Heyyy Dann, Take a look on my history... I am from Brazil and I already watched a lot of your videos with my girlfriend towardsdatascience.com/data-science-from-zero-to-kaggle-kernels-master-f9115eadbb3
Thanks for the honorable mention! Sorry I'm not uploading these days- I feel like I've been in crunch mode for months. Maybe some day the studio I work out will ship the game we're working on and I will get time to make new videos. Some day... (ಥ﹏ಥ)
Hello @Makin' Stuff Look Good. I love your channel and hope you have some time to make more content. Pls share with us some news on your work would be awsome too. I found some other channel about shader and graphic, but you still the best.
The biggest problem with learning programming from the internet is, that people who try to "teach" you to code use a snippet of a code, don't clearly explain what the purpose of that code is or when and where to use it. And assume that you just get it. That is like cutting vegetables into small pieces and telling someone who just learned to cook "You see those chopped vegetables, mix them with water and you have soup". So, if that person wants to cook on his own, he can't, because he doesn't know which vegetables to chop, how to chop them etc. etc. (I hope that you get the point)
This is exactly the problem I am facing as a beginner and I have no clue about anything honestly, my math skills are also close to 0 so I am struggling a lot. I see people in tutorials just say "you use this, to do that" but I want to actually know how and why does that ceratin thing work that way and I am just left with more questions than answers.
Underrated comment honestly. I'm also struggling a lot to code and learn coding, because I don't know the meaning of more than a half of the things they ""teached"" me. I started with C# but the tutorials out there were horrible because they didn't explain what actually some things do and where to use them. Then I switched to Java and it's just the same thing, tutorials are bad, people don't teach the way they should etc.. The only ways I found to learn any language was reading a book or going to a site related to that. I'm learning Java from a site right now, but I gave up on Tutorials on TH-cam and stuff, they're bad in my opinion.
I allways felt like tutorials are like teaching someone who doasnt speak English there ABC's and then they expect you to write Shakespeare just from what you've learned about the alphabet
I've been trying to learn gml for a few months now and it does click. I've found if you use someone's code, annalise it then try to yo apply it in a different way. You slowly learn how it works.
I need someone to sit down and teach it to me like a preschooler. All the tutorials I’ve seen assume some knowledge beforehand and it’s so frustrating!
Great video as always Jabrils. One amazing TH-camr that I feel deserves more credit in the Unity sphere is Unity3d College. This channel creates amazing in depth videos focused mostly on creating clean and well architect-ed Unity code, which I feel is a topic that is lacking in the TH-cam Unity community. Hopefully when you create a video on "How I Learned Unity", Unity3d College will make it on the list.
I stumbled upon your channel with your 48 hour game challenge video. Just blown away how resourceful and humble you seen. Really gave me some insight on where I can access invaluable knowledge to help hone my craft. After graduating with a BS in Computer Science I felt like I didn't get what I set out to achieve in college. You and I are one in the same I been a lifetime gamer since getting a used Atari 2600 for Xmas when I was 4, and have always wanted to be part of making video games. With work and home responsibilities dominating my life I felt like I didn't have the time to pursue doing what I would ultimately love doing for LIFE. To quote the movie Stepbrothers "I lost my T-Rex" but thank you Jabrils you have definitely inspired me to getting back to finding my T-Rex!!!
Thanks for mentioning these channels. It's always good to have a library of tutorials/examples. I personally had a beginning similar to yours, however I started by searching "how to make an exe file" for days before finding out the term was called programming.
Nice collection you got there. It's cool to see the CS industry becoming more approachable again. Looking forward to your next vid! cheers Zanidd PS: you forgot about security related channels :P
I was getting frustrated with myself and was planning on just giving up but then I found this video! I felt like inspiration has struck me once again, thank you very much!
XDD well he did warned programmers can be assholes if you are disrespectful...theres one community that I know that is really friendly...that would be the Defold Forum... its a 2d/3d game engine forum but from the core of it, they are really inviting
Tyler Gabb stackoverflow takes time to fit into, learn the community, and ASK A GOOD QUESTION (no vague, no studf thats already been asked). otherwise, its extremely valuable.
I wish I could go back to being young and start with game maker but also stick to it! I was about 20 when I first used it in class, one of the smart girls in class used syntax after about 2 or 3 weeks and made a badass game. I was sooo jealous, and felt dumb AF because I hated math, didn't understand anything about syntax needed to make a better game. All i really made during that one class is a crappy version of mario with the built in point and click commands, lol...if only I could rewind the clock and try harder, like really apply myself and use the forums for help. The mobile game market was very ripe for the taking back then, maybe it still is if you got time and good ideas. If you are reading this and you are young and have the time, you got nothing to lose. All you really need now is to apply yourself on learning useful skills and making projects on computers to become big and it's a bigger opportunity than going to college. (I've already went to college, not worth it honestly). I am 30 now and hated my current career, in fact i failed miserably in it because I hated everything about medicine and stopped trying, I am now for the first time doing something I enjoy, learning about my passions. Coding, and backend transport networks...a bit different than game dev but in the same general direction. Whoever is reading this, good luck, all you gotta do is try, and you will fail often but if you get back up and try again, that is the ONLY way you learn, so if you like coding or working with computers, you will eventually succeed. Don't choose the easy way out, choose what you are passionate about even if it's harder because if you are passionate about it and stick to it you will win!
