tell me, please. i came here from from the warband video where he mentioned people telling him something about sseth's dakimakura. what's special about them?
RussianBadger's gang did the banana joke. Pretty sure it was Scottish Koala who did it: "If you eat 40,000 bananas in 10 minutes, you'll die of radioactive poisoning." "Ah yes, the radiation would kill you!"
Potassium got its name from potash, a term that comes from an early production technique where potassium was leached from wood ashes and concentrated by evaporating the leachate in large iron pots.
I remember my last run in Qud, I was a transdimensional mind vampire that was incapable of physically interacting with the world, but grew in power by consuming the minds of others. It was extremely broken as next to nothing could hurt me and I'd just follow them around and reach my ethereal claws into their skull and pull out bits of their very identity to consume. That is, until a Seeker tracked me down, psychically forced me into the physical dimension, put me to sleep, and overwrote my consciousness with their own.
The lore of this game is straight like Warhammer 40k with humans and aliens fight each other and they ally with gods and betray each other kind of like how necrons did with C'tans.
I mean, you're not wrong about metric being better for most measurements. That said, even we in the US don't really use drams for anything common. I'd never even heard of it until I saw this review.
As an American who had to deal with some science classes we use both grams and liters and are suppose to learn how to convert them. So most people who at least remember those classes should be fine with either.
'Dram', not 'gram'. A gram is a unit of mass, a dram is one of volume. Unless of course you are suffering a case of overzealous autocorrect. Then I apologize for wasting your attention with this comment.
If you like the Anunnaki conspiracy you'd love what was shown just before it "the time cube", there's an awesome "down the rabbit hole" vid by Fredrik Knudsen. some wacky guy for some reason thinks the structure of time is somehow cubical and tries to prove it to an auditorium full of college students.
Ssethtzeentach just portraited what will happend if you let a Alpha Plus psyker to become a god without the limitation of his human body or daemons to haunt them and try to eat their souls.
@@dragonandavatarfan8865 DID YOU KNOW ALIENS BUILT THE STATUE OF LBERTY IN THEIR IMAGE!? LEARN MORE ABOUT THIS DISTURBING REVELATION TONIGHT ON HISTORY CHANNEL AT 3PM
i wonder if we will get the lords of magic special edition video one day,its easier to get it to run on windows 10 and play it then getting jack to watch it,wich is weirder is teh fact that he watched other strategy games before
I love this game. Most of Sseths' expoits have been fixed, it has been a wild ride seeing the changes and improvements. Anyways, here are the easiest functional new ways to break the in-game economy: go to the moon stair and collect warm static, create a sludge with primordial soup and a single dram of a rare liquid (except neutron flux) to spit the dilute liquid (is still worth a lot), or get tinker 3 and data disks to tinker hand nuke grenades, those cost a way more than the consumed resources.
I know I'm late to the party here, but just wanna say, to your end remark: This game only can be so complex and interesting because of the lack of graphics. It is just not feasable to create all the effects, animations, models that would cover the crazy stuff that is happening. This game taps into something way more powerful than good looking graphics, it makes your fantasy go wild and after you play for a bit and stick with it, you don't care for the looks, its just the medium to convey the story, like letters and words in a book, they invoke the images in your head, if you allow it.
In America we sell weed by both grams and pounds. 1/8th ("an eighth") is 3.7 grams. In American manufacturing (specifically machining), we invented our own decimal system based on the .001" or "thou," short for thousandth of an inch We refuse to be stopped.
Thousandth inch... that would explain the trend in the adult video industry when you have to measure with a unity that small... My slightly below average tool feels like a titan...
You talking about the Annunaki reminded me of a particularly wackadoo conspiracy theory I saw involving all that. _(I wish I didn't need to preface this such, but people can be pretty dense; I obviously don't believe this nonsense, I just think it's funny.)_ The theory posited that the St. Louis Arch is actually a piece of ancient Egyptian technology, given to the US, and that the legs of the arch actually connect all the way down to the Earth's core. There was a whole sub-conspiracy about Truman hiding the operation of tunneling to the core. Why do this? Apparently, when the Arch is activated, it blasts a beam of energy harvested from the Earth's core into the sun, in order to "recharge" it so the sun can continue burning and sustaining life on Earth. When the Arch is activated, the massive discharge of energy would wipe out a huge chunk of the country's population, but this is a necessary sacrifice to keep all life on Earth going. The 'shadow government' keeps this mass-death a secret to prevent widespread panic. Coronal mass ejections are supposedly a sign that the sun is running out of steam, and needs to be recharged, and since scientists have been observing CME, that means the Arch will need to be fired sometime in the relative future, and thus people in the US need to start moving out of the country to escape the collateral zone. You mentioning the Annunaki just reminded me of that.
