they look like they have a massive uncut cock coming out of their shell.
-Spore Puffs kill Batflies, Centipedes, Spiders, Dropwigs, Eggbugs, Noodleflies, Squidcadas, and Stowaways
If I missed anything else in the editing then tell me in this thread and I'll add onto the pinned comment
I think you forgot to show some example images (1:08:35)
Hi sir What are the songs you put in this video?
have 0 example images in the entire video other than submitted art
I would like to mention that miros vultures will antagonize the creatures they derived from(Vultures and Miros birds). According to the wiki, regular vultures are afraid of them, but king vultures will outright kill them. Miros birds seem to just antagonize miros vultures back.
Even though they're only naturally found in the Saint's time, strawberry lizards can technically be encountered in other campaigns through the lineage system. This doesn't necessarily contradict your theories on their evolution.... it just raises a lot of questions about how lineaging works.
Correction: slugcats are New York City subway rats. This is shown by their intelligence, navigation of pipes, and ability to propel rebar with sufficient speed to penetrate concrete. This is the beginning of my theory that rain world takes place in New York City, with the dual implication that five pebbles liked pizza and that NSH may be from New Jersey (explaining his erratic behavior).
this is canon
new york world
And the Vultures are just large modified Pigeons
wheres the essay op
And metropolis is just the city
@@XenoHunter-1954and leviathans are just fishy things
We always say the Leveithen are the biggest hostile creature but everyone forgets five pebbles when you go back into his room
This is a hilarious comment.
Angry calculator god the size of an ikea
Not even that. If you take a pearl or something he kills you instantly.
@@JODA93 He doesn’t kill you if you take a pearl. He instead has dialogue when you take one of his pearls. He says something along the lines of “Yes, help yourself. They are not edible.”
@@DelightfulLightBasement really? Man it really has been a long time since I've played it.
You should have mentioned that the Chieftain Scavenger is the only non-Slugcat creature to have the Mark of Communication.
for real that's the most interesting part
@@tiggywoovit5955 I don't think it is that far of a stretch to assume that if the Chieftain went to Pebbles after getting the citizen drone, he would most certainly be forced to give the chieftain guidance and the mark, and also couldn't hurt him. So, because of his permanent programming, Pebbles would involuntarily need to give it to the chieftain.
Moon also mentioned the scavs bring her things from time to time so while it’s likely pebbles gave them the mark of communication it’s very possible Moon has met the chieftain.
@@TheSandwhichman108 I do not think Moon is accessible at all during Artificer’s campaign but it could still be possible in some way or form… we’ll just never know how sadly.
@@kairosiscool5062 You’re right…The chieftain would have been long dead by the time Hunter arrives to (sort of) revive moon. Having been killed by Arti’s hands.
She was probably still alive most likely left to somewhere very out of the way to most likely wallow in her sorrows knowing nothing she does will ever erase the pain of watching both her children die.
can't believe they didn't call lantern mice "lampsters"
Aka: lampter
Fr
@@cross977 skurr moment
That muffin looks awfully like a lampster
Somebody baked a lampster into my muffin
@@reaperlodsomeone put grapple worms in my hotdogs
My favorite Rain World creature will forever be the Vulture Grub for exactly one reason:
"Is that calling in an airstrike?"
"Yes."
*_screaming_*
A close second is the Coalescapede because of people's reactions when seeing it.
@jordanl.8509 I just had a thought, what if we made mother coalescapede, so when you kill one of the spiders, the coalescapede gets bigger?
@@ZeGourmand
*do not*
@iamafuckingfailure hmmmmmm, what if I gave one the ability to glide? Or make one that can set up massive webs attached to the body?
@@ZeGourmandmore wholesome thought
Jolly co-op, bunch of players pick each other up
Become CoalesceaScug
My headcannon for spore puffs is that they were purposed as a form of insectiside to remove pests from crops, hence them being solely located around the farms. then they had the issue of how to spread the spores over a large area consistently, hence they purposed the rain deers precursors, which had pointy feet to aerate the soil but not disturb crops, they ate the spore puffs and the spores would get caught in their wool and spread through their feces, making a very efficient automatic pest control.
its just evolved cordyceps
@@keysoffun5644cool both can be true
This is a really great theory lol. It is now my headcanon.
Epic theory, do you believe that noodle flies have milk in both genders and share the kids?
@@Gront517 generally the only creatures we know to have genders in rain world is the squidcada that has 2 genders, the rest of the creatures are genderless and presumably reproduce asexually
Hey! Aspiring entomologist here, A good theory for eggbugs is that they're parthenogenic, females can reproduce or "clone" themselves without a male necessary, like surinam roaches. Another possibility is after mating, female eggbugs will lay eggs on both their backs and the males back for added security and a larger survivability rate, the brood being split up between 2 moving targets is better than 1 moving target. Considering the behavioral and anatomical differences between them and dropwigs, I disagree that they're related.
The aquapedes actually closely resemble real life scolopendromorpha, mostly Scolopendra cataracta and Scolopendra alcyona, which are semi-aquatic tropical giant centipedes.
Dissecting your spider theory, here's my take on it. The wolf spider and mother spider are the same species, the coalescipede being their offspring, wolf spider being the male, and mother spider being the female, the sexual dimorphism would explain the pigmentation differences. Now the spitter spider ties into your theory about them living communally, as someone who studies spiders around Canada, I've personally seen Latrodectus hesperus and Psilochorus hesperus cohabitating extremely often, most of the time even residing in the same web, their offspring hatch at similar times too, often branching out to the same areas and continuing to cohabitate. As for why we don't see juvenile spitter spiders? They mimic the behaviour of the wolf spider juveniles and join their hellish hunting tactics.
Stowaways are Arthropods yeah, spore puffs attack them and their immune system, as they do with centipedes, egg bugs, etc.
To your spider take, I think you're correct, but want to add that spitter spiders could possibly reproduce differently than wolf or mother spiders as well. The venom sack things that spitter spiders shoot out are in fact not just filled with venom, but also possibly living creatures as the sacs will actively crawl away if not attached to a creature or a wall.
My theory personally is that the sacs are some kind of maggot that attaches and applies the venom while the spitter spider brings the still living creature into their den for the maggots to grow up while consuming said corpse. The den being a safe and optimal environment for the growth of the maggot. Also this would explain why spitter spiders don't bite prey, since it would be bad to kill the paralysed creature when it being alive is the whole point.