Spot on dude. I just started getting more into coding but it's very fucking hard to find time for anything because I am currently in college and have way too many exames and papers to write, I pretty much had to quit doing anything fun and started chuging coffee like an addict so I can do well in college AND try to learn more about coding. I have some basic CS courses at college but it's not much and not practical at all (basics of LaTeX, html/css, python, XML and SQL). I already passed my exam in html/css but if you asked to make a decent looking web site I couldn't do it at all even though I got a max grade... But I can also see how kids in high school and bellow can struggle with learning too. I know from myself that back then I was just lazy as fuck, doing and learning things was hard and everything was overwhelming, I just wanted to have fun...
@@likbezlik college will always be hard if you take it seriously. I stayed off campus, not in a dorm so my exposure to campus life was limited and made less friends. Didn't party while in collage. It helped keep me on track with assignments. But even then all I cared was just passing, not acing my classes so there still was free time available. Finished with a 3.2GPA. If I cared more I would have done better, lol, but I hated what I was studying. I regret not doing coding or other computer stuff while at that age, would likely have been a lot more successful following my interest.
@@moldoveanu8 Yeah mate, I am also something like that. I have no social life outside of chatting with random classmates when we have classes. I am also not chasing good grades because I just don't give a shit about half the subjects (I study Library and Information science). Information science part is fun and I try learn as much usefull things as I can but some other classes are just useless. I am struggling enough just passing, I don't even think about higher grades, that's just impossible in my eyes. Finished second year with 2 exames unpassed and 7.2 average grades (we use 5-10 grade system here, so a 6 is the lowest grade).
@@likbezlik nice, keep it up. It could always be worse. A lot worse than 60%. For my medical science major we needed minimum 81% to simply pass. So 87%-92% was considered just average. :/ You'd need at least 97% to be near a 4.0 GPA. I barely stayed in the 80% lol. If I were you I'd focus more on what comes after college. Because the college part you'll pass. And then the next stage can be a surprise even if you planned for it.
I love this. This screams Community and gives a good insight to context in coding. Plus it feels like I'm being given the proper 2005 tour with this narration/visual gag. It's feel good. Good work.
Thank you Jabrils, I already know most of those channels, but I think is really great you share them to the community and the people who want to learn. Keep it up!
I believe Mark Brown's Game Maker's Toolkit is an invaluable source for game feel, mechanics, and general information about video game design. Everyone should check him out along with all the channels mentions in this video! They're all great.
Dude, I was definitely not having a good week or month or year and had been questioning wheter or not to continue with my scholar projects and such but your video actually inspired me a lot! Great content, great channels and a great time to be studying computer science.
And worst of all is that you need to have a very clear idea of how do you want it to work or else it either won't work or will be more complicated than it should.
I can relate to this! Even as a kid around 2000 I was experimenting with Game Maker and RPG Maker, and it really introduced me to what would become a great passion: Struggling~ Nice shoutout to Tim too!
I'm so happy that I found this video. I have wanted to get into coding (mostly game and website coding) for 1 and a half year, and I have just been like: "Imma wait cuz- *somewhat personal reasons*" but this is definitely a motivation!
Idk who two minute papers are but 3b1b is just math and stuff right? He doesn't actually cover much programming and computer science does he? Also no one can watch everyone /shrug
Yeah it's difficult. I'm trying to get into posting coding content but I'm a complete beginner. I just need people to try out my stuff, and give some criticism so I can get better. Know any good communities for that?
reByte Try reddit. r/learnprogramming is an excellent community for beginners and experts alike. Very responsive and great advice they can give you there. you can also try out a subreddit for a specific language, like r/cpp or r/learnpython.
I love how you have your own unique style in your videos. This is the first video of yours I've seen, but I just wanted to quickly say that you've got a really cool originality/creativity thing going and you've got a talent for making videos:)
Hey Jabrils! Great video... May I also suggest to you the following? TheNewBoston - He hasn't posted in 2 years, but Bucky was an integral starting point for my coding "career". A lot of stuff is done in Java, but I feel he did such a fantastic job explaining things Derek Banas - This guy IS FREAKING amazing. I suggest any and all beginners to check him out. His video's are so good....he is so humble... and incredibly helpful. This guy is truly an amazing person. And a fantastic teacher/programmer. everyone reading PLEASE check him out. But finally Jabrils you have been super awesome as well man. I am so glad to see you doing well and your subs are growing. You absolutely deserve it. Your videos on ML as well as your live streams have been really helpful to me. Thank you is not enough.
