bro this is my favorite type of content and i can totally relate. Cheaters these days are usually noobs who have no idea what they're doing and end up getting crapped on because of their own stupidity. XD
One thing I love about cheaters that target content creators/ streamers is they're giving the person they're fighting free content regardless of if they get sunk or not and on the other hand they're making themselves look like losers for the effort Big ups stupidity, fragile egos and a desperation to get attention by random people because they didn't get any from their parents
The blunderbuss is a 17th- to mid-19th-century firearm with a short, large caliber barrel which is commonly flared at the muzzle, to help aid in the loading of shot and other projectiles of relevant quantity or caliber. The blunderbuss is commonly considered to be an early predecessor of the modern shotgun, with similar military usage.[2] It was effective only at short range, lacking accuracy at long distances. A blunderbuss in handgun form was called a dragon, and it is from this that the term dragoon evolved.[3][4] A flintlock blunderbuss, built for Tipu Sultan[1] Etymology edit An English flintlock blunderbuss. The term "blunderbuss" is of Dutch origin, from the Dutch word donderbus, which is a combination of donder, meaning "thunder", and bus, meaning "container, tin" (Middle Dutch: busse, box, jar, from Latin buxus, box tree).[2] The transition from donder to blunder is thought by some to be deliberate; the term blunder was originally used in a transitive sense, synonymous with to confuse, and this is thought to describe the stunningly loud report of the large-bore, short-barreled blunderbuss.[3][failed verification] The term dragon is taken from the fact that early versions were decorated with a carving in the form of a mythic dragon's head around the muzzle; the muzzle blast would then give the impression of a fire-breathing dragon.[4] Design and use edit A French blunderbuss, called an espingole, 1760, France. Musketoon, blunderbuss and coach gun from the American Civil War era. The flared muzzle is the defining feature of the blunderbuss, differentiating it from large caliber carbines; the distinction between the blunderbuss and the musketoon is less distinct, as musketoons were also used to fire shot, and some had flared barrels.[5][6][7] The muzzle (and often the bore) was flared with the intent not only to increase the spread of the shot, but also to funnel powder and shot into the weapon, making it easier to reload on horseback or on a moving carriage; modern experiments corroborated the dramatic improvement in shot spread, going from a 530-millimetre-spread (21-inch) diameter from a straight barrel to an average of 970 mm (38 in) spread at 9 metres (10 yards).[8] Blunderbusses were typically short, with barrels under 60 centimetres (2 ft) in length, at a time when a typical musket barrel was over 90 cm (3 ft) long.[9][10] One source, describing arms from the early to middle 17th century, lists the barrel length of a wheel lock dragon at around 28 cm (11 in), compared to a 41 cm (16 in) length for a blunderbuss.[3] The blunderbuss could be considered an early type of shotgun and served in many similar roles. Though some old accounts may list the blunderbuss as being loaded with various scrap iron, rocks, or wood, which might well result in damage to the bore of the gun, it was typically loaded with a number of lead balls smaller than the bore diameter. Barrels were made of steel or brass. A blunderbuss pistol, or dragon, found at a battlefield in Cerro Gordo, Veracruz, Mexico An 1808 Harper's Ferry blunderbuss, of the type carried on the Lewis and Clark Expedition A pair of early blunderbuss pistols from Poland fitted with the miquelet lock A recreation of one of Lewis and Clark's pirogues with a blunderbuss mounted to the bow with a pintle. The blunderbuss, and especially the dragon, was typically issued to troops such as cavalry, who needed a lightweight, easily handled firearm.[10] The dragon became so associated with cavalry and mounted infantry that the term dragoon became synonymous with mounted infantry. In addition to the cavalry, the blunderbuss found a use for other duties in which the shotgun-like qualities were desirable, such as for guarding prisoners or defending a mail coach, and its use for urban combat was also recognized.[4][11] Blunderbusses were also commonly carried by officers on naval warships, by privateers and by pirates for use in close-quarters boarding actions.[12] The Portuguese Marines used it widely in the 17th century. Many types of ammunition, including gravel and sand, could be shot in a pinch, but most of the time they were shot using traditional lead balls. The blunderbuss used by the British Royal Mail during the period of 1788-1816 was a flintlock with a 36 cm (14 in) long flared brass barrel, brass trigger guard, and an iron trigger and lock. A typical British mail coach would have a single postal employee on board, armed with a blunderbuss and a pair of pistols to guard the mail from highwaymen.