All in all this theory is kind of strange and it doesn't really make sense for spiders to have maggot offspring, but it's just a random pile of thoughts I gathered. I think it's pretty interesting.
@@generalvoid1630 Oooh, interesting theory! My biggest concern and probably the biggest flaw is that offspring are extremely costly to make, in nutrition and time, why would a species evolve to "shoot" them at enemies if them surviving until adulthood is entirely dependent on the spider itself incapacitating the prey after it's paralyzed?
The spitter spider does have fangs, as it grabs onto prey with the same sound that wolf spiders make when biting into the player, it just doesn't have the same lunge attack.
@@_z_873 First part, yea probably true. It doesn't really make sense. The whole theory is kind of a mess if you think about it.
But on the spitter spiders having fangs, yes they do have fangs, but the fangs of spitter spiders are not as lethal as wolf spiders fangs.
I didn't mean that they completely lacked fangs, but that they maybe purposefully don't attempt to kill their prey with said fangs.
Unless I'm remembering wrong, wolf spiders instakill you far more often with a bite than spitter spiders, which never do so. My memory might be wrong though so take that with a grain of salt.
To add to general’s theory about spitters, in the code the sacs are called “larva” and the trail left behind is an “umbilical”. So it is indeed very likely that the sacs are a reproductive method of some kind
I’m sorry did you say *aquatic centipedes?*
My favorite line from Five Pebbles:
“Little creature, you are stuck in a cycle. You wish to be free from this ‘Rain World.’”
Best pebbles line by far
My favorite line was when five pebbles said "its five pebblin time" and then proceeded to five pebbles all over the place
"He didn't say that"
@@purplemagnetar7637Right, he said “if you wish for the answers, you need to give looks to the moon.”
"land fish"
The red spitter spider's maggots actually crawl around and wiggle if they don't get embedded into a wall, they seem to be independant organisms rather than just venom sacs.
Honestly I feel like that could just be the sacs wiggling because there's muscles squeezing the venom, but idk
@@justaskeleton9087 I would agree if they just wiggled, but the sacs seem to actively crawl like maggots from what I remember from spawning them in a couple times. I could be wrong, but I think they were made to act like some kind of maggots. It could imply that spitter spiders reproduce through those parasites and bring the paralysed creature to their nests without biting, because the plan is to have the spider maggot things grow up in the still living paralysed creature in a safe and secure environment. Many insects do similar things, but this is a quite strange way to go at it.
the comment above yours (at least for me, right now) says that in the code, the projectiles are labeled "larva" and the stringy trail "umbilical", so I think you're right 😦
16:06
Eggbugs and Dropwigs being the same species is a very sound theory. I first believed that it wasn't the case because the dropwigs will eat eggbugs, yet they also seem to eat other dead dropwigs. They seem to be cannibalistic and so eggbugs being a metamophosized version or a case of sexual dimorphism is not disproven by the fact that they eat eachother. They also have very similar characteristics and they both have long antenna and 4 legs, so even if they are not the same species they would be more closely related.
Damn, yeah, this actually seems pretty sound.
all carnivores would eat the corpse of their own species to live
It would also make sense if the Dropwigs kill Eggbugs to limit the number of future competitors.
I like it too, but I can’t help but wonder if the eggs on an egg bug aren’t actually eggs at all. Slug cats are called slug cats even though they are neither slugs nor cats so it might be possible that the eggbug’s name is misleading. Idk what the eggs might actually be though.
@@papapiggie6697 Theory, they are false eggs, they have the properties of a normal egg, but won't hatch. They are both on their back and dropped when killed/hit to make more presentable to predators and give the bug and actual eggs a chance to escape.2 reasons to support my theory:
1. It would be a good explanation for the blue colouring of the egg, it's to make it stand out and to make it look like other food, specifically the blue fruits.
2. Why else would it have the eggs protruding from from their back, it's easier to drop. you could say that it's dropping is a way for it's offspring to escape and survive, but than why don't they hatch like real cockroaches and are so easy to see
haven't finished the vid yet, But On Noodleflies (and Popcorn Plants):
There is evidence that Noodleflies have adapted to use their sharp proboscis both as a weapon and to open Popcorn Plants in what is likely a symbiotic relationship since there's expired/opened popcorn plants in the backgrounds of areas where Noodleflies are most common. My guess is that the Popcorn Plant's seeds are actually fruit (white = flesh, red = seed) containing seeds and when Noodleflies eat them, the seeds are not digested, but when Slugcats eat them the seeds are destroyed because they crunch the seed up. Or maybe Slugcats simply swallow them whole too cause' the animation is really short.
Could be that Popcorn Plants are only visible above ground while reproducing and the bodies of the plants are subterranean.
Noodleflies could be really goopey arthropods bc they appear to have 8 limbs. (3 pairs of reduced legs, 1 pair of wings)
During Saint's time the Noodleflies seem to have gone extinct so the Popcorn Plants have adapted to rely on wind/storms/extreme changes in pressure or temperature instead.
Edit + more info:
Correction: Noodleflies have 2 pairs of wings and 3 pairs of legs
Evidence towards Noodleflies NOT being arthopods is that they don't have segemented bodies, but if I remember correctly Moon claims that all remaining life descends from bioengineered organisms so...
The wiki also claims that the Noodlefly's needle can't break open popcorn plants so this could just be an oversight/game design purposes OR Noodleflies actually drink the nectar from the flowers of the popcorn plant and by the time slugcats seem them it's post-pollination.
I still gotta wonder how things go extinct in a world where things dont die...
@@chaosinc.382Some things can die permanently, like Hunter. Unless he still counts as living. It is very odd though, maybe old age?
@@chaosinc.382 When you die you don't wake back up again in the cycle you died in, so in that universe you did die permanently.
@@BouncyBonBon
rainworld: into the rainverse
@@maniandbeanohunter is described as “karmically imbalanced” by the game, which is why he can die permanently; so it still doesn’t explain how species can go extinct.
Imagine if all the modified creatures were the Ancients' school projects that they just released into the wild. The ones that survive living on in the environments of the games.