Holy crap you are a dream saver! I've dreamt of being a game dev for 12 years (17 years old as of now) and ran into the same issues as you and the minute I check out this channel I find this video, I appreciate your help and I'll try to learn as soon as possible!
For anyone who just needs normal tutorials about a ton of popular programming languages, Thenewboston has a ton of content for that. If you want in depth C++ tutorials, Chilitomatonoodle has a bunch of great stuff as well.
XD I've been coding for around two and a half years now and started out with gamemaker too! I didn't realise I watched so many coding-youtubers, litterly 4 of the first 5. Nice video with a good message!
Hey, you are an inspiration for my journey onward. I like your editing style and sense of humor. (explaining stuff in a manner I can comprehend also helps xD)
I started learning programming using gamemaker as well. Using my 5. grade english skills I typed into google "make game" and since the first result I tried that out. In 2009 scripting was a feature that the free version of gamemaker already had so I learned some basic scripting. However just as you at some point I would have had to buy the paid version to create 3d games. Due to my parents not supporting me spending money on "computer games" I started searching for altenatives. Because back than most game engines were commercial I decided to get as bare metals as possible and found C++ combined with DirectX. So at age 13 I learned the C++ essentials within a month. After that I got to my local library and got a C++ and DirectX book only to realise a couple hundred pages later that I simply couldn't understand all the math required to use DirectX. Because my math teacher was unwilling to teach me the math that "I will learn in 3 years" I decided to give up eventually. A month later I gave it a second try and found out about OpenGL. I found a great tutorial series by NeHe Productions aka Jeff Molofee that even had I German translation for the first couple of them. Since there was no difficult math involved I could get started and even started my TH-cam channel to teach other German developers on how to get started with C++ and OpenGL. I'm currently following my passion by studying computer science at the technical university of munich.
Imagine how much better no mand sky would be if it was only one solar system and the planets where to scale thst way you could actually run into other players but it is still big enough to have your own territory
Thank you sir. I have been wanting to get into making video games since high school and had no idea where to even start. I downloaded Unity and felt overwhelmed and confused, I have RPG Maker but too dumb to go through tutorials I have to specifically read. I always thought I had to go to college to learn what I needed but maybe, just maybe, this video is my first step into becoming a serious programmer and game developer. I thank you from the bottom of my heart!
I trie at that age python, ruby and this weird thing called DarkBasic but never got really far. Yet the drag and drop systems of Game Maker and RPG maker were really easy to me. My problem is that it already feels I'm too far behind and don't know exactly what language applies where. I'm probably still wrong but it's a big sinking feeling starting something anew again. If anything I might just do it to improve my 21th century vocabulary
Thanks. Im just okay at maths. This for some reason I thought impossible to develop. Maybe one day I'll take classes, once I don't have that much on my mind.
I've worked with hundreds of programmers. Knowledge isn't everything. Sometimes a little knowledge and a good personality is worth more than a lot of knowledge and a crappy personality.
I remember growing up with game maker, this was my go-to game engine, I would show off to my friends that I can make games and they were all in on it, this was around the end of elementary school and and youtube tutorials helped continue my learning, but game maker did sometimes lack a lot of tutorials, even if so, most of them were really outdated
Dude first of all big shoutout to your mom that she did this for you and secondly big respect to your endurance. I always wantes to learn game development. Went to college and kinda started by using done scripts and altering them. I didnt even know about engines honestly. Then I dowbloaded engine after engine after engine. Usually did one or two tutorials and then altered the code. But I am honestly a lazy mofo and even when I did a game jam usually I stopped using it after a while. Now I am a software engineer and still way to lazy to just create in my freetime. It really isnt usual for a person to just do stuff he has no idea about and try to understand it and use it.
Thanks for making this video. Jarvis is a personal favorite, you just opened a lot more info to me. I just got started and love watching videos. Thanks
I am a black man who lives on the internet and has watched code videos all his life to learn how to code and also has read code books all his life to learn how to code. That is why I relate with the author of this channel deeply. I'm glad I found this channel. I liked, commented, and subscribed. also, i'm a monogame/xna developer who needed suggestions on unity tutorials so I'm glad you suggested some unity channels to me. His story of just starting on the internet and using the internet to learn and become great is what I do. As I too am a black indie game developer. I will definitely check out some more of your videos.
i just finished my first Game Jam, never thought i would like it so much. now that it is over i have the same feeling you get after you finish beng watching a whole series on netflix
ChiliTomatoNoodle channel is the best place IMO to learn game development and plain programming (math, graphics and programming) from scratch (programming basics "if conditions/loops/variables") to pretty advanced topics ("vectors/matrices/SSE/Cameras"). the fun part is that: you are introduced to programming through graphics not Command line and dumb hello worlds.