[13] One 18th century coaching blunderbuss in another British collection had a brass barrel 43 cm (17 in) long, flaring to 51 mm (2 in) at the muzzle; it was also provided with a spring-loaded bayonet, which was held along the barrel by a catch and would spring forward into place when released.[7] Spring-loaded bayonet blunderbusses were also used by the Nottingham City Police after its formation around 1840.[14] While the blunderbuss is often associated with the Plymouth Colony Pilgrims of 1620,[15] evidence suggests that the blunderbuss was relatively scarce in the American colonies. After the Battle of Lexington in 1775, British General Thomas Gage occupied Boston, Massachusetts, and upon negotiating with the town committee, Gage agreed to let the inhabitants of Boston leave town with their families and effects if they surrendered all arms. While most of the residents of Boston stayed, those who left under the agreement surrendered 1,778 long arms, 634 pistols, 273 bayonets, and only 38 blunderbusses.[16] The blunderbuss did still have its civilian applications, however; the Lewis and Clark Expedition carried a number of blunderbusses, some of which were mounted and used as small swivel guns on the pirogues.[6] Crude tripwire activated blunderbusses, known as alarm guns, spring guns and cemetery guns,[17] were set up in graveyards and country estates to scare away poachers and resurrection men, and to alert the gamekeeper or sexton to their presence.[18][19] By the middle of the 19th century, the blunderbuss was replaced for military use by the carbine, but still found use by civilians as a defensive firearm.[20][
“Hey man, your cheating by accident” lmao How much of a goon does he have to be to cheat in Hourglass and still lose every fight he’s in I now realise that rare doesn’t have anticheat because Spong IS the anticheat
You always get the „possible to beat cheaters“ I get the ones who don’t need to reload, they fly, aimbot and teleport, while spamming with a bot in chat
yeah I also don’t think that the new anti-cheat will work super well but I gotta say that Im pretty impressed that Rare actually did something good this time
That first guy did not even look like he was cheating until he insta laddered, like how is he that bad lol 11:56 I could not tell if these guys were actually cheating or not, did I miss anything?
Cheaters are finally gonna go down, or at least become less. gonna probably see alot of them "cheat while they still can" until the next update. so pathetic.... anyhows, gg ma man :P
i fought a cheater the other day that stayed on the server after i sunk his ship in hg and tried to spawn camp me he was just using that insta ladder cheat. why would he only use the most obvious one? do they only ban people if you get a recording of them or do they do their own investigation after a report? probably not huh? i dont have recording software.
bro this is my favorite type of content and i can totally relate. Cheaters these days are usually noobs who have no idea what they're doing and end up getting crapped on because of their own stupidity. XD
Silly cheaters
Rare Rare Moment - cheaters getting banned
Real
One thing I love about cheaters that target content creators/ streamers is they're giving the person they're fighting free content regardless of if they get sunk or not and on the other hand they're making themselves look like losers for the effort
Big ups stupidity, fragile egos and a desperation to get attention by random people because they didn't get any from their parents
This
The blunderbuss is a 17th- to mid-19th-century firearm with a short, large caliber barrel which is commonly flared at the muzzle, to help aid in the loading of shot and other projectiles of relevant quantity or caliber. The blunderbuss is commonly considered to be an early predecessor of the modern shotgun, with similar military usage.[2] It was effective only at short range, lacking accuracy at long distances. A blunderbuss in handgun form was called a dragon, and it is from this that the term dragoon evolved.[3][4]
A flintlock blunderbuss, built for Tipu Sultan[1]
Etymology
edit
An English flintlock blunderbuss.
The term "blunderbuss" is of Dutch origin, from the Dutch word donderbus, which is a combination of donder, meaning "thunder", and bus, meaning "container, tin" (Middle Dutch: busse, box, jar, from Latin buxus, box tree).[2]
The transition from donder to blunder is thought by some to be deliberate; the term blunder was originally used in a transitive sense, synonymous with to confuse, and this is thought to describe the stunningly loud report of the large-bore, short-barreled blunderbuss.[3][failed verification] The term dragon is taken from the fact that early versions were decorated with a carving in the form of a mythic dragon's head around the muzzle; the muzzle blast would then give the impression of a fire-breathing dragon.[4]
Design and use
edit
A French blunderbuss, called an espingole, 1760, France.
Musketoon, blunderbuss and coach gun from the American Civil War era.