I completely agree about the imperial system. Sadly after so long it’s been ingrained into our Society. Not an easy task as the government would receive massive backlash if they tried to switch everything over.
To be fair, all systems of measurement are arbitrary, including the metric system. The metric system is, however, _evenly_ arbitrary, because it was purpose built, whereas other systems of measurement like Imperial were more "make it up as you go along". There's an old English unit for area, called an oxgang, which is defined as "the amount of land a ox can plow in a plowing season" which is around 15 acres. Completely practical for the local application, but when start applying it globally/countrywide in the modern world... There's another obsolete unit measurement that was used in my country, Serbia. It's called "tovar", and is defined as "the amount of weight one horse could carry (comfortably, presumably)". See? Practical back then, not so much today. There's a reason Metric has become standard. It's superior, absolutely, but other measurements were stupid or anything. They were measurements made up from things an average person could understand, and for most of human history exact measurements for most applications weren't necessary. Modern technology needs far stricter measurements than technology of even only 500 years ago did. To make a mill, you don't really have to get the part to the exact measurements, as long as they fit together, stay together, and are easy to maintain. I'm just saying this because even I, who absolutely does find people in the modern day using Imperial to be ridiculous, can still appreciate Imperial for what it is, and why it was invented. Just to say categorically that Imperial is just a stupid system that makes no sense is untrue, and ultimately disrespectful to previous generations. Previous generations were no dumber than we are and it always bugged me when modern people think their superior to those that came before them and think they are the smartest generation to ever live. (Not saying you're claiming that... I just, you know, a lot of people do come to the conclusion that Imperial is bad through that reasoning).
I know this is old but you should know we use both imperial and metric in the U.S., and they both work perfectly fine lol, you just aren't used to one of them Chill P.S. drugs use both, we measure in grams and ounces before we get to kilos, and a pound comes before that, hence selling "eigths" and "quarters", referring to an eight and quarter of an *ounce* respectively Also I'm pretty sure Bill Nye the Science Guy pulled a cup of lava out of a microwave once
Both systems work but one works better and it's pointless and confusing to have 2 different systems for the same thing. This message brought to you by metric gang
This is game is just alot of things, and i find it very good for the game, no its more of a simulation than a game, this is no game. And thats how i describe it being a quality video game cuz its much more of a game, for simplicty sake a complex game. Though unfortunately this will consume alot of ur time, i tried playing it and i quickly get a jist of the mechanics as seth said it will become second nature. Good complex game but as i said too much content for me, i more a multi tasking person when it comes to having fun in video games.
Hey, so, um... Will you ever watch more of Liam Vickers Animation's Animations? You obviously enjoyed Cliffside, so I presume that you will enjoy Internecion Cube (and Murder Drones) as well.
The imperial system and the metric system are good for different purposes. Lbs, degrees farenheight, feet and inches, gallons, and ounces are all very useful for day to day use. Lbs are a lot better for weighing yourself than kg. For medical farenheit is a lot more precise, and it's also more useful for getting an accurate idea of the temperature out (since it's over twice as precise as celsius). Feet and inches are way more useful when doing construction, than metric because all of the measurements are based on relative sizes. Meters are too large and centimeters are too small. For scientific measurements, metric is always superior, but for anything related to day to day life, the imperial system is better. Drams are totally worthless though and so are about half of all imperial measurements, no one uses most of them.
You can just use decimals if celsius is too big and you will never eyeball it when doing construction so you can just use decimetres if centimeter feels too small for whatever reason. Kilograms are also not unpractical in any way. It might just be that you are used to pound which makes it innately more useful and sensical. Also, why would anyone use celsius when you can use kelvin.