First you uploaded this on my birthday. Second I like to use ue4 and c++ for coding and like to watch Virtus learning hub for the ue4 tutorials and help because he doesn’t give you a full tutorial series for making a game but helps you out to an extent and has so many different tutorials from third person, first person, and more and even has a legend of Zelda remake series. :)
My favorite thing about this video is seeing the mentions reach out in the comments section. That is what all tech industries need, it’s more community and family based relationships. Work together to push innovation!
Thank you so much for the sharing, I gave up on GameMaker once and this video gave me motivation and tips to go on. Now I sorta want to move to unity and I just need to learn what I need to learn. Thanks!
so cool hearing your story dude! thanks for the shout
Jarvis Johnson hey Jarvis!
Heyyyyy!!
I also watch ur vids by the way!!
First time I realised Jarvis and Jarblis were different people ngl
I love me some Java.
Omg it’s troom troom
Loved learning your story and discovering new channels to watch!
how do you have so much goodamn energy Dan
Heyyy Dann,
Take a look on my history... I am from Brazil and I already watched a lot of your videos with my girlfriend
towardsdatascience.com/data-science-from-zero-to-kaggle-kernels-master-f9115eadbb3
Michael Reeves It's nervous energy
You're the best on this list. I'd rather watch the coding train than watch Netflix.
THE CODING TRAIN!!!! HUGE FAN
Glad I stayed up until 5am working on a video so i could catch this early ass upload my guy 🌰🌰🌰🌰🌰
Yoooo I love u
hi michael
"Working on a video" ... rather playing with *youtube buddies*.
have my babies
We want youtube buddies.
I appreciate the shout out dude
Thanks for the honorable mention! Sorry I'm not uploading these days- I feel like I've been in crunch mode for months. Maybe some day the studio I work out will ship the game we're working on and I will get time to make new videos. Some day... (ಥ﹏ಥ)
Hello @Makin' Stuff Look Good. I love your channel and hope you have some time to make more content. Pls share with us some news on your work would be awsome too. I found some other channel about shader and graphic, but you still the best.
whats the other channels name?
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ Take My Energy つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
YEAAAHHHHH
@The HandProject if youre on a windows keyboard, press windows + period and look through the emoticon catalogue
The biggest problem with learning programming from the internet is, that people who try to "teach" you to code use a snippet of a code, don't clearly explain what the purpose of that code is or when and where to use it. And assume that you just get it.
That is like cutting vegetables into small pieces and telling someone who just learned to cook "You see those chopped vegetables, mix them with water and you have soup". So, if that person wants to cook on his own, he can't, because he doesn't know which vegetables to chop, how to chop them etc. etc. (I hope that you get the point)
This is exactly the problem I am facing as a beginner and I have no clue about anything honestly, my math skills are also close to 0 so I am struggling a lot. I see people in tutorials just say "you use this, to do that" but I want to actually know how and why does that ceratin thing work that way and I am just left with more questions than answers.
Underrated comment honestly. I'm also struggling a lot to code and learn coding, because I don't know the meaning of more than a half of the things they ""teached"" me. I started with C# but the tutorials out there were horrible because they didn't explain what actually some things do and where to use them. Then I switched to Java and it's just the same thing, tutorials are bad, people don't teach the way they should etc.. The only ways I found to learn any language was reading a book or going to a site related to that. I'm learning Java from a site right now, but I gave up on Tutorials on TH-cam and stuff, they're bad in my opinion.
I allways felt like tutorials are like teaching someone who doasnt speak English there ABC's and then they expect you to write Shakespeare just from what you've learned about the alphabet
I've been trying to learn gml for a few months now and it does click. I've found if you use someone's code, annalise it then try to yo apply it in a different way. You slowly learn how it works.
I need someone to sit down and teach it to me like a preschooler. All the tutorials I’ve seen assume some knowledge beforehand and it’s so frustrating!
This is one of the most common questions we get, too! Nice work!
HA you didnt get a shoutout
You SHOULD HAVE been in the list
thenewboston, sentdex and of course you weren't on the list, it kinda made me sad.
Socratica has been an excellent Python sensei
Great video as always Jabrils. One amazing TH-camr that I feel deserves more credit in the Unity sphere is Unity3d College. This channel creates amazing in depth videos focused mostly on creating clean and well architect-ed Unity code, which I feel is a topic that is lacking in the TH-cam Unity community. Hopefully when you create a video on "How I Learned Unity", Unity3d College will make it on the list.
