@@dudefrombelgium I keep dreaming of shootings, hard to explore the worlds I dream of. I dreamt of being on some kind of Mars like farmworld, but some damn kid made me play four square with him, so I never got to truly go exploring.
This video hits those feelings of sitting in my grandparents computer room in the mid to late 90s playing on the computer. I'll always cherish those memories.
Sometimes I feel sad that I just missed the 90s. I was born in 2000, and I'm a proud 2000s kid, but the 90s felt like such a different time. Simpler, surreal, and a lot easier to live in the moment. I wish I got to experience those things.
@@kouhai2456 It truly was amazing. I was born in 1988 so I grew up in the 90s. Everything you mention was true. Everyone was so excited for the future as tech was progressing. Experiencing the internet and computers in their infancy was like magic. I always imagined the 90s as how life would be in the future. Boy was I wrong and yearn to go back.
The names of all the art shown here: 0:00 Markus Matthias Krüger - Can't find the name but is in the book "Hortus" 0:06 Brent Wong - The Wandering Land (1974) 0:12 Brent Wong - Untitled (1973) 0:19 Brent Wong - Ruin A (1971) 0:25 Tomás Sánchez - Inner Lagoon...Thought-Cloud (2016) 0:32 Tomás Sánchez - Thought Cloud (2017) 0:39 Markus Matthias Krüger - Can't find the name but is in the book "Hortus" 0:45 Markus Matthias Krüger - Doppelwald (2020) 0:51 Brent Wong - Requiem (1971) 0:58 Brent Wong - Matrix (1971) Just so people know, I found the names of the art because the names of the artists were in this video's description
Thank you for your comment ! At the end of the video, I thought to myself, "I hope all of these were made by people, and aren't some IA slop." and you've reassured me.
A, you want more? Anxiety, extasy, horror, peace, serenity, despair, depress... Oh, you mean more . . . video? Well then, I . . . Excuse me, I misunderstood. 😊🤗
An infinite goldmine of harmony that I still have not heard anyone else talk about: Sliding a single chord around is the basis for quite a lot of cool music. Something I love is to take a full 7 note scale, copy that a 4th down on the next moment in your harmonic rhythm, and do that 2 times for 4 total scales each a 4th down from the previous. A very cool sound by itself, but you can invert them onto a different note as the 1 individually, making it sound a whole lot less like an obvious and angular cycle that jumps from place to place. (Which is very cool too) 4 total scales down the cycle of 4ths is just an example, but alongside 5ths, it is the smoothest option. You can do anything with this... Find the notes each scale has in common for diatonic stuff, omit things so you can reveal them later (let's say a jazzy solo), take note of the chromatic lines and stuff. You don't have to start the cycle on the 1st chord in your cycle or chunk thereof either, there's no end to the flexibility of this concept, and so many ways to connect it to other forms of harmony. See if you can work a blues scale into it if you're careful with which blues melody scale degree you play over the underlying shifting harmony scales, try that with an exotic one like double-harmonic too. You can overlap all the harmony scales at once and see which other scales are present within, that can be a melody scale if the tensions line up in a cool way with the tensions within how the harmony moves. Something really cool is to take the notes that also occur in the next scale and give them a big tail so you're basically blurring between key centers, this works exceptionally well with cycles of major and minor thirds, as they from a complete cycle quickly, meaning your last chord back to the 1st has the same consonant tails. (Tritone cycle loops even quicker, but that hardly provides the cycle effect) All of this is SOOOOO good for ambienty stuff like deephouse and jungle and stuff, those 2 are my favorites cause transposing sampled chords just like you did here is a staple with them, and these sounds are related to those. It can also however do FAR more dissonant yet still very structured things, excellent for complex mathy breakdowns.
As an intermediate-beginner musician I have no idea what you just said something to do with 4ths and 5ths which are like parts of the chord and diatonic
@poorlydrawn443 I might upload a quick demonstration at some point, basically the core of it is you take a major scale, then for the next chord, you take that same scale down a 4th or 5th
The first image reminds me of my earliest memories for some reason, the trees are how u see them as a child so big and spooky, also gives me a 60’s or 70’s Godzilla film vibe watched a lot as a kid, also lack of technology and the simpleness is relative. I really like the image.