@@ardabaser1349 I'm quite familiar with both systems, my job used to be calibrating many different kinds of tools, which forced me to learn both quite well. No one really uses decimeters and they're also not really a useful size. Yes, you can always use decimals, but that doesn't make the numbers easy to work with. You could easily say the same for the imperial system though. You could equal any value just by using fractions or decimals. The difference is in what each system is based on. The metric system is very scientifically oriented, and it was created to be based on easily defined and repeatable measurements. The Imperial system was created to be relative to people and how they could use those numbers. Being very familiar with both, I'm saying that it's simply easier to recognize the difference between 99 f being a little warm and 100 f being a slight fever than 36.2 and 37.8. It's not a matter of one being necessarily more valid than the other, but the threshold of 99 to 100 is easier to track than a different of .555... (.6 rounded). That's because, while decimals aren't really any different, most people work a lot better in whole numbers, multiples of integers (especially of 2). I don't know why that is, but that doesn't change that it is. It's probably something to do with how we learn to remember. For length measurements, the imperial system was based on sizes that were relative to the rough average size of people, and of things that were useful in daily life. The metric system based it's units on the size of a a cube of a certain volume of water when frozen. It has great proportionality for scientific or precise measurements, but the lack of proportionality to the rough average size of a person makes it less useful for day to day usage. A stair step is 8 inches, 2/3 (a simple fraction) of a ft, a doorway is 3ft, 3 & 1/2 ft, or 4ft wide typically, dinner plates are usually 8 inches or 1ft across roughly, railings are 3 & 1/2 or 4ft high, yard fences are 5ft (short enough to see and talk over, tall enough to stop most animals), etc. Now, you can take all of those as fractions or decimals of a meter, but why would you when there's a system designed to already be roughly proportional to humans? The numbers have had centuries of user testing to average the measurements out until a full standard was adopted - I can't explain why they work out so well in daily life except to say they simply do. In my current job if measurements come up it's always in metric - I really don't have a particular favoritism or bias of one or the other, but having used both frequently for years, I have simply found that they are equally useful in different ways.
@@GRIMHOOD99 Did you happen to read my reply to the previous comment? Yes, I live in America, but I'm equally familiar with the metric system and whenever measurments come up involving my current job it's always metric. I've had to use both side by side in prior jobs. I like the metric system. I also like the imperial system. I just like them for different purposes. There are valid reasons to use both depending on the circumstance because they were created with different frames of reference. The metric system was based on specific physical properties, which is why it's fantastic for precise measurements and scientific uses. The imperial system was created relative to measurements that are common and useful in day to day life.
I can't really see Imperial system as more practical for everyday life. Though, I live in a country with metric system. So, Imperial system seems to me disproportionate, where 1 foot consists of 12 inches, 1 yard of 3 feet and mile of 1760 yard. while in metric systems 1000 millimeters equal to 1 meter and 1000 meters makes for a 1 kilometer. Or 1 meter is equal to 100 sentimeters/10 decimeters. Same with mass - 1000 grams is 1 kilogram. 1000 kilograms is 1 tonne. There are also centners of 100 kilograms. In Imp. system we operate by ounces and pounds. One pound consinsts of 16 ounces. Yes, these units of measurement were formed from human sizes and all sorts of masses of stones, but they are disordered. Different units of measurement are made up of different values of other units of measurement. As for temperature, in Celsius the temperature of melting ice/triple point of water is taken as zero. While in Fahrenheit, zero is the temperature of a mixture of water, ammonia and table salt, measured in a particularly cold winter in Danzig in 1709.
I mean don't worry buddy we all agree the imperial system sucks but its what we're taught and its what everything is measured in so most of the time we only have so much choice lol. The metric system is just easier and smarter most people that use either system have that figured out the country just demands the imperial system out of us lmao
'System just doesn't work' But it does, you might not have grown up with the system and thus you haven't seen how beneficial it actually is to every day life; there is a reason you don't use metric clocks or metric degrees.
SI is objectively better than Imperial and way clearer when it comes to unit conversion. It'd not the size of each unit, but the proportional relation between units.
@@pirig-gal Yeah, for industrial and scientific pursuits. Both Britain and the US use metric for these areas but the Imperial system is still used for everyday situations because the units are based on the human experience. What use is a single gram in your every day life compared to an ounce? Imperial is not meant for precision but communication; a mile is not a distance based on the rest of the universe but how far a person can walk.
@@johnbraithwaite863 It's a matter of being used to it. If I had to use Imperial I'd have a hard time imagining an ounce, or a mile. SI is much better when it comes to doing maths, since everything is base-10. And since in Imperial you use, for example, thousands of an inch, it's not really a matter of precision either.
@@pirig-gal You can walk a mile at a casual pace in 20 minutes, half a mile in 10. Time itself is imperial, you can rough count seconds by listening to your heartbeat. An ounce is about a small spoons worth of food.