Yoo thanks man! Your the best!
@jrig123 what's the deal with your? To you're?
I stumbled upon your channel with your 48 hour game challenge video. Just blown away how resourceful and humble you seen. Really gave me some insight on where I can access invaluable knowledge to help hone my craft. After graduating with a BS in Computer Science I felt like I didn't get what I set out to achieve in college. You and I are one in the same I been a lifetime gamer since getting a used Atari 2600 for Xmas when I was 4, and have always wanted to be part of making video games. With work and home responsibilities dominating my life I felt like I didn't have the time to pursue doing what I would ultimately love doing for LIFE. To quote the movie Stepbrothers "I lost my T-Rex" but thank you Jabrils you have definitely inspired me to getting back to finding my T-Rex!!!
Your channel is SOOOOO UNDERRATED!!!!!!
Thanks for mentioning these channels. It's always good to have a library of tutorials/examples. I personally had a beginning similar to yours, however I started by searching "how to make an exe file" for days before finding out the term was called programming.
Nice collection you got there.
It's cool to see the CS industry becoming more approachable again.
Looking forward to your next vid!
cheers
Zanidd
PS: you forgot about security related channels :P
It's like all the youtube channels I watch gathered in the comment section.
Any suggestions? I'd be interested in a security channel Thanks!
@@scottjennings2165 you can checkout john hammond, LiveOverflow or my channel ;)
I was getting frustrated with myself and was planning on just giving up but then I found this video! I felt like inspiration has struck me once again, thank you very much!
How to get started with machine learning???
the link in description...
AishCanC#
r/wooosh
@@merr5593 r/wooosh
what is woosh ?
@@merr5593 the sound of the joke going over your head
Thank you so much. I'm honestly disappointed that I didn't find your channel until recently. Luckily I can catch up on everything I have missed!
I like how you do narration over you doing gestures. :)
Ikr? I don't know why, but that is so satisfying to me
That animation bit was funny as hell dude. Great Story btw. You've earned yourself a sub.
Legends say hes still eating that thing and making expressions to this day.
Dude I'm loving your style. the "eating while speaking body language while listening to narration" is such a unique style. Subbed.
Did you say "find a friendly community" and then proceed to suggest stack overflow. Haha funny joke
XDD well he did warned programmers can be assholes if you are disrespectful...theres one community that I know that is really friendly...that would be the Defold Forum... its a 2d/3d game engine forum but from the core of it, they are really inviting
uhm ok ...wkwkwk
Yea I remember asking something simple aswell and my english wasn't 100% perfect so I got downvoted a lot lol
Also I didn't know how to format code
Tyler Gabb stackoverflow takes time to fit into, learn the community, and ASK A GOOD QUESTION (no vague, no studf thats already been asked). otherwise, its extremely valuable.
This is only the second video I've watched of yours but this video has been unimaginably valuable. Thank you so much for sharing other channels.
I wish I could go back to being young and start with game maker but also stick to it! I was about 20 when I first used it in class, one of the smart girls in class used syntax after about 2 or 3 weeks and made a badass game.
I was sooo jealous, and felt dumb AF because I hated math, didn't understand anything about syntax needed to make a better game. All i really made during that one class is a crappy version of mario with the built in point and click commands, lol...if only I could rewind the clock and try harder, like really apply myself and use the forums for help.
The mobile game market was very ripe for the taking back then, maybe it still is if you got time and good ideas. If you are reading this and you are young and have the time, you got nothing to lose.
All you really need now is to apply yourself on learning useful skills and making projects on computers to become big and it's a bigger opportunity than going to college. (I've already went to college, not worth it honestly). I am 30 now and hated my current career, in fact i failed miserably in it because I hated everything about medicine and stopped trying, I am now for the first time doing something I enjoy, learning about my passions. Coding, and backend transport networks...a bit different than game dev but in the same general direction.
Whoever is reading this, good luck, all you gotta do is try, and you will fail often but if you get back up and try again, that is the ONLY way you learn, so if you like coding or working with computers, you will eventually succeed. Don't choose the easy way out, choose what you are passionate about even if it's harder because if you are passionate about it and stick to it you will win!
Spot on dude. I just started getting more into coding but it's very fucking hard to find time for anything because I am currently in college and have way too many exames and papers to write, I pretty much had to quit doing anything fun and started chuging coffee like an addict so I can do well in college AND try to learn more about coding. I have some basic CS courses at college but it's not much and not practical at all (basics of LaTeX, html/css, python, XML and SQL). I already passed my exam in html/css but if you asked to make a decent looking web site I couldn't do it at all even though I got a max grade...