Probably picked a scale and pitched the original sample around in that scale. It'll generally sound at least pretty good if it's not too odd of a scale, especially with how spaced out it is, it'll probably be pretty forgiving even if the scale isn't so compatible with the original melody, and for something like this, a bit of clash would be fitting.
Lol I just imagine the people there looking like regular humans, but moving like a stop motion animation and speaking with inconsistent accents that range from British, Canadian, Scottish, Swedish, Mexican, and so forth. "Oi! The baby is walking on the ceiling again! Grab 'ihm right quick in a hurry before Gravity Jones sees 'ihm, homes!"
me too. i think it has tgo do with the way we perceived world when we were a child, everything seemed new, big, even odd sometimes. i'm going through some weird times in my life right now and i'm starting to see things again with the eyes i once had. pure joy
Mostly dreams and vague memories of places you have experienced for the first time. The world appears bigger as a child, which I guess your brain remembers the sentiments you had and then kinda just mixes them with old dreams as well as old interpretations you had as a child, which just makes for one cool nostalgic emotion as an adult. That's my guess.
Apparently the guy who made this startup sound, Brian eno, made 10s of sounds like this when he was commissioned by Microsoft. Man, I'd love to hear the ones that didnt make the final cut.
The sounds and art style, the nostalgic feeling, I can smell the air, feel the emotions, that naive mindset of youth, free from all confusion as an adult, but only for a few seconds This shit a powerful drug
I’m just so glad these artists and others in the world also imagine these kinds of things. There’s something oddly cozy about these simple and strange landscapes
Oh God, I had these surrealist landscapes were like the dreams I had back in 2020! They so real, liminal, etc... I was like looking around and I thought there were people in the distance, it was creepy, but beautiful at the same time. I wish I could stay in these places longer. I'm actually crying right now...
the final image is my favorite i love images that have insanely huge objects that are super far away but yet so large they take up an insane chunk of the sky
seeing the image, hearing the pitch, then mentally explaining to myself how the two relate was so interesting. like “higher pitch for a cracked, towering building? yeah it looks like it deserves that.” its like the bouba-kiki thing!
Never thought I would say this but: that was way too short. Thanks for listing the painters. Interesting how similar their work appears. They mesh so well together.
They all look like early Brent Wong. There are many more of his works from his time in and around the Wellington area back in the '60s, capturing the essence of the place. Views from Titahi Bay, Iglton's farm looking north to Plimerton, Pukerua Bay and west to Mana island ... magic.
Omg thank you so much for taking the time to credit the artists used in this video as well! I see sooo many videos in all sorts of aesthetic driven internet subcultures treating art like stock images, removing the context and removing the avenue for people to look further into the artists work on their own. It's always nice to see cheers bruh xx
Wow, you must be a fan of large man-made objects. Possibly a career in cargo ship engineering or, possibly could tie into a resilience towards heights making you susceptible to even more job opportunities, my guy.
I can't describe how this video makes me feel, it's the same feeling I get from Wet-Dry World in Mario 64. There's something so strange and empty and yet somehow soothing about it.
Imagine if there was an anime film in 1990s Japan which was basically the Rene Magritte version of Mononoke Hime. And what you see in the video are some background cels of it.
This just feels downright unnerving. If this video was a word, the definition would be "You are the last soul alive. This dreamy landscape, the earth, the sun, the universe, it's yours... But, what does it matter..?"
The Windows 95 startup jingle will forever be amongst the greatest, most memorable tunes I've ever heard. There's so much 90s nostalgia surrounding it ❤
The only way i can explain these paintings using words is "early" With the lighting and the emptiness of the paintings make each feel like those early 2000's games, albiet abandoned
ive seen this all before, yet this is my first time seeing any of these paintings. my faint memories and dreams are collecting like raindrops in a gutter.