The flared muzzle is the defining feature of the blunderbuss, differentiating it from large caliber carbines; the distinction between the blunderbuss and the musketoon is less distinct, as musketoons were also used to fire shot, and some had flared barrels.[5][6][7] The muzzle (and often the bore) was flared with the intent not only to increase the spread of the shot, but also to funnel powder and shot into the weapon, making it easier to reload on horseback or on a moving carriage; modern experiments corroborated the dramatic improvement in shot spread, going from a 530-millimetre-spread (21-inch) diameter from a straight barrel to an average of 970 mm (38 in) spread at 9 metres (10 yards).[8]
Blunderbusses were typically short, with barrels under 60 centimetres (2 ft) in length, at a time when a typical musket barrel was over 90 cm (3 ft) long.[9][10] One source, describing arms from the early to middle 17th century, lists the barrel length of a wheel lock dragon at around 28 cm (11 in), compared to a 41 cm (16 in) length for a blunderbuss.[3]
The blunderbuss could be considered an early type of shotgun and served in many similar roles. Though some old accounts may list the blunderbuss as being loaded with various scrap iron, rocks, or wood, which might well result in damage to the bore of the gun, it was typically loaded with a number of lead balls smaller than the bore diameter. Barrels were made of steel or brass.
A blunderbuss pistol, or dragon, found at a battlefield in Cerro Gordo, Veracruz, Mexico
An 1808 Harper's Ferry blunderbuss, of the type carried on the Lewis and Clark Expedition
A pair of early blunderbuss pistols from Poland fitted with the miquelet lock
A recreation of one of Lewis and Clark's pirogues with a blunderbuss mounted to the bow with a pintle.
The blunderbuss, and especially the dragon, was typically issued to troops such as cavalry, who needed a lightweight, easily handled firearm.[10] The dragon became so associated with cavalry and mounted infantry that the term dragoon became synonymous with mounted infantry. In addition to the cavalry, the blunderbuss found a use for other duties in which the shotgun-like qualities were desirable, such as for guarding prisoners or defending a mail coach, and its use for urban combat was also recognized.[4][11] Blunderbusses were also commonly carried by officers on naval warships, by privateers and by pirates for use in close-quarters boarding actions.[12] The Portuguese Marines used it widely in the 17th century. Many types of ammunition, including gravel and sand, could be shot in a pinch, but most of the time they were shot using traditional lead balls.
The blunderbuss used by the British Royal Mail during the period of 1788-1816 was a flintlock with a 36 cm (14 in) long flared brass barrel, brass trigger guard, and an iron trigger and lock. A typical British mail coach would have a single postal employee on board, armed with a blunderbuss and a pair of pistols to guard the mail from highwaymen.[13] One 18th century coaching blunderbuss in another British collection had a brass barrel 43 cm (17 in) long, flaring to 51 mm (2 in) at the muzzle; it was also provided with a spring-loaded bayonet, which was held along the barrel by a catch and would spring forward into place when released.[7] Spring-loaded bayonet blunderbusses were also used by the Nottingham City Police after its formation around 1840.[14]
While the blunderbuss is often associated with the Plymouth Colony Pilgrims of 1620,[15] evidence suggests that the blunderbuss was relatively scarce in the American colonies. After the Battle of Lexington in 1775, British General Thomas Gage occupied Boston, Massachusetts, and upon negotiating with the town committee, Gage agreed to let the inhabitants of Boston leave town with their families and effects if they surrendered all arms. While most of the residents of Boston stayed, those who left under the agreement surrendered 1,778 long arms, 634 pistols, 273 bayonets, and only 38 blunderbusses.[16] The blunderbuss did still have its civilian applications, however; the Lewis and Clark Expedition carried a number of blunderbusses, some of which were mounted and used as small swivel guns on the pirogues.[6]
Crude tripwire activated blunderbusses, known as alarm guns, spring guns and cemetery guns,[17] were set up in graveyards and country estates to scare away poachers and resurrection men, and to alert the gamekeeper or sexton to their presence.[18][19]
By the middle of the 19th century, the blunderbuss was replaced for military use by the carbine, but still found use by civilians as a defensive firearm.[20][
I agree
"but then they made new accounts" is very real and makes bans worthless.
Real
How you say by accident gets me cracked up bro thanks for the laugh
Thanks gamer
“Hey man, your cheating by accident” lmao
How much of a goon does he have to be to cheat in Hourglass and still lose every fight he’s in
I now realise that rare doesn’t have anticheat because Spong IS the anticheat
Definitely a bot account 😂 or this kid made channels to comment on himself lmao
Big ups anticheat
@novasludge3484 u good?