@@pirig-gal I do agree that metric is better for mathematics; I have been in the STEM field for a decade, I use metric everyday (I would rather everything be base 12 instead of 10) but you can't just keep writing off imperial as backwards because you don't understand it's place, not to mention it's a cultural artifact of our history and people.
I'm sorry but that tirade about grams is so off, 1 littler(1000 milliliters) of water equals 1 kg(1000 grams), so 1gram = 1 milliliter. Were you thinking about something else while talking about grams? Also 1 liter of different substances has different wait. I think water was used as a base, as well as when they used to put 0 ºC when water freezes.
It wasn't a comparaison of metrics range, but instead of how overly complicated other system need to be. And yeah, 1 lifter og water i 1 Kg because the density of water is set to 1000 kg/ m^3
I mean, yeah, there are. I went to several as a kid. That being said, with the 32k Protestant spin offs of the 12 or so Roman Catholic spin offs of the Orthodox Church it’s not even statistically unlikely, since those 32k denominations are basically just “yo I disagree with that mfer, so imma start my own church”. Most of those 32k denominations believe Christianity didn’t *really* begin until 1500-1800, so they’re not too interested in grasping historical nuance or contemplating vast expanses of time since the validity of their faith is inherently tied to their ability to “verify” the Bible’s historicity using the “scientific method”™️. They shoulda just read the early church fathers, but they can barely read the Bible.
"I broke a concrete wall, I lost a concrete friend" is probably the funniest, yet most sad things I heard Seth say
"Cat girl pillows"
Alright who's gonna tell him?
He doesn’t know PepeLaugh
tell me, please. i came here from from the warband video where he mentioned people telling him something about sseth's dakimakura. what's special about them?
@@zigaoberstar1039 there's a reason why he called them "androgynous"
@@zigaoberstar1039 their is a reason astolfo is one of them same with Felix from re zero,
@@zigaoberstar1039 The character in that dakimakura is from the anime Re Zero, the rest is up to you.
RussianBadger's gang did the banana joke. Pretty sure it was Scottish Koala who did it:
"If you eat 40,000 bananas in 10 minutes, you'll die of radioactive poisoning."
"Ah yes, the radiation would kill you!"
Yup
same with almonds
if i'm not wrong, they contain uranium or something the like
@@axhen not uranium, they contain cyanide
@@Guille2033 ooooh i forgot which one of the 2 it was
I could watch Jack react to the madness of the internet all day. Lol.
Make Jack read wolf apologize ......
Honestly speaking CoQ is a shit ton of fun and I keep coming back to it.
Same
Too bad the graphics are straight out of 1945
@@chromosomedcollector I mean, it's more like 1985
@@chromosomedcollector yeah, they look so outdated, it's almost like the developers wanted the game to look like that.
@@DR3ADNOUGHT the developers must be fucking idiots then
Alright, as an American, I can assure you, well over 99.5% of the population doesn't know what a dram is.
"Cat girl pillows"
Uhhhh... None of those are girls mate...
That's the best part.
@@ST0AT
AYO
No no, " _Androgynous_ body pillows." Very different.
Yeah. Catgirl pillows...
To be fair, I didn't know a dram was a real unit of measurement until this video. So I guess the dev is the only one that uses that
The dev conversation with a slight change of tint to show the two people talking is a nice touch.
This game is the visual representation of doing acid while drunk
16:45 we don't use drams either, it's entirely outdated as a unit for anything other than maybe whiskey.
Jack is into Annunaki. I don't know whether to be surprised, hyped, or terrified.
Potassium got its name from potash, a term that comes from an early production technique where potassium was leached from wood ashes and concentrated by evaporating the leachate in large iron pots.
That's very interesting I always thought it had something to do with potatos
In my opinion this is the best sseth video ever
Never even knew what a dram was until I watched Sseth's video. Nobody in America uses it. I don't think anyone in the world uses it.
You need to check his dwarf fortress review. I highly recommend it
I remember my last run in Qud, I was a transdimensional mind vampire that was incapable of physically interacting with the world, but grew in power by consuming the minds of others. It was extremely broken as next to nothing could hurt me and I'd just follow them around and reach my ethereal claws into their skull and pull out bits of their very identity to consume.
That is, until a Seeker tracked me down, psychically forced me into the physical dimension, put me to sleep, and overwrote my consciousness with their own.