I want to explore these non existent imaginary landscapes
You can, just close your eyes and go there.
Like turning on noclip and exploring the cutscene maps.
Me too, me too.
@@dudefrombelgium I keep dreaming of shootings, hard to explore the worlds I dream of. I dreamt of being on some kind of Mars like farmworld, but some damn kid made me play four square with him, so I never got to truly go exploring.
try salvia
"The humans left this world long ago, yet we still feel their presence."
Not for long we won't not when the world is brimming with mother nature we won't
Imagine an open-world game where you explore a vast, dream-like landscapes like these.
Probably wouldn't even be hard to make in Unity. I'm sure Jacob Geller has already reviewed games with similar vibes to this.
You might like Sable, it's not open world but it's beautiful
ai trash f.u. to everyone involved
Not exactly this style, but Mind: Path to Thalamus comes to, well, mind. It's not open world, however (thankfully).
LSD dream emulator for PS1
This video hits those feelings of sitting in my grandparents computer room in the mid to late 90s playing on the computer. I'll always cherish those memories.
Sometimes I feel sad that I just missed the 90s. I was born in 2000, and I'm a proud 2000s kid, but the 90s felt like such a different time. Simpler, surreal, and a lot easier to live in the moment. I wish I got to experience those things.
@@kouhai2456 It truly was amazing. I was born in 1988 so I grew up in the 90s. Everything you mention was true. Everyone was so excited for the future as tech was progressing. Experiencing the internet and computers in their infancy was like magic. I always imagined the 90s as how life would be in the future. Boy was I wrong and yearn to go back.
wholesome comments :)
@@kouhai2456 I was born in 1985. It was truly a pleasure to grow up in the 90s and early 2000s.
your GRANDPARENTS had a COMPUTER ROOM?
It's beautiful, until you realize you can't find the exit door
I NEED EXIT- (read this in pomnis voice lo)
@@saffalaffalotskibidi sigma pomni gyatt gigachad rizz free fire fortnite chamba digital floo patrick Bateman jonkler
A L O N E
I don’t want one.
@@shreddedbagelwabiwabo8342 😭😭 what
The names of all the art shown here:
0:00 Markus Matthias Krüger - Can't find the name but is in the book "Hortus"
0:06 Brent Wong - The Wandering Land (1974)
0:12 Brent Wong - Untitled (1973)
0:19 Brent Wong - Ruin A (1971)
0:25 Tomás Sánchez - Inner Lagoon...Thought-Cloud (2016)
0:32 Tomás Sánchez - Thought Cloud (2017)
0:39 Markus Matthias Krüger - Can't find the name but is in the book "Hortus"
0:45 Markus Matthias Krüger - Doppelwald (2020)
0:51 Brent Wong - Requiem (1971)
0:58 Brent Wong - Matrix (1971)
Just so people know, I found the names of the art because the names of the artists were in this video's description
Did you find the names of the other ones?
@@interactiveverse1872 nope
@@interactiveverse1872 i pretty much just googled the artist's names listed in the description and google image search for this list
Well apparently Brent Wong is my new favorite artist?
Thank you for your comment ! At the end of the video, I thought to myself, "I hope all of these were made by people, and aren't some IA slop." and you've reassured me.
Some of these images would make good wallpapers for an old computer
*Some of these images would make good wallpapers
*Some of these images
*Some of these
*would
*Some
0:13 Tanks! I was searching my Airpods!
Thats one giant airpod.
Which tank
@@ElDiosMashiar😂
@@ElDiosMashiarThanks! without the h I assume.
@@ElDiosMashiar leopard 2
This gives me so many mixed emotions. Comfort, uneasiness, acceptance, calm, fear, joy...... more please.
A, you want more?
Anxiety, extasy, horror, peace, serenity, despair, depress...
Oh, you mean more . . . video?
Well then, I . . .
Excuse me, I misunderstood.