This is a certified Rain World moment
Indeed
a
Lizor
I am willing to provide a certificate for this rain world moment
Truly a Rain World moment in time
Fauna
1:15 Slugcat
3:34 Batfly
4:42 BlueFruit
5:33 JellyFish
6:47 Vulture Grub
7:44 Squidcata
9:34 Snails
11:01 Lantern Mice
12:31 EggBugs and Dropwigs
15:00 Yeeks
16:05 Hazers
17:47 JetFish
18:45 Grapple Worm
20:00 Garbage Worm
21:50 Leaches
23:05 Noodle Flys
25:30 Lizard Section
26:00 Green Lizards
26:49 Pink Lizards
27:22 Blue Lizards
28:05 White Lizards
29:01 Orange Lizards
30:29 Black Lizards
31:21 Salamander
32:09 Caramel Lizards
32:56 Strawberry Lizards
33:47 Eel Lizards
34:18 Cyan Lizards
35:18 Red Lizards
36:21 Centipedes Section
37:22 Orange Centipedes
38:02 Red Centipedes
39:08 CentaWings
39:58 Aquapede
40:43 Spider Section
41:21 Small Spider's
42:14 Big Spider's
43:40 Spiter Spider's
44:54 Mother Spider's
46:47 Scavengers
50:00 FireBug
52:24 Stowaway
53:53 RainDeer
56:37 Vultures
57:38 King Vultures
58:38 Miros Birds
1:00:36 Miros Vultures
1:02:27 Rot
1:05:06 Giant JellyFish
1:07:54 Leviathan
1:10:23 Iterators SuperStructure Section
1:10:55 Overseers
1:12:25 Neron Fly
1:13:41 Inspector
1:15:06 Iterator Puppet
1:17:30 Guardian
1:20:15 Echoes
1:21:55 Void Worms
Flora
1:24:33 SlimeMold
1:26:01 Dandelion Peach
1:27:18 Glowweed
1:28:20 lilypuck
1:29:37 Bubble Fruit
1:30:45 Gooie duck
1:31:50 Mushrooms
1:33:19 Karma Flowers
1:34:53 Batnip
1:35:47 Bubble Weed
1:36:47 SporePuffs
1:38:41 Cornbud
1:40:48 CherryBomb
1:42:03 FlashBang
1:44:12 Paincone
1:46:40 WormGrass
1:48:45 PolePlant
1:50:07 MonsterKelp
not yiggs, it's yeeks
@@matsushiq thank you
Yeek is the right spelling :)
It's spelled "Iterator"
You god damn legend, respect for taking your time doing this mate. Pure Respect.
God damn that's a hug list of supporting artists. It's awesome that so many people can come together to investigate such a unique game.
Hug list UwU
@@gigachonker69shut up
Where can I find hug list?
pikaman!!!!!!!!!
Hug list :D
I love whenever Das says "Look at this list on screen" despite the fact that there isn't a list on screen (just amazing art made by amazing artists)
Even though you goofed up on that, I still loved the video Das! Keep up the good work!
Same, although it's kind of weird how this was supposed to be the flora conclusion on rainword and although it accomplishes that through dialog it doesn't have the the same level of editing as the past version
@@airplanes_aren.t_realyea it's mostly just the blurred footage in the background and the art as basically the only thing to look at
@@airplanes_aren.t_realtbf he did have to write 30+ pages of wildlife analysis and it took 3 months. hes probably tired of this video at this point
(edited for spelling)
Now that Flora/Fauna has finally been made, Daszombes can finally rest and simply desintegrate into dust.
"goodbye"
*Das fades out of existence, never to be seen or heard from again.*
Someone didn’t watch the video before commenting
@@loggersviii1228 this is a premiere video. This was before the video was launched.
@@loggersviii1228 I commented at almost the start of the live, and didn't check what he said.
Until Rain World: Upsuck comes out.
I always figured the Long Legs were corrupted Inspectors, as the Inspectors' function seems to be error checking of some kind and would be the most likely organism for Pebbles to modify in order to modify his own programming.
The long legs weren’t created from a creature, they’re literally a sickness. Basically cancer that wants to eat you
inspectors didnt exists before donwpour and they were added just because of the emptiness of DM main part
also cancer can have simple structures
Probably not, when you kill inspectors their hardlight body explodes leaving behind just their robotic eyes.
The rot is most likely a modified amalgam of all the different biological parts of Pebbles, maybe just the processing strata that just happened to gain mobilitym
I think it was more of a starting from scratch situation. What sort of insane supercomputer would perform extremely risky procedures on the only thing that would defend him?
@@kh6853 A suicidal one?
The presence of the grapple worms in Metropolis with the chemotroph theory could be explained by the cut content for Metropolis and a bit of Moon's dialogue: they just eat whatever nutritious bits they find in the abundant dust in the city. The equivalent to the rain/night cycle would've been a dust storm as mentioned in one of those dev commentaries, and Moon does also mention that dust just regularly falls out of the sky, so that could possibly provide enough food to the grapple worms living in the city that get their food from eating whatever tasty minerals/chemicals that make up the dust.
There are predatory aquatic rats in Australia that could explain how the Artificer is a predator that can maul.
Only in Australia
@@tinnedteainsyrup8943 rain world is Australia if it wasnt mostly desert
@@Inspectnerd rain world is wet Australia
@@tinnedteainsyrup8943 yes! ive seen a video that was some song about austrailia but it was rain world stuff
Rakali
1:18:57 Do you think it’s possible that the Guardians are doing the complete opposite: Encouraging the Saint to ascend all the creatures in the room plus the Guardian itself? I don’t believe we see any passive creatures in Rubicon outside of Guardian rooms, as well as 0 scavs in the entirety, so it’s possible that the Guardians take the creatures that cannot ascend and lock them in the dens until the Saint rocks up to make sure they get to ascend
1:21:34 While you’re probably right about everything else, the golden colour for Echoes is probably just void stuff since Saint has the golden look despite not wearing gold adornments
Damn, what a video. This was worth the wait, with really nice art and editing (apart from one or two missed pictures I guess). Hopefully this one hits the jackpot as well!
I think there's nuance to the echoes, because Saint doesn't get a face ornament or whatever on the end screen even if he gets the golden tentacles, so maybe the echoes do fuse with some of their stuff
@@Kipyena It's possible the golden tentacles gain their colouration from the void/void fluid itself, since, y'know. anything close to the void sea is *aggressively* yellow.
