Enjoyed the video, though you missed many spaces such as the First Class Smoking Room, À la Carte Restaurant, Café Parisien, some of the First Class suites on B Deck and C Deck as well as many crew spaces forward. A part two would be amazing, especially if you enjoyed this project this much! There is a helpful ship plan of Project 401 and the rooms available to explore located around the ship, it’s helpful to look at it and see where you have access. 1:19 Fun fact: The game’s name comes from the name of the clock that stood at the A Deck landing of the forward Grand Staircase. It was known as the “Honour & Glory Crowning Time”. 3:40 First Class Reception Room fitted in the English Reinassance Jacobean style. It was connected to the First Class Dining Saloon. First class passengers would gather here before dinner, socializing and awaiting to be directed to their dining table by the servants. Small pastries and drinks were served while the orchestra played tunes of the day. This room would have been the first impression of the Titanic for many First Class passengers entering through the two vestibules on either side of the room (45:56). 4:05 First Class Dining Saloon also fitted in the English Reinassance Jacobean style. It was the largest dining saloon at sea and could seat 554 passengers. Olympic and Titanic were the first ships in history to provide passengers with individual seating and private tables (to give the feel that passengers were actually dining in a restaurant on shore) instead of long, public seating, the norm of the time for ocean liners (this type of seating was still incorporated onboard but for Second and Third Class). 6:37 The Turkish Bath was a complex of multiple rooms. It represented a very early version of a modern spa. The room you just entered is called the Cooling Room. 8:13 Those two rooms are shampooing rooms. 8:33 Temperate room, Steam room and Hot room respectively. 7:08 The Swimming Bath, the last of the Turkish Bath process. 6:49 That’s an electric bath. During the early days of electricity, people believed it also had therapeutic purposes. A person would lay inside the enclosed chamber, while electricity would start going off inside it, causing an electric recharge on the person. The treatment was painless. The Olympic received two of them, but since they were rather unpopular, the Titanic received only one. 9:07 Linen storage. 11:28 White Star Line was all about comfort above anything else. That includes providing Third Class with their own dining saloon as well as lavatories. As was the norm of that era, ship line companies didn’t provide Third Class with any form of dining or bathing facilities, passengers being requested to supply themselves with their own food for the duration of the voyage. 20:52 Here you entered the Second Class Spaces of the Titanic, comparable to First Class on most ships of the era. 21:15 This is the Second Class Smoking Room, decorated in the French Louis XVI style. 24:22 Second Class Library, fitted in the English Neoclassical Adam style. 30:04 That is the wheelhouse (enclosed bridge), from where the ship was maneuvered during the voyage. The navigating bridge 30:20 (open bridge) was used when the ship was in dock/docking. There was also another one at the stern of the ship 22:46 called the docking bridge which, like they name suggests, was used for the same reason as the navigating bridge. 33:49 Those are the engines for the First Class elevators. Directly below were the three elevators that went from A Deck to E Deck. 33:46 This is the First Class Reading & Writing Room, decorated in the English Georgian style. The space was designed for women to gather after they enjoyed dinner. It was mainly used for socializing, reading and writing letters. The room was rather unpopular, the lounge next door being most preferred. 36:14 The First Class Lounge, probably the grandest room aboard, was decorated in the French Louis XV style, similar to the Palace of Versailles. 37:41 First Class cabin. 38:50 The Cardeza Suite, occupied by Charlotte Cardeza, her son Thomas and maid. She occupied one of the two Parlour Suites on B Deck, which featured the highest ticket prices and included a private promenade, private bathroom and shower and multiple dressing rooms. The Sitting Room was decorated in English Adam Style while the bedroom in Italian Reinassance style. The Private Promenade was designed in English Tudor style. 40:01 These three connected cabins belonged to the Ryerson Family. First Class passengers could purchase multiple cabins to form a stateroom as you could in a hotel. Two of them were decorated in Modern Dutch, while one was in Old Dutch style (40:12).
You know more than me 😂 I noticed I missed off a lot of the ship after watching. I'm am considering on doing a part two as there is still a lot more I could look at. It's a big ship.
Great what they can do with tech these days, we can imagine oursleves being there, i'm a real location freak so it amzing to wander about on the ship. What's inside the Titanic -video th-cam.com/video/HLrBUwNSEo0/w-d-xo.html this video is one of the best that goes through & explain each deck and it's layout so using that and this to actually do it - is amazing! Thanks for uplaod and sharing your walk about. Let me grab by hat and cane and walk the Titanic!
I LOVE your tour! I have Titanic:Adventure Out of Time and this puts that game to shame! Areas not shown in AoT! Wow!
There are more areas of the ship I didn't cover but I'm thinking about doing a part two to get them as there are some interesting parts I missed off.
Enjoyed the video, though you missed many spaces such as the First Class Smoking Room, À la Carte Restaurant, Café Parisien, some of the First Class suites on B Deck and C Deck as well as many crew spaces forward. A part two would be amazing, especially if you enjoyed this project this much! There is a helpful ship plan of Project 401 and the rooms available to explore located around the ship, it’s helpful to look at it and see where you have access.