😊🤗
@@andrewscott985 yes
@@andrewscott985 nostalgia
this is called liminal spaces, you know that right?
degrence, nage, harfam, kyne, teluge, andric, dorcelessness
An infinite goldmine of harmony that I still have not heard anyone else talk about:
Sliding a single chord around is the basis for quite a lot of cool music. Something I love is to take a full 7 note scale, copy that a 4th down on the next moment in your harmonic rhythm, and do that 2 times for 4 total scales each a 4th down from the previous. A very cool sound by itself, but you can invert them onto a different note as the 1 individually, making it sound a whole lot less like an obvious and angular cycle that jumps from place to place. (Which is very cool too)
4 total scales down the cycle of 4ths is just an example, but alongside 5ths, it is the smoothest option. You can do anything with this... Find the notes each scale has in common for diatonic stuff, omit things so you can reveal them later (let's say a jazzy solo), take note of the chromatic lines and stuff. You don't have to start the cycle on the 1st chord in your cycle or chunk thereof either, there's no end to the flexibility of this concept, and so many ways to connect it to other forms of harmony.
See if you can work a blues scale into it if you're careful with which blues melody scale degree you play over the underlying shifting harmony scales, try that with an exotic one like double-harmonic too.
You can overlap all the harmony scales at once and see which other scales are present within, that can be a melody scale if the tensions line up in a cool way with the tensions within how the harmony moves.
Something really cool is to take the notes that also occur in the next scale and give them a big tail so you're basically blurring between key centers, this works exceptionally well with cycles of major and minor thirds, as they from a complete cycle quickly, meaning your last chord back to the 1st has the same consonant tails. (Tritone cycle loops even quicker, but that hardly provides the cycle effect)
All of this is SOOOOO good for ambienty stuff like deephouse and jungle and stuff, those 2 are my favorites cause transposing sampled chords just like you did here is a staple with them, and these sounds are related to those.
It can also however do FAR more dissonant yet still very structured things, excellent for complex mathy breakdowns.
Comments like this make me wish that TH-cam comments could be saved - even though I only understood a tiny fraction of what you said 😅
As an intermediate-beginner musician I have no idea what you just said
something to do with 4ths and 5ths which are like parts of the chord and diatonic
@poorlydrawn443 I might upload a quick demonstration at some point, basically the core of it is you take a major scale, then for the next chord, you take that same scale down a 4th or 5th
I appreciate that you went the extra mile and gave it a chord progression
souhlasím!
It sounds a bit like some Scott Walker songs
You have just brought back nostalgia into my eyes.I'm weeping right now. I don't wanna live in windows 11 I want to live in windows 95.
The theme that turns Windows 11 into Windows 95:
I get that. Windows 11 is a scam
i WANT TO LIVE INSIDE THIS VIDEO
Me too
Me three
I feel unsafe
Me four
Me five
The first image reminds me of my earliest memories for some reason, the trees are how u see them as a child so big and spooky, also gives me a 60’s or 70’s Godzilla film vibe watched a lot as a kid, also lack of technology and the simpleness is relative. I really like the image.
Why does this sound like actual music... I'd listen to this on loop. It's literally so cool how one startup sound made some pretty cool music.
Boi do I have news for you: there's a breakcore edition
Probably picked a scale and pitched the original sample around in that scale. It'll generally sound at least pretty good if it's not too odd of a scale, especially with how spaced out it is, it'll probably be pretty forgiving even if the scale isn't so compatible with the original melody, and for something like this, a bit of clash would be fitting.
@@Aeduo Being someone who works with music, that was very interesting.
@@LunarFlareStudios oh you probably know way more than me then. I just fart around on a guitar and watch random TH-cam videos.
There's an hour long ambient version of this sound here on youtube and it's such a vibe
0:39 This is a real place in Bosnia
Where?
@@Omnidimensial 43°58'37"N 18°10'35"E
@@MoloIongo thanks
It’s called pyramid of the sun and I have no idea if it’s man made or natural
It's not, it's a painting. Also enough with the damn "sun pyramids", the guy that first started marketing them to tourists is a known fraud.