"You've got to admit the system just doesn't work."
Thankfully, they taught Math at my public school.
The lore of this game is straight like Warhammer 40k with humans and aliens fight each other and they ally with gods and betray each other kind of like how necrons did with C'tans.
ah yes, cat"girl" pillows
I mean, you're not wrong about metric being better for most measurements. That said, even we in the US don't really use drams for anything common. I'd never even heard of it until I saw this review.
As an American who had to deal with some science classes we use both grams and liters and are suppose to learn how to convert them. So most people who at least remember those classes should be fine with either.
'Dram', not 'gram'. A gram is a unit of mass, a dram is one of volume.
Unless of course you are suffering a case of overzealous autocorrect. Then I apologize for wasting your attention with this comment.
@@AncientShotgun I don't know what the hell a dram is as an american
@@crispylizard4348 I'm from the Caribbean and I don't know either so don't feel to bad
If you like the Anunnaki conspiracy you'd love what was shown just before it "the time cube", there's an awesome "down the rabbit hole" vid by Fredrik Knudsen. some wacky guy for some reason thinks the structure of time is somehow cubical and tries to prove it to an auditorium full of college students.
Ssethtzeentach just portraited what will happend if you let a Alpha Plus psyker to become a god without the limitation of his human body or daemons to haunt them and try to eat their souls.
So... The Emperor?
Ancient alien theorists frustrate me to no end, no helped by the history channel and it’s insane program.
"Theorists"?
@@platogkrone7161 Yes. Those who form theories; given to theory and speculation.
History Channel after 3pm: A L I E N S
@@dragonandavatarfan8865 DID YOU KNOW ALIENS BUILT THE STATUE OF LBERTY IN THEIR IMAGE!? LEARN MORE ABOUT THIS DISTURBING REVELATION TONIGHT ON HISTORY CHANNEL AT 3PM
They do have some fun ideas to use in worldbuilding as a writer. Gotta give credit where credit is due.
Ah, a fellow SG-1 Afficionado
Bro that conspiracy sounds like a fate spin off plot point.
The annunaki shit is basically just Americanized Gnosticism, and the Japanese apparently love Gnostic shit so yeah it’s not too surprising lol
i wonder if we will get the lords of magic special edition video one day,its easier to get it to run on windows 10 and play it then getting jack to watch it,wich is weirder is teh fact that he watched other strategy games before
I love this game. Most of Sseths' expoits have been fixed, it has been a wild ride seeing the changes and improvements.
Anyways, here are the easiest functional new ways to break the in-game economy: go to the moon stair and collect warm static, create a sludge with primordial soup and a single dram of a rare liquid (except neutron flux) to spit the dilute liquid (is still worth a lot), or get tinker 3 and data disks to tinker hand nuke grenades, those cost a way more than the consumed resources.
Americans dont even use the dram lmaooo
I know I'm late to the party here, but just wanna say, to your end remark: This game only can be so complex and interesting because of the lack of graphics. It is just not feasable to create all the effects, animations, models that would cover the crazy stuff that is happening. This game taps into something way more powerful than good looking graphics, it makes your fantasy go wild and after you play for a bit and stick with it, you don't care for the looks, its just the medium to convey the story, like letters and words in a book, they invoke the images in your head, if you allow it.
Oh, that isn't a cat *girl*.
I hate it when devs patch out fun stuff.
Sorry.
"Cat GIRLS" ?
girls, huh.
In America we sell weed by both grams and pounds. 1/8th ("an eighth") is 3.7 grams.
In American manufacturing (specifically machining), we invented our own decimal system based on the .001" or "thou," short for thousandth of an inch
We refuse to be stopped.
Thousandth inch... that would explain the trend in the adult video industry when you have to measure with a unity that small... My slightly below average tool feels like a titan...
You talking about the Annunaki reminded me of a particularly wackadoo conspiracy theory I saw involving all that.
_(I wish I didn't need to preface this such, but people can be pretty dense; I obviously don't believe this nonsense, I just think it's funny.)_
The theory posited that the St. Louis Arch is actually a piece of ancient Egyptian technology, given to the US, and that the legs of the arch actually connect all the way down to the Earth's core.
There was a whole sub-conspiracy about Truman hiding the operation of tunneling to the core.
Why do this? Apparently, when the Arch is activated, it blasts a beam of energy harvested from the Earth's core into the sun, in order to "recharge" it so the sun can continue burning and sustaining life on Earth.