@@RivLabs I wasn't going against this, I actually think the same about it since Rivulet's demon core when activated shows it's made of refined golden void fluid
(And I'm not even talking about rubicon here)
@@Kipyena Ooh absolutely true! I didn't even think about how the mass rarefaction cells are literally void fluid batteries until you pointed that out (I don't have an excuse im just stupid)
Maybe Grapple Worms are a purposed organism? And the Ancients used their silk (or whatever the hell they shoot out) for stuff like clothing back in the day. No idea how plausible that is, but it might work 🤷♀️
Grapple Worms could've also been a toy for younger Ancients. I like this theory because it's fun imagining Ancients swinging Grapple Worms around like sticky hands lmao.
I’ve always thought of the long thing the worms shoot out as a tongue that travels through its body.
Also I personally imagine ancients playing with a grumpy slugcat
this doesn't track at all unfortunately. they are tongues and not silk, from the color to the sound they make that matches other tongue slingin' weirdos in the world
@@thebrowsecast2802 I guess that would kind of make sense, but we can't really know for sure 🤷
Almost everything is a purposed organism according to moon. The purpose of the grapple worms could have been anything though, remember that a lot of time has passed, and scugs, a pretty advanced creature capable of tool use, descended from sentient pipe cleaners (just imagine shoving some mutant mouse down a drain to eat a clog). If something like that is now engaging in significantly more complicated behavior, who knows what weird thing grapple worms used to do. They could have been tape measurers, or living decoration, some organisms were even just components of a tool hidden within a box.
Still though, the grapple is way too fleshy and definitely not silk. The toy theory is much more likely. Maybe they also made good yoyos.
Six Rocks on Splintered Wood, stop hitting things with that worm! You could break something!
-an ancient mother, probably
Caramel Lizards intrigue me. In real life, it takes an extremely long time- even on a geological timescale- for animals to evolve new limb pairs. Typically, such things are actually repurposed existing limbs.
I know Rain World's grasp on evolutionary biology is tenuous- especially since any number of these could be purposed organisms- but I like to think the Caramel Lizard is actually the most *primitive* form of lizard alive today.
This would all be explained if all lizards originally had six legs, but most of them were reduced to vestigial remnants, completely inside the bodies of modern lizards. After all, a four-legged gait is quite efficient, and it's possible the lineage that gave rise to modern lizards lost the need for their third limb pair entirely.
That, then, would explain why Caramel Lizards retain their third limb pair- they may have evolved stronger legs that allow them to pounce and leap, a feat only achievable thanks to having six of them.
Caramel lizards being a more primitive version would make sense, they are completely immune to the cold, which is apparently the natural state of the world, an icy landscape. They could very well be the original lizards, before they were turned into purposed organisms and went feral (or a close relative to it). The lack of extra limbs might even be from the ancients meddling. They may have just wandered into iterator controlled habitat from the snowy surroundings. Would also explain why they are found in the outer expanse, they colonized that area first, and then some occasionally trickled into iterator territory over time, and by the time of the saint campaign, they just flooded in, thriving in the now frigid conditions.
@@chitinskin9860 if your correct, this might also indicate that the areas a larger distance from the iterators are more of a tundra habitat. perhaps the world was starting an extended ice age when the iterators were first being built and those conditions remained in place in untouched corners of the world. and if we could somehow reach them we would see the flora and fauna that wouldve existed had the iterators never been built.
Here is a theory regarding the vulture grubs: They were and still very much are an engineered species, and have not been able to really evolve past that. This is either because they were a recently modified species are because their mechanical parts inhibit evolution. I also believe that the vultures may have been part of a security system for the cities, and the grubs could be used to summon them. Due to the nature of this, as the old society fell, The vulture grubs not being able to overcome their engineering, the ones that learned to hide underground are the only ones who really survived, Because they wouldn't signal vulturesby accident, which they themselves don't really have control over. I also have a theory that the grubs never really fully reach adulthood like axolotl for example, and reproduce in the larval stage, because of engineered hormone inhibitors, Because once they would turn into an adult insect they would be practically useless or outright die if their mechanical parts are only compatible with the larvae.
vulture grubs could've been used by maintenence workers and shit to go from wherever they were back to their cities
@@ligma6992 you mean vultures as transport units? Does not sound to comfy, but a plausible theory. By who exactly the grubs were used, is hard to tell. Especially because nothing in the game I've found hints to that. If there are some clues, do inform me though.
@@iexistexe it's a crackpot theory at best, but it's the best explanation I have for vulture grubs
@@ligma6992 My idea was that the vultures were either security drones, maybe meant for catching engineered creatures that went rogue (maybe if one of the living capacitors decides to run away from the electrical grid (that's my theory on what centipedes were used for by the way)) or research capturing drones, meant for catching animals in the wild and bringing them back for study or modification testing. This means that the vulture grubs would have been used as signalling beacons by the ancients security/police force/animal control or by field researchers. But also never out of the question is that they were used for multiple purposes. I believe for that the ancient ones could perhaps at one point signal them more directly what to do once they summoned them. What indicates this to me is that vultures have one of the strictest behavioural patterns and little diversity in personality out of all animals, which pair excellently with them to be engineered for obedience and commandability.
if you combine karma flower with a grenade you get fire egg, comfirming the connection karma flowers have with the void. also the devs said the similar apperances of void worms and leviathans are not a coincidence. also what does it mean for your cycles to overlap with echoes?
Personally, I *believe* (since echoes are stuck in place through metaphysical means) they also move through *time* in a substantially different way, compared to any other... life form? I'm not sure if echoes count as alive, in the traditional sense, but you get the idea. Anyway, due to their altered movement through time, they only occasionally exist at the same time as any one other being. You could imagine this as though most things experience time as a line, whilst to echoes it is a sort of wave, only crossing through, or *intersecting with*, that line at a few points. Keep in mind this is all just my interpretation, but it's cool stuff to think about!
@@RivLabs i dont think other creatures experience time quite like a line either, dying and respawning appears to be a canon thing, when you are dying in one place over and over slugcat is canonically "stuck in a cycle"
A theory I like is that gourmand's campaign is the equivalent of a fisherman's tale. It would make sense given his ability to spit out more food than he eats.
Also, karma flowers are said to be drugs
The thing with Gourmand is that it's highly likely that his campaign is just a dramatic retelling of what actually happened, explaining his exceptional crafting skills, his ability unique to him of killing creatures with his sheer weight alone, his ability to conjure up random objects *and even living beings sometimes,* his spear damage, how easily he gets exhausted, etc etc. It's likely that these hold some truth to them - Gourmand probably can craft, his weight can be used to his advantage, he gets exhausted, etc, but it's likely that most of these are very much exaggerated for the sake of a dramatic story.