0:59 looks so much like on of the dreams I had as a kid it’s scary. Everything from the landscape to the ominous floating shape in the sky
you have some wild dreams--in the best way possible
Did you ever hear about "geometric night terrors" thing? I think it`s very similar
I think that weird thing in the sky literally looks like a Roblox character what a star shaped back accessory
please make art
You already have the most important ingredient
You just need one skill to make your dreamed visions intersect with reality
@@quary7912 duuuude you just made me discover what I've been having during childhood, thank you for this
I got the uneasy feeling that something is gonna walk past each scene, with no care for your existence
youtube is giving me theese comments on a completly different video. I just want to see what happens when I make a comment
Windows 95 startup is one of the best sounds ever
PS2 is a good competitor
Microsoft really cooked with the startup sounds
Thank the legend Brian Eno
@@costa-w3k Yes, even better
This is amazing. The mental shift that takes place when watching/listening to the music/visuals…words are useless for describing such things
I would love to live in that first one. That wooded area is oddly fascinating despite being far from the weirdest one showcased.
I think the disregard for realistic scale kinda describes what’s going on, it’s super interesting
Lol I just imagine the people there looking like regular humans, but moving like a stop motion animation and speaking with inconsistent accents that range from British, Canadian, Scottish, Swedish, Mexican, and so forth.
"Oi! The baby is walking on the ceiling again! Grab 'ihm right quick in a hurry before Gravity Jones sees 'ihm, homes!"
i can't find a good highres source for this image. my day is ruined
@@FeterPrahm dude same.. I know its from markus Mathias Krüger but I dont know the tittle and dont know where to find it
It reminds me of My neighbor Totoro
Those giant trees always wake up the explorer inside me
These surreal place sgive me childhood vibes and idk why, all I want is to explore these images
me too. i think it has tgo do with the way we perceived world when we were a child, everything seemed new, big, even odd sometimes. i'm going through some weird times in my life right now and i'm starting to see things again with the eyes i once had. pure joy
total eerie, i really love the first one.. "how did it get there?"
Mostly dreams and vague memories of places you have experienced for the first time. The world appears bigger as a child, which I guess your brain remembers the sentiments you had and then kinda just mixes them with old dreams as well as old interpretations you had as a child, which just makes for one cool nostalgic emotion as an adult. That's my guess.
Why does it do that? It's beautiful
They also look like history/nature book illustrations
Apparently the guy who made this startup sound, Brian eno, made 10s of sounds like this when he was commissioned by Microsoft. Man, I'd love to hear the ones that didnt make the final cut.
"the guy who made this startup sound"? More respect for one of the greatest icons in the history of 20th-century popular music, please
apparently they were made on a Mac too
apparently he made them on a Mac too
they say he created them on a Mac, too
As it seems he crafted these on a Mac as well
The sounds and art style, the nostalgic feeling, I can smell the air, feel the emotions, that naive mindset of youth, free from all confusion as an adult, but only for a few seconds
This shit a powerful drug
This shit is like terrifying and comforting all at the same time.
immaculate vibes, thank you algorithm
What a unique vibe this gives
I’m just so glad these artists and others in the world also imagine these kinds of things. There’s something oddly cozy about these simple and strange landscapes
Surrealism just touches.. something deep under my mind.
The thing I love about these types of images is that I could explore here for days and still be nowhere close to exploring all of it.
They all just look like a Studio Ghibli fever dream
The first image kickstarted a nostalgic memory of my great grandfather’s farm of when I was maybe 4 years old in the early 2000s…simpler times
this is literally something i dream of. i feel like i've been inside each of these paintings in many different dreams.
Oh God, I had these surrealist landscapes were like the dreams I had back in 2020! They so real, liminal, etc... I was like looking around and I thought there were people in the distance, it was creepy, but beautiful at the same time. I wish I could stay in these places longer. I'm actually crying right now...
These artworks are really sweet. Makes me want to fall asleep so I can explore them
Man those paintings are amazing!
I had initially assumed they were AI generated, but yeah, the video description seems to be listing human authors
the final image is my favorite
i love images that have insanely huge objects that are super far away but yet so large they take up an insane chunk of the sky
The clouds and the hazy sky are so beautiful.