When the Arch is activated, the massive discharge of energy would wipe out a huge chunk of the country's population, but this is a necessary sacrifice to keep all life on Earth going.
The 'shadow government' keeps this mass-death a secret to prevent widespread panic.
Coronal mass ejections are supposedly a sign that the sun is running out of steam, and needs to be recharged, and since scientists have been observing CME, that means the Arch will need to be fired sometime in the relative future, and thus people in the US need to start moving out of the country to escape the collateral zone.
You mentioning the Annunaki just reminded me of that.
"Minecraft the lava with your hands"
"Nahhhh"
"Yeh"
"Nahhhhhh"
"Yeh"
16:42 We split the atom using imperial, suck my unites.
BTW didn't you see Sseth's Caves of Qud video already?
I'm american and I've never heard of drams only ounces liters and gallons
You know chicken eggs come from a cloaca, right? lol
Americans don't use the imperial units because want to. We do it out of obligation to spite the UK for inventing it in the first place.
I completely agree about the imperial system. Sadly after so long it’s been ingrained into our Society. Not an easy task as the government would receive massive backlash if they tried to switch everything over.
At this point if they ever try I'll go full revolt
To be fair, all systems of measurement are arbitrary, including the metric system. The metric system is, however, _evenly_ arbitrary, because it was purpose built, whereas other systems of measurement like Imperial were more "make it up as you go along". There's an old English unit for area, called an oxgang, which is defined as "the amount of land a ox can plow in a plowing season" which is around 15 acres. Completely practical for the local application, but when start applying it globally/countrywide in the modern world...
There's another obsolete unit measurement that was used in my country, Serbia. It's called "tovar", and is defined as "the amount of weight one horse could carry (comfortably, presumably)". See? Practical back then, not so much today.
There's a reason Metric has become standard. It's superior, absolutely, but other measurements were stupid or anything. They were measurements made up from things an average person could understand, and for most of human history exact measurements for most applications weren't necessary. Modern technology needs far stricter measurements than technology of even only 500 years ago did. To make a mill, you don't really have to get the part to the exact measurements, as long as they fit together, stay together, and are easy to maintain.
I'm just saying this because even I, who absolutely does find people in the modern day using Imperial to be ridiculous, can still appreciate Imperial for what it is, and why it was invented. Just to say categorically that Imperial is just a stupid system that makes no sense is untrue, and ultimately disrespectful to previous generations. Previous generations were no dumber than we are and it always bugged me when modern people think their superior to those that came before them and think they are the smartest generation to ever live. (Not saying you're claiming that... I just, you know, a lot of people do come to the conclusion that Imperial is bad through that reasoning).
Aren't drams apothecary measurement. Drams drops minems
I want to play this game now.
So what you saying is, WE CAN FINALLY FIND PEPE SILVA DOWN IN CAVES OF QUD?
You might enjoy La-Mulana 2 if the Anunnaki interest you.
God I love Stargate it's the best
>catgirl pillows
>girl
I know this is old but you should know we use both imperial and metric in the U.S., and they both work perfectly fine lol, you just aren't used to one of them Chill
P.S. drugs use both, we measure in grams and ounces before we get to kilos, and a pound comes before that, hence selling "eigths" and "quarters", referring to an eight and quarter of an *ounce* respectively
Also I'm pretty sure Bill Nye the Science Guy pulled a cup of lava out of a microwave once
Both systems work but one works better and it's pointless and confusing to have 2 different systems for the same thing. This message brought to you by metric gang
This is game is just alot of things, and i find it very good for the game, no its more of a simulation than a game, this is no game. And thats how i describe it being a quality video game cuz its much more of a game, for simplicty sake a complex game. Though unfortunately this will consume alot of ur time, i tried playing it and i quickly get a jist of the mechanics as seth said it will become second nature. Good complex game but as i said too much content for me, i more a multi tasking person when it comes to having fun in video games.
I’m a US mechanic. I fuckin hate standard and we always buy sets of sockets and hex keys that use both that and metric.
4:19 >girl
Please react to sseth Arcanum review
I think there is an abhuman spiecies of plant people.
React to wendigoons conspiracy iceberg video
you should watch the show ancient aliens, its complete batshit insanity. also those arent just anime pillows those are femboy pillows.