@@wingidon If that was the case, how would the gourmand know about void?
Some other things to note:
1) Stowaways are indeed some sort of arthropod (perhaps even a terrestrial barnacle), as they're vulnerable to Spore Puffs. Same with Squidcadas.
2) Miros Birds don't drown underwater while Miros Vultures do.
3) Strawberry Lizards apparently exist outside of Saint's timeline via lineage dens, suggesting that they're from a different area entirely.
4) For some odd reason, Firebugs eat Slugcats if their relationship code is any indication.
5) Eggbugs are afraid of literally EVERYTHING. As in, the only things they're not afraid of are Batflies and Firebugs, the latter of which they will go out of their way to harass and vice versa.
6) Miros Vultures prefer cold regions over dark regions, hence why they seemingly leave Shaded Citadel to live in Bitter Aerie. This also explains why they spread outside of Bitter Aerie during Saint's time.
7) It's not a coincidence that both Garbage Worms and Leviathans resemble Void Worms in some aspects. Take that as you will.
8) Unlike a majority of other Hunter creatures, King Vultures don't come back during the later time periods. This is shared with the two Scavenger variants.
9) Mother Spiders also don't die to Flashbangs.
10) After Survivor's time, the Noodlefly parent in Outskirts disappears, but the babies are still there by Rivulet's time. Your guess for why this happened.
11) Caramel Lizards are also immune to Worm Grass, but Green Lizards are still stronger. This implies that Caramels are perhaps lighter and more endothermic than Greens.
12) FP and LM have their cans designed in a T-shape. Essentially, FP is the horisontal top part while LM is the vertical bottom part.
2) Perhaps the Miros Vulture's gas vents are connected to their respiratory system in some way, meaning that when submerged, they can drown while Miros Birds can't? Though that would raise questions about why the Miros Vultures need air in the first place, and I don't have any ideas on that one :P
11) Is it possible that the wormgrass immunity is due to some characteristic of their scales/skin, and the caramel lizards have either evolved from greens and thus inherited that trait, or convergently developed it?
(I don't have anything interesting to add to your other points, but they're all very cool to learn, thank you!)
I am pretty sure I drowned a miros bird in water in arena earlier.
8) Like the RW wiki pointed out- it's likely that elite scavengers are gone due to not having access to the resources necessary to have such heavily equipped soldiers, since electric spears probably require materials found only in the iterators to be crafted. Also, a interesting detail is that Chimney Canopy is the only region which consistently has elite scavengers, outside of the Metropolis and the Wall during night time. As for king vultures, I have no idea, my best guess is that they got outcompeted by the more efficient vultures, since king vultures would probably require more energy and food due to their large size and use of the arpoons
@@Ceiling0redza or perhaps, due to their more complicated mechanical components, the king vultures either "break down" faster, relative to normal vultures, or require some kind of facility to be created, the likes of which i doubt would continue to operate up into Saint's time.
12 is literally just wrong
Can't believe I'm excited for a documentary premiere, but here I am...
Iterator logs when?
Seriously tho, that detail that batflies have two flight modes and they flap their wings differently is so awfully cool to me
I have a personal theory, more a headcanon, that wormgrass are perhaps unwanted weed (mainly because they are carnivorous) that grew unchecked after the ancients went to buy milk. Also, the green coloration of kelp in shoreline is possible to be them doing photosyntesis, since said region has light and that all other regions they live in are pitch black, since they would be way easier to spot in the open so they rely on photosyntesis as a way to complement their diet
I always imagined worm grass WERE the crops. They were likely harvested for a filling food, but when the ancients left, they started to prey on the nearby purposed organisms that were meant to maintain them (e.g rain deer were like uhhhhhhh,,,,,,, giant fertilizer-dropping machines)
Also “ancients went to buy the milk” summarizes literally everything that happens in rain world.
@@Whydoiexisthere- To be honest, when I got into rain world I had the same idea of the grass being the crops. Also lol true, the milk was so good that their entire civilization just vanished
I think the monster kelp is 2 similar species. One evolved from kelp, the other from pole plants
(talking about red lizards) "they likely claim large swaths of territory, and fight other individuals for merely entering, except the two of them in outskirts i guess they're just married or something"
*meanwhile red lizard fighting noises play in the background as said married couple tears each other to shreds*
With so many creatures toeing the line between flora and fauna it makes sense not to separate them as much
My theory for the firebugs is that their a now extinct species of purposed organism made by the ancients to carry void fluid, now only appearing in rubicon since it’s fragment like nature even if their all dead now
but they don’t carry void fluid
@@loggersviii1228Void fluid is in their eggs
@@NeovenatorGuy yeah my mistake I accidentally skipped that last bit about the firebugs
They must still be alive, since, if I recall, Gourm can 'craft' their fire eggs and Gourm crafting is probably really just exchanging two items in his stomach to spit out something he stored.
@@catpoke9557 that's.. that's a fair point!
1:09:14 Its also pretty important to note that it was confirmed by a developer that there is a connection between void worms and leviathans. There is likely a overarching purpose for them rather than to kill everything nearby them
Absolutely amazing video! Only one thing I can think of that I disagree with, and thats the conclusion about Worm Grass' mouths. The blue circle feels more akin to the digestive surfaces of, for example, a flytrap, secreting enzymes and eating a creature without swallowing it. Only instead of holding it in place via two mouth-like lobes, Worm Grass hold it in place with some kind of adhesive, each individual "blade" of grass adhering to its prey at once to digest it slowly and painfully.
This could also explain two oddities about them. When a creature has even 1 worm grass attached to them, even if they are completely out of the patch and above ground, they may still die if it does not let go. They are literally being digested alive. Additionally, perhaps Green and Caramel Lizards repel worm grass either through the "extreme smell" mentioned in the video, or- what seems more likely in my opinion- perhaps they evolved skin designed to be difficult if not outright impossible for the Worm Grass's adhesive to grab ahold of.
It puts a big smile on my face that my leviathan art made it in with such a large chunk to boot, really proud of that piece and super glad to be a part of such a fantastic video!