0:59 I feel like ive sen this in a dream or something before
You havent
@@Hakhoumbha who are u lil bro
me too
Too much drugs brothers
Ideal feelings of surrealism. Where it feels familiar, but you know it’s not. A feeling so complex that it doesn’t quite have a name
The images are eerily familiar. It's almost like I've been in those places before, or have seen them in my dreams.
I had the same feeling. So odd.
I always keep coming back to this video. I cannot stop watching it. It encapsulates my ideal world.
how did the youtube algorithm know to show me this glorious thing
It's reserved for the illuminati who watch too much TH-cam
seeing the image, hearing the pitch, then mentally explaining to myself how the two relate was so interesting. like “higher pitch for a cracked, towering building? yeah it looks like it deserves that.” its like the bouba-kiki thing!
Looks like a mix of Dali's liminal spacing of his paintings and Magritte's absurd and irrational imagery, I like it!
also like Tomás Sánchez
@@BenjiFriedman Actually two of those are Tomás Sánchez, the time stamps are in the description
These landscapes give me chills
I love that start up noise . Where the colors were vibrant , the air crisp and clean . The excitement of youth and nothing but hope for the future .
Never thought I would say this but: that was way too short. Thanks for listing the painters.
Interesting how similar their work appears. They mesh so well together.
The thing is,, I’ve had dreams about random huge objects in the sky. This captures it well
Broccoli looking trees, cloud shadows, mountains you can sprint up, and endless meadows and moors to run around in. Very dreamlike. 😌
all of these were nice (especially with the W95 chime) but that last Brent Wong piece really got me, I even felt chills :0
They all look like early Brent Wong. There are many more of his works from his time in and around the Wellington area back in the '60s, capturing the essence of the place. Views from Titahi Bay, Iglton's farm looking north to Plimerton, Pukerua Bay and west to Mana island ... magic.
imagine being alone forever in this world
0:52 is the most scary. When I was a kid, I had a hard time looking at paintings with blackish horizons and bad weather, like some evil lurking there.
Just imagine, all of these places do exist. Somewhere there, out of this universe, but the definitely do exist.
dont delude yourself
@@AhmadIbnAbdelno, even from a scientific viewpoint it's possible.
Yes!
Not really
@@gildanonofyabiznez6430 That's what YOU say!
Ah yes, the 90s, where the family computer was eclipsing the phone and television as the most important appliance in the home.
I love the calm emptiness of these paintings. A lot of my dreams are like that. An undisturbed landscape of stillness.
Omg thank you so much for taking the time to credit the artists used in this video as well! I see sooo many videos in all sorts of aesthetic driven internet subcultures treating art like stock images, removing the context and removing the avenue for people to look further into the artists work on their own. It's always nice to see cheers bruh xx
It reminds me of the paintings that were in my late grandmother's house, it was something like this
0:33 POV: You noticed you were getting older in the mirror
I don’t get it
@@Goofy.burgerfr
I’m pretty sure they mean it like your the cloud looking at the grass and imagine it as a mirror or something
0:13 i really like this painting. I would love to have that hung on my wall.
It looks awful. Nothing meshes. Just looks like everything is copy and pasted. You could probably do it yourself…
@@komando8365 I'm pretty sure you could say that with most surrealist works
That's by far the worst. But taste is subjective
Looks kind of like an abstract C and balls, floating in the sky.
Or is that why you like it?
Wow, you must be a fan of large man-made objects. Possibly a career in cargo ship engineering or, possibly could tie into a resilience towards heights making you susceptible to even more job opportunities, my guy.
those images give me the suffocating feeling of comfort
I love this so much those Forrests are just so amazing idk why
I can't describe how this video makes me feel, it's the same feeling I get from Wet-Dry World in Mario 64. There's something so strange and empty and yet somehow soothing about it.
This invoke some great childhood nostalgia inside me
These paintings are beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing
soothing, nostalgic, vaguely threatening.