But I can also see how kids in high school and bellow can struggle with learning too. I know from myself that back then I was just lazy as fuck, doing and learning things was hard and everything was overwhelming, I just wanted to have fun...
@@likbezlik college will always be hard if you take it seriously.
I stayed off campus, not in a dorm so my exposure to campus life was limited and made less friends. Didn't party while in collage. It helped keep me on track with assignments.
But even then all I cared was just passing, not acing my classes so there still was free time available. Finished with a 3.2GPA. If I cared more I would have done better, lol, but I hated what I was studying.
I regret not doing coding or other computer stuff while at that age, would likely have been a lot more successful following my interest.
@@moldoveanu8 Yeah mate, I am also something like that. I have no social life outside of chatting with random classmates when we have classes. I am also not chasing good grades because I just don't give a shit about half the subjects (I study Library and Information science). Information science part is fun and I try learn as much usefull things as I can but some other classes are just useless. I am struggling enough just passing, I don't even think about higher grades, that's just impossible in my eyes. Finished second year with 2 exames unpassed and 7.2 average grades (we use 5-10 grade system here, so a 6 is the lowest grade).
@@likbezlik nice, keep it up. It could always be worse. A lot worse than 60%. For my medical science major we needed minimum 81% to simply pass. So 87%-92% was considered just average. :/ You'd need at least 97% to be near a 4.0 GPA. I barely stayed in the 80% lol. If I were you I'd focus more on what comes after college. Because the college part you'll pass. And then the next stage can be a surprise even if you planned for it.
30 is still prime years. You got time.
I love this. This screams Community and gives a good insight to context in coding. Plus it feels like I'm being given the proper 2005 tour with this narration/visual gag. It's feel good. Good work.
what about derek Banas he does 1 hour videos that teaches you everything you need to know about a language!
Thank you Jabrils, I already know most of those channels, but I think is really great you share them to the community and the people who want to learn. Keep it up!
I believe Mark Brown's Game Maker's Toolkit is an invaluable source for game feel, mechanics, and general information about video game design. Everyone should check him out along with all the channels mentions in this video! They're all great.
Dude, I was definitely not having a good week or month or year and had been questioning wheter or not to continue with my scholar projects and such but your video actually inspired me a lot! Great content, great channels and a great time to be studying computer science.
Code is not hard. Thinking about what you're going to code and how you're going to code it is hard.
Exactly
@Virus R What?
ikr
And worst of all is that you need to have a very clear idea of how do you want it to work or else it either won't work or will be more complicated than it should.
So true.
I can relate to this! Even as a kid around 2000 I was experimenting with Game Maker and RPG Maker, and it really introduced me to what would become a great passion: Struggling~
Nice shoutout to Tim too!
"and because i know there's a lot of smart programmers in my dis...."
*joins discord in half a second*
I'm so happy that I found this video. I have wanted to get into coding (mostly game and website coding) for 1 and a half year, and I have just been like: "Imma wait cuz- *somewhat personal reasons*" but this is definitely a motivation!
Can't forget the youtuber BlackThornProd! He specialises in 2d games and us really handy with simple tutorials like movement or AI
For me it’s awesome to see someone like you encouraging my self and others with so much information!!! Thank you
Blackthornprod's good aswell for unity (he's like brackeys but more 2D and more uploads)!!!
You’re videos are really great dude. Ive been thinking about getting into game dev a bit
You missed some good theoretical channels like 3blue1brown and two minute papers
3b1b literally saved my math grades
Idk who two minute papers are but 3b1b is just math and stuff right? He doesn't actually cover much programming and computer science does he? Also no one can watch everyone /shrug
@@elikay2101 crypto, ai and stuff is also on their channel
Love me some two minute papers!
Devon Crawford is a good channel too
I've been trying to get more involved and find new channels to follow, and this is exactly what I needed! ty
Me: Wow I will finally find more programming themed channels!
*I know all of them already*
Here th-cam.com/users/999Greyfox
Yeah it's difficult. I'm trying to get into posting coding content but I'm a complete beginner. I just need people to try out my stuff, and give some criticism so I can get better. Know any good communities for that?
reByte Try reddit. r/learnprogramming is an excellent community for beginners and experts alike. Very responsive and great advice they can give you there. you can also try out a subreddit for a specific language, like r/cpp or r/learnpython.
I love how you have your own unique style in your videos. This is the first video of yours I've seen, but I just wanted to quickly say that you've got a really cool originality/creativity thing going and you've got a talent for making videos:)
Hey Jabrils! Great video... May I also suggest to you the following?
TheNewBoston - He hasn't posted in 2 years, but Bucky was an integral starting point for my coding "career". A lot of stuff is done in Java, but I feel he did such a fantastic job explaining things
Derek Banas - This guy IS FREAKING amazing. I suggest any and all beginners to check him out. His video's are so good....he is so humble... and incredibly helpful. This guy is truly an amazing person. And a fantastic teacher/programmer. everyone reading PLEASE check him out.