1:19 Fun fact: The game’s name comes from the name of the clock that stood at the A Deck landing of the forward Grand Staircase. It was known as the “Honour & Glory Crowning Time”.
3:40 First Class Reception Room fitted in the English Reinassance Jacobean style. It was connected to the First Class Dining Saloon. First class passengers would gather here before dinner, socializing and awaiting to be directed to their dining table by the servants. Small pastries and drinks were served while the orchestra played tunes of the day. This room would have been the first impression of the Titanic for many First Class passengers entering through the two vestibules on either side of the room (45:56).
4:05 First Class Dining Saloon also fitted in the English Reinassance Jacobean style. It was the largest dining saloon at sea and could seat 554 passengers. Olympic and Titanic were the first ships in history to provide passengers with individual seating and private tables (to give the feel that passengers were actually dining in a restaurant on shore) instead of long, public seating, the norm of the time for ocean liners (this type of seating was still incorporated onboard but for Second and Third Class).
6:37 The Turkish Bath was a complex of multiple rooms. It represented a very early version of a modern spa. The room you just entered is called the Cooling Room. 8:13 Those two rooms are shampooing rooms. 8:33 Temperate room, Steam room and Hot room respectively. 7:08 The Swimming Bath, the last of the Turkish Bath process.
6:49 That’s an electric bath. During the early days of electricity, people believed it also had therapeutic purposes. A person would lay inside the enclosed chamber, while electricity would start going off inside it, causing an electric recharge on the person. The treatment was painless. The Olympic received two of them, but since they were rather unpopular, the Titanic received only one.
9:07 Linen storage.
11:28 White Star Line was all about comfort above anything else. That includes providing Third Class with their own dining saloon as well as lavatories. As was the norm of that era, ship line companies didn’t provide Third Class with any form of dining or bathing facilities, passengers being requested to supply themselves with their own food for the duration of the voyage.
20:52 Here you entered the Second Class Spaces of the Titanic, comparable to First Class on most ships of the era. 21:15 This is the Second Class Smoking Room, decorated in the French Louis XVI style.
24:22 Second Class Library, fitted in the English Neoclassical Adam style.
30:04 That is the wheelhouse (enclosed bridge), from where the ship was maneuvered during the voyage. The navigating bridge 30:20 (open bridge) was used when the ship was in dock/docking. There was also another one at the stern of the ship 22:46 called the docking bridge which, like they name suggests, was used for the same reason as the navigating bridge.
33:49 Those are the engines for the First Class elevators. Directly below were the three elevators that went from A Deck to E Deck.
33:46 This is the First Class Reading & Writing Room, decorated in the English Georgian style. The space was designed for women to gather after they enjoyed dinner. It was mainly used for socializing, reading and writing letters. The room was rather unpopular, the lounge next door being most preferred.
36:14 The First Class Lounge, probably the grandest room aboard, was decorated in the French Louis XV style, similar to the Palace of Versailles.
37:41 First Class cabin.
38:50 The Cardeza Suite, occupied by Charlotte Cardeza, her son Thomas and maid. She occupied one of the two Parlour Suites on B Deck, which featured the highest ticket prices and included a private promenade, private bathroom and shower and multiple dressing rooms. The Sitting Room was decorated in English Adam Style while the bedroom in Italian Reinassance style. The Private Promenade was designed in English Tudor style.
40:01 These three connected cabins belonged to the Ryerson Family. First Class passengers could purchase multiple cabins to form a stateroom as you could in a hotel. Two of them were decorated in Modern Dutch, while one was in Old Dutch style (40:12).
You know more than me 😂 I noticed I missed off a lot of the ship after watching. I'm am considering on doing a part two as there is still a lot more I could look at. It's a big ship.
What about me? Where can I do this tour??
Im not swimming in that ocean
There's a link in the description of the video
There are video’s that show it sinking in real time. Not from the inside I don’t think, though.
Yes there is I don't think it in real time.
Where can I do this same tour on my own?
its literally in the description
@@daleholten3012 oops, I forgot to look there, thank you.
Yes it's in the description
Ooh there a download there but says V2 so thought that was the older demo - probably just being dense lol
Great what they can do with tech these days, we can imagine oursleves being there, i'm a real location freak so it amzing to wander about on the ship.
What's inside the Titanic -video
th-cam.com/video/HLrBUwNSEo0/w-d-xo.html
this video is one of the best that goes through & explain each deck and it's layout so using that and this to actually do it - is amazing!
Thanks for uplaod and sharing your walk about.
Let me grab by hat and cane and walk the Titanic!
Yes I would like to see other ships done as well that would be cool
@@troybot14 They are doing them in the Grand Voyage game release with will be a basic ship or two and then dlc for more from the launch video info
How did you get the areas that are closed of in demo? I downloaded the demo 3 (the latest on there website) but still a lot of areas are locked off?
Click on project 401
@@troybot14 Thanks i kep going to downloads and demo's and as this link said demo and v2 thought it was an old download lol