Why these landscapes are so beautiful?
The music is beautiful too and along with the images it looks like a good dream.
When ever I hear the windows startup sound I picture green green grass,blue blue sky, and a park in the background. When I think of it it makes me cry
These images give me chills and at the same time amaze me
These locations from SPORE Space Adventures are really beautiful 😍
The one with the volcano on the 0:13 second mark trips up my gigantophobia
This video reminded me of my youth and the sound made me cry😭
0:19 That exact structure was in one of my dreams
The destroyed building or the floating thing over the volcano?
@@CaptCovfefe515 destroyed building
I feel like I've seen 0:57 on a road trip before
@@mistersphere1most normal looking one here tbh
Krüger is by far my most favorite painter, thank you for exposing me to 2 more artists!
Imagine if there was an anime film in 1990s Japan which was basically the Rene Magritte version of Mononoke Hime. And what you see in the video are some background cels of it.
What was it called?
How... Oddly specific??
Those are the exact vibes I got from this.
That would Kill the vibe for me.
There's no vast forests to defend. A few hills at best.
You can't be liminal and be teaming with life.
@@wikipediaintellectual7088 *teeming
I could happily watch this for hours. Shame there isn't more of this kind of stuff on TH-cam. Perfect for settling down to bed with.
This just feels downright unnerving. If this video was a word, the definition would be "You are the last soul alive. This dreamy landscape, the earth, the sun, the universe, it's yours... But, what does it matter..?"
Alpha minecraft vibes
The Windows 95 startup jingle will forever be amongst the greatest, most memorable tunes I've ever heard. There's so much 90s nostalgia surrounding it ❤
The only way i can explain these paintings using words is "early"
With the lighting and the emptiness of the paintings make each feel like those early 2000's games, albiet abandoned
They remind me of 80s sci-fi novel cover art
Gives me Dreamcore
Looks more like the classic surrealist paintings in the 1920s
As someone whose childhood was the early 2000s I only know of one game that slightly matches that description.
What specifically are you referring to?
@@wikipediaintellectual7088 my brain makes me subconsciously remember active worlds while looking at those paintings
0:13 really got me feeling different
I've seen this painting in person in Auckland! It's a stunner
@@oliverscarlini love this piece, do you know the name of it?
Spaceship ❤️👽
Yah, the very first note 🥲
@@atraeu Its untitled but if you look up "Brent Wong Balloon" it'll come up
ive seen this all before, yet this is my first time seeing any of these paintings. my faint memories and dreams are collecting like raindrops in a gutter.
How you can see my dreams 💀💀
Thank you so much for crediting the artists! I want to go chedk out Wong's stuff.
Brent Wong, creator of dreamcore
How is this so eerily beautiful? Sublime.
this makes me want to cry for some reason
Stuff like This taps into that human nature to explore. I can’t express how much I want to go to these places and try to understand the world
Somehow these looks like illustrations in all of my old science books, and yet none of them at the same time
That was the vibe I felt when I heard this 95 startup, it's literally a sound that evokes surreal feelings and sensations
These pics softly touch something deeply in my soul.
These paintings are so my vibe. Thank you algorithm for recommending this video
Niceeee, never seen those pictures before, but really like them!
Watching this scratched a part of my brain that I didn’t even know I had.
I liked this video and TH-cam immediately began pitching me ads for a “psychic love advisor.” Somehow that feels right.
This video just filled the wallpaper folder of someone still using Windows 95 in 2024
you have officially gave me a game idea
Same here
@@Omnidimensial send me the game when you're done if ever :3
(i dont think ill ever finish)
@@e__eggfinish it pls
I have too much going on rn and I'm a lil stressed. I'll try.
@@e__egg I’ll never finish either
"Change Da world, My final message, goodbye."
Reminds me those good old days...
Man why are all these nostalgic and feel like ive been to these places before i definitely for sure would love to be stuck in any if these places
If people are a fan of this style of art, I recommend checking out artists Jacek Yerka and Vladimir Kush
Thank you for the recommendations, really opened my eyes