I would've appreciated some gameplay footage to help frame the context for everything, but regardless, this is very well done
Same. Some fanarts are interesting, but not necessarily canonical imaginations of the actual sprites of the creatures, so it would have been nice to see the original sprites for each as well. But as you said, it's a great video nonetheless.
The leeches may have trouble feeding on slug cats due to the slime coating. With jungle being the only one able to get past it.
I think grapple worms have sticky tongues and shoot them out to catch debris, bugs, etc, and then wipe their body across their tongue as they move to the side, eating as they go, and once they retract one of the tips it'll also bring whatever debris or animals it landed on to the mouth as well. Basically I think they have a weird method of filter feeding.
One thing that confused me about the pain cones is that’s it’s defence mechanism is on its own worthless, but thinking about it, many pain cones tend to grow in places where worm grass grows, so if you get caught by the defence mechanism in a patch of worm grass, you are dead, almost certainly so the worm grass could be the reason that such a defence mechanism was adapted.
Could neuron flies be what had to adapt and evolve into a jellyfish? Idk if this makes sense but I like your theory about them having evolved from a sort of device or power source.
Now that you say it, they do look similar
Just finished my first Survivor run, im in a very rain world mood atm so this is pretty hype
Good for you !!
@@begal69420 thx :)
I am facing a power outage and this is the good news I needed.
Oh boy! Daz is finally embracing his inner biologist!
I commented this on the original video, but I'll put it here it again. I think the grapple worms feed on electricity, and use the tounges to ground a source together and feed on the energy going through them. This explains why they're almost on 5p. This can also explain why they sort of randomly search, like they're going for a good position. And it gives them an original purpose, like an emergency wire for dangerous discharges, which are a common thing.
1:43:56, plants do use spores, bryophytes, (mosses) and ferns and such are not seed bearing plants as they evolved before that adaptation, they instead use spores. (Bear in mind I’ve only just started plant science in university so I’m hoping that I just remembered that right)
The cicada theory for the squidcadas sounds good. I’d also like to note they move forward, tentacles first. Irl squids jet around backwards using vents near their “heads”. Hazers act this way, and they’re squidlike. So, why don’t squidcadas move this way? They’re not squids. They crawl like insects.
Edit: Also, about the overseers, perhaps they use magnetism to move quickly. Roller coasters use magnets to accelerate to high speeds in a small amount of time. I know it’s a bit of a stretch, but since Rain World is so heavily industrialized and metallic, I don’t want to dismiss it.
My theory to explain this is that since everything likely evolved from a purposed organism (including squidcadas you can see from the weird metal plate in their head) the ancients basically put some DNA from one animal into the other (wings onto a cuttlefish) for some reason at a guess squidcada used to be delivery drones (problem with this is why wouldn't they just use drones though idk)
I’m guessing they came from some form of deep sea squid (something like a vampire squid)
their main form of propulsion is two specialized fins on the sides of their heads and only use their jet as a last resort. If squidcadas came from a similar creature it’s not too crazy that they lost the ability to use their siphons as a propulsion method simply due to the fact that air is not dense enough to be used in the same manner. As for the hard external plate on their head, perhaps their ancestors had a hood similar to a nautilus. It could also be a portion of their internal shell that has become external for whatever reason, (squids have a flexible internal shell called a gladius while cuttlefish have a Cuttlebone that is far more rigid) it’s also possible that it has become far larger in order to support their bodies outside of water, this would also explain why they are so cumbersome when they aren’t flying as moving an “armored” body around with such short tentacles would not be very easy outside of water. But that’s just my take from what I know about earth squids.
Edit: autocorrect thought I wanted to say ridged when I meant rigid lol
its fundamentally flawed to base anything off the name. wormgrass is called worm grass and is certainly not a form of grass. it is simply a name for our purposes, not an indication of anything in universe.
1:10:36 "that was a pretty solid intro to the iterators, right?" He says after mispronouncing the word iterators 50 times.
Love how it goes from "Outer gods living in an infinite sea of void". Too "Some orange orange goop" lol
7:09 possible explanation for why vulture grubs summon vultures even if they eat them: they could be parasites who mature/reproduce within the vulture's digestive system ? which is why they actively seek out getting eaten, but only by that specific animal
similarly to jewel wasp larvae
21:31 grapple worms could be purposed organisms for construction workers to get around site quicker/safer
Ah yes, the extremely common method of getting around a construction site, throwing yourself off a cliff with a living grappling hook
I have a theory on noodleflies, the "babies" might actually be all males, not only feeding on but also mating with the larger females, and like some animals, become female after a while and then grow into their larger female forms
This is also a theory I’ve had for a while. Doesn’t explain how if you shelter with a noodle egg you get babies imprinted on you that follow you around, but I like that theory better than there’s just no males we can see
@@CeizoBro since the males are the babies, they still might have an instinct to follow their mothers around
@@CeizoBrowait… the babies are imprinted onto you? Oh no, I’ve just been eating them as soon as I woke up…
@@neet-o-muskeet-o4521 they taste better when they dont struggle
@@CeizoBromaybe in the time it takes to hatch they also mature while we eep
About miros vulture laser. Long time ago I have seen strange weapon in another game - sword of the stars. There were a weapon that emits harmless ray that causes explosion at the end. I asked a physics student about such possibility. And he taught me that something like this is actually possible at least in theory. Some sort of chemical reaction at the end of the ray.
While this is way higher quality something i really do miss from the previous video is in-game clips showing the behavior as you are describing it, felt it added a lot.
And while the art is pretty, moving gameplay is way more engaging imo
10:35 I heard about a species of shrimp that has a claw used as a gun and shoots burn bubbles on predators 🤔
I’m bewildered and flabbergasted, no train lizard :(
there not cannon
nothing like a quick easily digestible video to learn about the wildlife in rain world
Hue hue hue
One thing that I always found interesting is that after downpour gave lizards personalized hisses, yellow and cyan lizards ended up sharing the same ones. And this might be kind of a wild guess, but I'd like to imagine that due to those hisses' electronic nature (which also help contextualize both their abilities and traits) both are different breeds of partially cybernetic guardian lizards, cyan for Pebbles' superstructure and yellow for Moon's. (WHICH coincidentally matches those iterators' ID colours related to their chatlogs, inspectors and overseers)
This would more or less explain their proximity to the respective superstructures, as by the time Moon starts malfunctioning, or around the time Spearmaster's campaign takes place, yellow lizards, while still very much present around her struts, would start migrating away from her now more dangerous and unstable environments to other places, such as Pebbles' superstructure where their social nature could overpower cyan lizards' abilities, forcing the latter to hide away. There might be a few "buts" with this train of thought but I think it's an interesting way of explaining their weird electronic hisses.