Hey, so, um... Will you ever watch more of Liam Vickers Animation's Animations? You obviously enjoyed Cliffside, so I presume that you will enjoy Internecion Cube (and Murder Drones) as well.
Americans use fluid ounces, teaspoons, tablespoons, cups, pints, and gallons. No drams involved
this game look interesting and i don't mind crappy visual if the game is good but my brain will melt for sure.
If you're even a little interested in conspiracy theories you should check out Wendigoon's Conspiracy Theory Iceberg. It's some good stuff.
Just use the Metric
Ok soomer
16:50 no and I'll use leagues just to spite you.
new caves of qud update is just a few weeks away from release, so excited for it, devs are weird super commies though
Grams? I think you are confused. Grams are metric. Kilo is kilogram or 1000 grams.
Drams was the unit used i. The video
gramms are op yo 1000 gramms = kilo
1000 milliliter = 1 liter
easy
also boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius
freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius
seems a lot fking easier then the weird numbers you guys use xD
@@MrAchsas if metric is so good why dont they use metric clocks and metric days?
@@kerosblue5609 ? wat
The imperial system and the metric system are good for different purposes. Lbs, degrees farenheight, feet and inches, gallons, and ounces are all very useful for day to day use. Lbs are a lot better for weighing yourself than kg. For medical farenheit is a lot more precise, and it's also more useful for getting an accurate idea of the temperature out (since it's over twice as precise as celsius). Feet and inches are way more useful when doing construction, than metric because all of the measurements are based on relative sizes. Meters are too large and centimeters are too small. For scientific measurements, metric is always superior, but for anything related to day to day life, the imperial system is better.
Drams are totally worthless though and so are about half of all imperial measurements, no one uses most of them.
You can just use decimals if celsius is too big and you will never eyeball it when doing construction so you can just use decimetres if centimeter feels too small for whatever reason. Kilograms are also not unpractical in any way. It might just be that you are used to pound which makes it innately more useful and sensical. Also, why would anyone use celsius when you can use kelvin.
@@ardabaser1349 I'm quite familiar with both systems, my job used to be calibrating many different kinds of tools, which forced me to learn both quite well. No one really uses decimeters and they're also not really a useful size. Yes, you can always use decimals, but that doesn't make the numbers easy to work with. You could easily say the same for the imperial system though. You could equal any value just by using fractions or decimals. The difference is in what each system is based on. The metric system is very scientifically oriented, and it was created to be based on easily defined and repeatable measurements. The Imperial system was created to be relative to people and how they could use those numbers. Being very familiar with both, I'm saying that it's simply easier to recognize the difference between 99 f being a little warm and 100 f being a slight fever than 36.2 and 37.8. It's not a matter of one being necessarily more valid than the other, but the threshold of 99 to 100 is easier to track than a different of .555... (.6 rounded). That's because, while decimals aren't really any different, most people work a lot better in whole numbers, multiples of integers (especially of 2). I don't know why that is, but that doesn't change that it is. It's probably something to do with how we learn to remember. For length measurements, the imperial system was based on sizes that were relative to the rough average size of people, and of things that were useful in daily life. The metric system based it's units on the size of a a cube of a certain volume of water when frozen. It has great proportionality for scientific or precise measurements, but the lack of proportionality to the rough average size of a person makes it less useful for day to day usage. A stair step is 8 inches, 2/3 (a simple fraction) of a ft, a doorway is 3ft, 3 & 1/2 ft, or 4ft wide typically, dinner plates are usually 8 inches or 1ft across roughly, railings are 3 & 1/2 or 4ft high, yard fences are 5ft (short enough to see and talk over, tall enough to stop most animals), etc. Now, you can take all of those as fractions or decimals of a meter, but why would you when there's a system designed to already be roughly proportional to humans? The numbers have had centuries of user testing to average the measurements out until a full standard was adopted - I can't explain why they work out so well in daily life except to say they simply do. In my current job if measurements come up it's always in metric - I really don't have a particular favoritism or bias of one or the other, but having used both frequently for years, I have simply found that they are equally useful in different ways.
- This post has been brought to you by someone who grew in a country using an imperial system.
@@GRIMHOOD99 Did you happen to read my reply to the previous comment? Yes, I live in America, but I'm equally familiar with the metric system and whenever measurments come up involving my current job it's always metric. I've had to use both side by side in prior jobs. I like the metric system. I also like the imperial system. I just like them for different purposes. There are valid reasons to use both depending on the circumstance because they were created with different frames of reference. The metric system was based on specific physical properties, which is why it's fantastic for precise measurements and scientific uses. The imperial system was created relative to measurements that are common and useful in day to day life.