But finally Jabrils you have been super awesome as well man. I am so glad to see you doing well and your subs are growing. You absolutely deserve it. Your videos on ML as well as your live streams have been really helpful to me. Thank you is not enough.
Holy crap you are a dream saver! I've dreamt of being a game dev for 12 years (17 years old as of now) and ran into the same issues as you and the minute I check out this channel I find this video, I appreciate your help and I'll try to learn as soon as possible!
For anyone who just needs normal tutorials about a ton of popular programming languages, Thenewboston has a ton of content for that. If you want in depth C++ tutorials, Chilitomatonoodle has a bunch of great stuff as well.
XD I've been coding for around two and a half years now and started out with gamemaker too! I didn't realise I watched so many coding-youtubers, litterly 4 of the first 5. Nice video with a good message!
I almost watch every youtube channel mentioned
Hey, you are an inspiration for my journey onward. I like your editing style and sense of humor.
(explaining stuff in a manner I can comprehend also helps xD)
Your parents were really awesome i don't think i can imagine mine doing that :(
Love that I already am subscribed to all these channels. Good to see I'm on the right track
Checkout my channel too,for some cool tutorials
Where's thenewboston? I learned almost everything I know thanks to him and he as almost everything in his channel!
COUGH "ahhh sorry about that guys, must have smoked one too many cigarettes this morning, but its me, bucky here....."
I just stumbled upon your channel and this video but the style and storytelling immediately got me hooked!
Wanna give shoutout to CodeParade. Not sure which category it'd fit in but I was super impressed when I discovered it via Carykh...
I can't even begin to describe how much of an inspiration you are and how much needed strength and hope you have given me.
2:06 That was mildly disturbing.
lol
Oh ! A Jelle Marble fan ! Snowballs huh ? Midnight Wisps ftw !
A real Thank you man! I'm a freshman and everything feels overwhelming but this gave me a real good direction.
instructions unclear, made the matrix
Thanks for the tip to find a good community to ask questions me being a new student for computer science
You forgot sentdex :(
Victor Kojuharov i was just about to comment this
335
The guy didn't included thenewboston in his list, bro, sentdex's just after him
Loved the video and could help thinking about how funny it be seeing you record
1. //Who was waiting for 'CS Dojo' ??
2. return 0
Mee!!!!!
I started learning programming using gamemaker as well. Using my 5. grade english skills I typed into google "make game" and since the first result I tried that out. In 2009 scripting was a feature that the free version of gamemaker already had so I learned some basic scripting. However just as you at some point I would have had to buy the paid version to create 3d games. Due to my parents not supporting me spending money on "computer games" I started searching for altenatives. Because back than most game engines were commercial I decided to get as bare metals as possible and found C++ combined with DirectX. So at age 13 I learned the C++ essentials within a month. After that I got to my local library and got a C++ and DirectX book only to realise a couple hundred pages later that I simply couldn't understand all the math required to use DirectX. Because my math teacher was unwilling to teach me the math that "I will learn in 3 years" I decided to give up eventually. A month later I gave it a second try and found out about OpenGL. I found a great tutorial series by NeHe Productions aka Jeff Molofee that even had I German translation for the first couple of them. Since there was no difficult math involved I could get started and even started my TH-cam channel to teach other German developers on how to get started with C++ and OpenGL. I'm currently following my passion by studying computer science at the technical university of munich.
But Jabrils, you didnt talk about the almighty notepad
I've seen videos from all of these channels at one point. Can't get enough content from all these channels.
Imagine how much better no mand sky would be if it was only one solar system and the planets where to scale thst way you could actually run into other players but it is still big enough to have your own territory
Thank you sir. I have been wanting to get into making video games since high school and had no idea where to even start. I downloaded Unity and felt overwhelmed and confused, I have RPG Maker but too dumb to go through tutorials I have to specifically read. I always thought I had to go to college to learn what I needed but maybe, just maybe, this video is my first step into becoming a serious programmer and game developer. I thank you from the bottom of my heart!
Guys try Quill18creates he does unity game tutorials and does a gaming channel on quill18
Exactly how I got started coding too! I was 11 and wanted to make games. I literally looked up "game maker" and it that's how it all started. :)
You forgot the Techlead :( :(
yeah :(
Techlead is good but hes pretty recent... I keep forgetting that too
Holy crap, you just helped me get a clear direction how to improve my stream 🙏 Thank you so much!
what is even the point when ur 23 and everyone starts coding at 13
Mate you're 23 there are people who started coding in their 50s and made a career out of it.