Other cool things to note!
- Dev commentary mentions Miros Vultures prefer cold climates, that's why when moon collapses and the top of her superstructure stops generating heat, turning into bitter aerie, Miros Vultures that haunted Pebbles' and her underhangs migrate there. That's why they also appear in Glacial Wasteland/Saint's Garbage Wastes.
- Centiwings' aggression level are not random! They start out ambivalent but the more time you spend around them (while they're focusing on you and not another creature in proximity) they begin to grow impatient of you, seeing you more as a nuisance or a threat. Only when provoked that way, or through direct aggression, they become hostile.
- The lime past garbage wastes pearl mentions a mix of tiny purposed organisms and microbes inside the acid digestion tanks, which accidentally create violatile substances. Moon suggests those could (however unlikely) integrate into the surrounding ecosystem, which caused some theorizing that Artificer could've accidentally spent too much time around them and thus have gained her explosive abilities.
- It is very interesting to note that Spearmaster can't siphon nutrition from Garbage Worms (suggesting they're more mechanical than organic), Rain Deer, Stowaways' bodies (which cause the spears to fall, presumably because of their gooey thickness, but Stowaway' tentacles still can be fed from) and Overseers (probably because they aren't tangible enough?). They CAN however siphon it from Inspectors and Guardians, suggesting not only that both have some (possibly inorganic) nutrition to them, but also given how spears stick to Inspectors, that their holographic bodies (and also Overseers' by extention?) are made of something akin to "hard light", kind of like hyper light from Hyper Light Drifter? Maybe?
- You forgot to mention Albino Vultures NOT A TRUE RAIN WORLD FAN BOOOOOO (jk)
Oh, this is sick! My 17th birthday is happening on the day this comes out, super excited to see this. Cheers!
A thing I've noticed about the Leviathan is that they look awfully similar to the worm like structures you see in the background of shoreline. Although this theory is kind of a stretch.
There are plants that both use spores, and explode. Peat Moss is a great example. They have what I can only describe as… spire rocket launchers.
I actually have an idea for the bubble weed, from what I can tell it grows in areas which flood during rain cycles or have varying water levels, so what if the plant has the air bubbles as a way of storing air containing both CO2 for the plant and also O2 which so happens can be used by other creatures, so the plant may breath during floods. Probably a bit of a long shot but i just wanted to get the thought out.
I definitely think slugcats are of equal intelligence to humans. The mark allows them to understand a foreign language, and the things the iterators communicate to them are all very complex. It doesn't gift intelligence, so given that what the iterators say to them all make total sense to them- or at least they seem to, since the game usually doesn't give us meta-knowledge and so we probably don't get any more from the dialogue than they do- this means they are at least as intelligent as us, just less advanced. Which makes sense. Scavs have already taken the niche of a full tribal civilization. There's not much room for anything else to take it.
As for skin slime, while they do look really shiny in some of the art, and the evidence I'm going to present isn't super solid.. I'd like to mention that in the dating sim, it is made clear that Rivulet's clammy skin is very unusual. So assuming that the people who wrote the script consulted the original designer of the slugcat, it would seem that slugcats have dry, hairless skin- except for Saint and Rivulet, who have fur and slime respectively.
It's also possible slugcats have a very thin layer of fur since, while they implied they are normally furless in the dating sim, humans also have a bad habit of implying areas of the body with thin hair are hairless when they are not. But, for now, the best assumption is that Saint is an outlier and other slugcats lack fur.
almost 2 hours straight of daszombes content. What a day to be alive huh?
Rain world should have a dlc called dry-world where it’s millions of cycles gone by since the iterators fell and the rain caused by them has dissipated causing extreme heat and dry climate idk thought it would be cool
Neat idea, but it contradicts what we see at the end of Saint's campaign.
@@B_Skizzlecould be a mod or smth then
Yeah I just thought it up
This video is so good my dad returned with the milk just to watch it
It would be cool a DLC where we explore the moon we see far away,like slugcats with some ancient spacesuits lol
BAHAHAAH- THAT WOULD BE AWESOME
i did have an au idea similar to that! I've always dreamt of a space related mod or dlc for rain world
@@colfy3961 yeah,it would expand the cosmology of rainworld so stupid redditors don’t say “rainworld is flat and there are no other stars or planets in the rainworld universe”
@@colfy3961bad the downpour devs like dragon propaganda think rainworld is flat and that it is in the firmament with a celestial wall 💀💀
My favorite part of moon is that she says “yes little rodent,I am the Rainworld” and proceeded to rainworld all the rainworlders
The greatest 10 seconds of my TH-cam career
Respect for the shoutout
Seems you missed the Hunter Long Legs in the Rot section. Though it only appears in the Gourmand play through and they are pretty rare due to their creation method, so I guess it doesn’t really matter.
Hunter long legs are an exaggeration by gourmand at best and completely noncanon at worst.
@@mbcodes18 considering a lot of Gourmand’s crafting is suggested to be an embellishment, that would make sense.
@@SteveRogers0768 yeah, I just imagine that he saw the karma flower surrounded by rotten slugcat and made up the hunter long legs
Considering that the Wheel Flower glows like void fluid and that it allows you to access cycles and memories not normally accessible without the Flower I would assume that Flower itself is akin to some type of blessing from the Void. Also taking into consideration the fact that these Flowers seemingly grow in places of importance (Example being the Perma Flower growing where the hunter dies and the Flower that grows right before the hole that survivor and monk fell in), it feels like the Flowers are just gifts from the void. Another reason the flowers are related to the void is because it just let's Artificer see Echoes, something straight up from the void itself, which isn't possible without the flower.
paincone bugs actually do hurt things. I tested with a lizard and, after throwing enough cones, it died. although it did take a LOT of cones.
yeah they do 0.01 per bee damage just like most other items used to stun
1:10:00 Trash Disposal. They’ll eat about anything.