I can't really see Imperial system as more practical for everyday life. Though, I live in a country with metric system.
So, Imperial system seems to me disproportionate, where 1 foot consists of 12 inches, 1 yard of 3 feet and mile of 1760 yard. while in metric systems 1000 millimeters equal to 1 meter and 1000 meters makes for a 1 kilometer. Or 1 meter is equal to 100 sentimeters/10 decimeters.
Same with mass - 1000 grams is 1 kilogram. 1000 kilograms is 1 tonne. There are also centners of 100 kilograms. In Imp. system we operate by ounces and pounds. One pound consinsts of 16 ounces.
Yes, these units of measurement were formed from human sizes and all sorts of masses of stones, but they are disordered. Different units of measurement are made up of different values of other units of measurement.
As for temperature, in Celsius the temperature of melting ice/triple point of water is taken as zero. While in Fahrenheit, zero is the temperature of a mixture of water, ammonia and table salt, measured in a particularly cold winter in Danzig in 1709.
I really wanted to try this, but then I discovered that the fanbase is full of disgusting people.
Not only the fanbase, but the developer too.
“Fanbase” that’s a weird way to say “dev”
What do you mean?
Can you explain me why?
What do you mean by this?
I mean don't worry buddy we all agree the imperial system sucks but its what we're taught and its what everything is measured in so most of the time we only have so much choice lol. The metric system is just easier and smarter most people that use either system have that figured out the country just demands the imperial system out of us lmao
First?
'System just doesn't work' But it does, you might not have grown up with the system and thus you haven't seen how beneficial it actually is to every day life; there is a reason you don't use metric clocks or metric degrees.
SI is objectively better than Imperial and way clearer when it comes to unit conversion. It'd not the size of each unit, but the proportional relation between units.
@@pirig-gal Yeah, for industrial and scientific pursuits. Both Britain and the US use metric for these areas but the Imperial system is still used for everyday situations because the units are based on the human experience. What use is a single gram in your every day life compared to an ounce? Imperial is not meant for precision but communication; a mile is not a distance based on the rest of the universe but how far a person can walk.
@@johnbraithwaite863 It's a matter of being used to it. If I had to use Imperial I'd have a hard time imagining an ounce, or a mile.
SI is much better when it comes to doing maths, since everything is base-10. And since in Imperial you use, for example, thousands of an inch, it's not really a matter of precision either.
@@pirig-gal You can walk a mile at a casual pace in 20 minutes, half a mile in 10. Time itself is imperial, you can rough count seconds by listening to your heartbeat. An ounce is about a small spoons worth of food.
@@pirig-gal I do agree that metric is better for mathematics; I have been in the STEM field for a decade, I use metric everyday (I would rather everything be base 12 instead of 10) but you can't just keep writing off imperial as backwards because you don't understand it's place, not to mention it's a cultural artifact of our history and people.
I'm sorry but that tirade about grams is so off, 1 littler(1000 milliliters) of water equals 1 kg(1000 grams), so 1gram = 1 milliliter. Were you thinking about something else while talking about grams? Also 1 liter of different substances has different wait. I think water was used as a base, as well as when they used to put 0 ºC when water freezes.
It wasn't a comparaison of metrics range, but instead of how overly complicated other system need to be.
And yeah, 1 lifter og water i 1 Kg because the density of water is set to 1000 kg/ m^3
There is not a single Christian denomination that believes the Earth is only 6000 years old.
I mean, yeah, there are. I went to several as a kid. That being said, with the 32k Protestant spin offs of the 12 or so Roman Catholic spin offs of the Orthodox Church it’s not even statistically unlikely, since those 32k denominations are basically just “yo I disagree with that mfer, so imma start my own church”. Most of those 32k denominations believe Christianity didn’t *really* begin until 1500-1800, so they’re not too interested in grasping historical nuance or contemplating vast expanses of time since the validity of their faith is inherently tied to their ability to “verify” the Bible’s historicity using the “scientific method”™️. They shoulda just read the early church fathers, but they can barely read the Bible.
@@notaboutit3565 I said Christian denominations. The term Christian denotes a follower of the teachings of Christ.
@@arfbark3924 I’m very well aware of what you said, which is why my response is what it is. Do you want to make an actual response?