I trie at that age python, ruby and this weird thing called DarkBasic but never got really far. Yet the drag and drop systems of Game Maker and RPG maker were really easy to me. My problem is that it already feels I'm too far behind and don't know exactly what language applies where. I'm probably still wrong but it's a big sinking feeling starting something anew again. If anything I might just do it to improve my 21th century vocabulary
Thanks. Im just okay at maths. This for some reason I thought impossible to develop. Maybe one day I'll take classes, once I don't have that much on my mind.
Coding doesn't have an age.
Also watch some of Garyvee's content
I've worked with hundreds of programmers. Knowledge isn't everything. Sometimes a little knowledge and a good personality is worth more than a lot of knowledge and a crappy personality.
I remember growing up with game maker, this was my go-to game engine, I would show off to my friends that I can make games and they were all in on it, this was around the end of elementary school and and youtube tutorials helped continue my learning, but game maker did sometimes lack a lot of tutorials, even if so, most of them were really outdated
jabrils How do i get started with machine learning???
jk
Dude! I caught that jazzy song at the end of your vid... takes me back to the Gran Turismo 3 days :)
I learned how to program from codebabes
only true source of coding knowledge
damn right
Yea me too.
😂😂😂
Pretty much all the channels you have talked about in this video are my favourite channels! :)
You forgot extra credits
They don't do anything with programming, only the theory behind creating games. You won't learn how to do any programming from them
They would go in the theoretical category like computerphile
Dude first of all big shoutout to your mom that she did this for you and secondly big respect to your endurance.
I always wantes to learn game development. Went to college and kinda started by using done scripts and altering them. I didnt even know about engines honestly.
Then I dowbloaded engine after engine after engine. Usually did one or two tutorials and then altered the code. But I am honestly a lazy mofo and even when I did a game jam usually I stopped using it after a while.
Now I am a software engineer and still way to lazy to just create in my freetime.
It really isnt usual for a person to just do stuff he has no idea about and try to understand it and use it.
Physics isn't either.
-Einstein
Thanks for making this video. Jarvis is a personal favorite, you just opened a lot more info to me. I just got started and love watching videos. Thanks
Great video bro definitely need to swing by my channel if you like these guys
I am a black man who lives on the internet and has watched code videos all his life to learn how to code and also has read code books all his life to learn how to code. That is why I relate with the author of this channel deeply. I'm glad I found this channel. I liked, commented, and subscribed. also, i'm a monogame/xna developer who needed suggestions on unity tutorials so I'm glad you suggested some unity channels to me. His story of just starting on the internet and using the internet to learn and become great is what I do. As I too am a black indie game developer. I will definitely check out some more of your videos.
Thank you so much for recommending coding train..love it!!!!
Im glad you take your time to put the links. TY.
Jabrills got me hella motivated to start learning game development again. Then I remembered that school is 3 days away. feelsbadman
Oh.. this is why this was in my recommended! CARYKH! Amazing channel, glad I found you :D
I want to thank you for letting me discover Tim Ruswick his channel. Motivation was exactly what I needed!
Thank You so much my man! most of these I already am subscribed but others I am very interested to see!
Thanks for the story of how you got started
Hope I can get started soon
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! I’ve been trying to find the ABC’s of programming for SO LONG.
Got into programming because I wanted to get into game design. Real life took me down a different route. Great list! Subscribing to them all.
i just finished my first Game Jam, never thought i would like it so much. now that it is over i have the same feeling you get after you finish beng watching a whole series on netflix
This will help me further my studies for sure! You are the best!
dude... u just open my eyes! ur my hero !
ChiliTomatoNoodle channel is the best place IMO to learn game development and plain programming (math, graphics and programming) from scratch (programming basics "if conditions/loops/variables") to pretty advanced topics ("vectors/matrices/SSE/Cameras").
the fun part is that: you are introduced to programming through graphics not Command line and dumb hello worlds.
First you uploaded this on my birthday. Second I like to use ue4 and c++ for coding and like to watch Virtus learning hub for the ue4 tutorials and help because he doesn’t give you a full tutorial series for making a game but helps you out to an extent and has so many different tutorials from third person, first person, and more and even has a legend of Zelda remake series. :)
Great video! Thank you Jabril! So many fantastic resources, THANK YOU
I already knew about Jarvis, CodeBullet and somwhat about Michael.
Good to know there more channels to check out within various fields!
Just found this channel and love it! Keep it up man!
My favorite thing about this video is seeing the mentions reach out in the comments section. That is what all tech industries need, it’s more community and family based relationships. Work together to push innovation!
Wow, 47k views in one week! 123k subs! You're doing amazing, keep up the great videos. They are very well produced.
Thank you so much for the sharing, I gave up on GameMaker once and this video gave me motivation and tips to go on. Now I sorta want to move to unity and I just need to learn what I need to learn. Thanks!