Loved the video, wish there was more gameplay footage found in it though like the first two wildlife videos, cause they actually show what the creatures actually look like in game rather than just showing art by a group of artists as the base for all the assets. I get that it gives more room to show the art but it’s one thing to see something but I think it misses the entire point of rainworlds meticulously crafted system to show the creatures and plants moving. Like the absolute dread one feels when a monster kelp begins moving towards you or the blinking by a daddy long legs. I also would’ve loved a bit more analysis on some of the slugcats; the main additions to downpour. One theory I had was that hunter and spear master are quite similar in structure in the sense that spear masters (assumed) calcium spears are a form of turbo cancer that is benign and under control by spear master as seven red suns has shown more knowledge on how to fabricate purpose organisms. Could also be why hunter has a deadly turbo cancer as he was created in a rush to help moon. Idk I’m just ranting. Love the video but it just feels less quality than the first two
25:10 Actually, it could be that the males die off after breeding, similar to ants or bees
I've been on TH-cam for a very, very long time, and I've never anticipated a video like I do this one
Some of these sound so impossibly deadly, I don't think we as humans would actually survive were we to somehow find ourselves in Rain World
unless a slugcat is sized like an actual mouse, which would mean most lizards are the zie of like bearded dragons/cats. I could win from a cat i think
@@MarijnBontje IIRC one of the devs mentioned he was "two and a half slugcats tall" so they're probably like 2 to 3 feet tall.
@@MarijnBontje Lizards are closer to a size of 1 to 3 meters from what I understand. They're not small and their heads are probably big enough to fit most of your head inside. From all I've seen Rain world is a completely hostile environment, where basically everything could kill an adult human without much effort.
This is so sad :(
I disagree, the scavengers are already a decent human analogue. Humanity in this situation would likely fill a similar niche as the scavs do.
You have more patience then anyone else in the rainworld community
my understanding of the snails or pop-beetles as I've more often seen them called, is that their pop is more mechanical in nature, possibly building up tension in their shell and releasing it like a mantis shrimp. The most likely way I can see this working is if their shell is a continuous hard spiral plate that coils tighter, slipping past itself with loud cracks and then when fully compressed released all at once.
Also the flashbang plants strike me as likely being a defensive evolution from a purposed organism: their original purpose being simply as a lantern, evolving the ability to violently and rapidly expend their stored bioluminescent chemicals when damaged once survival outside of a plant pot became an issue.
Das, I think Stowaways are related to Grapple Worms, but have evolved to be stationary predators, and also evolved their sticky tongues into the venomous tendrils that they hunt with. I also think that they could be a mature version of the Grapple Worms.
i like to imagine that leviathans are purposed organism created by the ancients to mimic the void worms the reason being the body structure (large , slim with many fins) with the head being a dead maschine. like what if there were anchients who wanted to talk to the echos like ask what ascention was like? was the anything? how does void fluid feel like? but mostly what did the void worms look like in order to make their own version of the void worm in another way to ascend (witch probably didnt end to well) witch is aslo why the leviathans eat everything its just doing what the ancients wanted of them
Games like Rain World really inspire me.
The creature designs are so simple yet creative and have helped me a lot with when designing my own fantasy creatures. And the way the world treats you like an actual part of the ecosystem instead of a main character is really cool.
While I haven’t finished the game yet I honestly can’t recommend it enough, very fun and challenging.
Great to finally see this come out, I've been looking forward to it. And i'm sure this will make its way on to my: "Really long videos to play in the background while I'm doing other stuff playlist" after I've given it a proper viewing first.
A theory on the caramel lizards: Due to green lasers being resistant to red lizard bites, caramel lizards may simply be a cross-breed species between the two who has managed to completely outcompete their green ancestors, most likely also because the green lizards were not cold resistant enough to survive the snowstorms.
19:30 grapple worms can stick on predators or other creatures meaning they may be paracitic or blood sucking
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO YEAAAAA BABYYY! THAT'S WHAT IVE BEEN WAITING FOR!!!! THATS WHAT ITS ALL ABOUT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
1:25:45 I think the slime molds might have been used to conduct electricity - They would essentially be completely self-repairing cables!
Red centipedes do actually live with smaller orange ones, you can see this in subterranean and pipeyard. They also don’t attack the other centipedes so I’d say it’s very likely that the red centipedes are the final growth stage of the more common centipedes. The reason you don’t see many of them would be that most centipedes simply don’t live long enough to reach that stage of their life.
Thank you for this, wasn’t expecting it but really glad you made it!
My theory with yellow lizards instead of radio signals could be vibrations, when a yellow lizard spots you it makes a weir noise and it wiggles it head, probably producing vibrations that the alpha can "translate" to the others
I feel like thay where made to be a living like long range radio for the ancients or itrators
Like that one ball in underhang I think has a ton it could be a short or long range radio that kinda just stopped working and the cretures decided to escape and use the antenna for pact tatics
I have a theory that orange lizards were made to act as temporary communication arrays when communication arrays were down.
21:26 wait the shelters are in some part organic?... wat
I think you missed this, but there also seems to be a morphological relationship between jetfish and vultures - a vulture with its mask off looks a **lot** like an overgrown jetfish, with the same two weird little mouthparts; the vulture's "wings" would then be more like an adapted form of the jetfish tentacles, and they both seem to be propelled through "jets" of fluid (water or pressurized gas). Given how much more "artificial" the vultures are, I think it's likely that jetfish are closer to the ancestral, less-modified form.
or maybe jetfish were meant to be the vultures of the sea but then evolved to become more passive
The name Slug Cat was adopted by the game dev himself back when it was just him working on a simple game. He made an entire devblog when he started the project in like 2012. Theres a video by Curios archive i think. He called them some kind of bear creature when someone commented on youtube "Slug Cat!" and he said we would never call them weird bear creatures again. Many of the animals have different features, that doesnt mean theyre anymore or anyless than what they are.
53:30 That, the fact there is a massive world we will never see, and that everyone in the game we see means nothing is very sad, and it made me depressed.
12:09 idk how, but I saw a lantern mouse in industrial next to a batfly. It wasn’t eating it though? Could’ve been because it’s mortally terrified of slugs, and I got too close.
"Written like this." "Affect the insects shown on screen."
Editor: And if I don't?
2 straight hours of fascinating enrapturing content. You've done it again Daszombes. Well done. Well Done.
I am once again calling for all to call the "spitter spider" by its one and only true name, the Taranquila
0:40
"Much better production"
*audible mouse click*
Was too funny not to mention. Great video! ❤
"Like most single mothers, the mother spider is not against killing bitches when its required..."
This absolutely murdered me