@@massivesponge are you? C'mon...you know this is a fake account 😂 joined 3 weeks ago and only watch you? Riiiiight
@@novasludge3484 what are you yapping about? I’m not a bot I just enjoy spongs content
!jay giving a tip to the cheater in the middle of the fight
!jay on top
No way cheaters actually got banned that’s insane :0
They love getting banned
thats why they call you the king of houglass
Queen*
Nessiedoes
Love these vids man, I’ve been sinking some hackers recently too using tips learned from watching you. ❤
Based
You always get the „possible to beat cheaters“ I get the ones who don’t need to reload, they fly, aimbot and teleport, while spamming with a bot in chat
These ones are near impossible, we’ve beat the full impossible ones a couple times before :)
@@massivespongei dont believe you. how did you manage that
Beat an invis cheater one time because his teammate sucked, so we killed him and managed to camp them… was on spongstream about a month ago
I have never even encountered a cheater and you guys seem to find so many I guess I'm just lucky lol
Spong isn’t scared of cheaters, cheaters are accidentally scared of him
Hourglass
@ThePotoo real
Hot take: Cheaters carry the SoT content
👀
sponge video, massive win
Real
These might be the last cheaters you’ll ever see lol (I hope so)
Doubt
yeah I also don’t think that the new anti-cheat will work super well but I gotta say that Im pretty impressed that Rare actually did something good this time
Sponge you are a little to good 😂❤ nice vids
Big up meletios
I've been told that insta ladder cheaters don't have an animation when they reach the top of the ladder, is this true?
No
@@massivesponge didn't think so
Bro, I can’t imagine what nerves you need to have to endure this so cold-bloodedly. You are best)
❤
Big up maxrock
Sigma alpha sponge sinking cheaters cause he’s signa
Signa
The sad reality of SOT
Big up sot
Preciate the big ups
Big ub
That first guy did not even look like he was cheating until he insta laddered, like how is he that bad lol
11:56 I could not tell if these guys were actually cheating or not, did I miss anything?
At 11:56 it’s the same crew, jay saw them on the ferry, also you can see the pirate :)
@@massivesponge Oh alr cool 👍
I played against silly goofy sloop last night solo, it was so annoying getting sniped every single time.
Classic
Cheaters are finally gonna go down, or at least become less. gonna probably see alot of them "cheat while they still can" until the next update. so pathetic.... anyhows, gg ma man :P
Real
Spong how do you feel about the new anti-cheat coming?
Hopeful, it won’t stop all of them tho
Queen of hourglass
Big ups the queen
Can't wait for the anticheat to drop and work for one week then completely fail at doing its job and Rare starts neglecting it
Real
spongbungus
True
I need the sponge anticheat
Spanticheat
Oh they go up ladders quick...so crazy...
Wha, it’s literally a cheat?
Another big sponge w
Big ups w
i fought a cheater the other day that stayed on the server after i sunk his ship in hg and tried to spawn camp me he was just using that insta ladder cheat. why would he only use the most obvious one? do they only ban people if you get a recording of them or do they do their own investigation after a report? probably not huh? i dont have recording software.
U gotta clip
the most basedest of all of based videos ever
Based
That is so cool to see that the anticheat is very efficient lol
No anticheat yet 👀
I hope that anticheat gonna be good @@massivesponge
RIP most of this content with Easy Anti Cheat announcement (hopefully)
Hopefully but I doubt it
Big Ups.
That’s what I’m saying
Yay the cheaters got banned
Big ups ban
Hey guys that’s me !!! I love taking sot serious !!! 🥘🥘💌💌👩🏿🏫🐭
L cheater
Cornball get a life
Distinction 4 athena
Big up Athena
I think they got banned on accident
Oopsie
subscribe
Do that
wut shirt is that
Ionnow
BONANER
Agreed
W sponge
W me
spongebob
Spog
Fucking RODL annoys me at the best of time but from cheater it really boils my piss
True
what are these guys paying to not play a game
Like $500
Why do they cheat do they know its not allowed?
Someone need to tell them
i fought and sunk a cheater because he rammed me and forgot got on my ship but i repaired my hole so why'll he was spawn killing me he sunk lmao
Very fun
Yipeeeeee
Me
PP
True
Yay spong vis
*vid
I embarrassed myself😔
It’s ok, you did great
sopng
Aelsk
they are getting better at cheating
Nor
stop hacking we all know you are mr sponge. see your aim. you hit too many shots! nothing else is sus but still hacking
Well said
cheating is bad
Real
🧽 on cannons? When did we ever see that?
OG spong cannoneer