RIGHT LIKE 😭i really thought they individually perfected every single beat in that song. not that the samples take away from it being one of the best kpop songs (pop songs in general tbfh) but still 😭
@@pls2213 It does a bit for me honestly. Almost like realizing you're adopted 😥 You still love your parents but now you know they're not the ones who made you. Feels different.
@@Raphael-2 that was really good but in reality it doesn’t really matter where it/you were originally from as long as everybody’s happy and enjoying it
What I really like about the sample used in both Venom and Dice is that the length, key, and rhythm was altered for both songs, so while we can tell by paying attention that it’s the same sample, it’s utilized in a unique way in each song & also gives a different vibe. Stray Kids used it to give a creepy, crawling feeling, and NMIXX used it to have a jaunty, fun beat Also, in a very recent episode of Chan’s Room (I wanna say ep.188?) Bang Chan of Stray Kids decided to make a lo-fi track for fun on live, and as he was scrolling through samples, he played the guitar riff from the intro of Lonely Boy by TXT. the chat just started going, “ayyyy Lonely Boy!!” which was fun😂
@@nyunation th-cam.com/video/vLX6eeda4BE/w-d-xo.html or alternatively, search “Chan’s Room 188” and it’ll be on JYP’s TH-cam channel :) it’s for the full live
No cause when I first heard sticker I thought it sounded like someone just picked random instruments in GarageBand and the fact that that’s not actually too far off is killing me
Need more of this kind of shit. Also a little disappointed in how intact the samples often are. The greats in hiphop tend to transform samples in incredible ways.
yeah i was thinking the same thing. some of these samples are just made into the whole song or just tuned up or down and used again used for the whole song =
My music production teacher always tells us that it's ok to use samples if you cannot think of a beat or cannot make a certain sound like a lead, drum pattern, or a fill etc. but if you do use samples, always edit them in anyway (like rearranging notes, or adjusting the pitch, tempo and frequencies) to showcase your own style and also so you have less of a risk being accused of plagiarising another song with the same unedited sample, especially if a main lead or whatever used as a main melody for a chorus for example. Hearing the same unedited sample in multiple songs is repetitive and loses a song's individuality and can make listening to certain songs a bit dull and boring (not the case for everyone). It's possible to create a song solely with samples and you can get amazing results from that, but it just doesn't show a producer's true, personal ability to produce music from scratch and again, the use of samples will eventually bore a listener at some point if they keep on hearing the same samples in multiple songs. I clicked on this video because I like to discover the little details in producing songs like how producers incorporate samples in music. It's interesting to see the conflicting views on the use of samples in Kpop in the comments of a lot of these videos I've watched, but my take on this is that you can use samples because they're out there for a reason because they might help producers create sounds they might not know how to create but want to use in their own songs, and the samples also help inspire things such as drops or melodies for certain parts a producer might be stuck with creating. I also think my teacher's advice is important to take note of if you wanna use samples in your own songs (The beginning of the comment) :)
Lol I just wanted to comment that I've coincidentally been assigned an essay where I have to write about issues in the music industry and in one section I have to discuss the use of samples in songs 😭 It's taking forever to complete this section because there are so many pros and cons but I wanna say thanks to the creator of this video for giving me examples to reference to in my essay 😂
@@aquatized ah, i wasn't aware of this. i was thinking more in terms of royalties because if he got a percentage from every song that used his samples he'd be set for life, his sound is so integral to the backbone of 4th gen kpop
KSHMR is huge on Splice & I assume he also makes a lot of bank on his other selling platforms. Basically he's gonna get "paid" each time someone downloads his samples, but he won't get royalties.
I swear everytime I watch these videos there’s a new sample found for Lalisa, Teddy really said lemme just sample the whole song because I’m out of ideas
@@ailem2707 oh u mean hits like eleven, hype boy, nxde, after like, stay tonight, (especially) love dive, hwaa, attention, moonlight sunrise,...? the list goes on
@@Jauhelihakeitto Is Attention composed of just samples. Not being skeptical, just curious. There's two that I hear and know of, although it could just be one dramatically altered sample: "You make me feel good" that continues throughout the pre-chorus, and then is pitch shifted and chopped for the chorus itself, and I suspect that the "marching band vocalization" heard in the beginning is a sample too. But everything else strikes me as original.
The thing about samples is that they exist to be used for the sole purpose of adding to a song, so I don’t know why people get so disappointed when they find out something is a sample. If it’s used in too many songs sure, but a lot of the time it just adds to it and I think it’s neat.
ik there were 2 skz examples from this year in here but I was hoping to see the Virtual Riot sample used for Freeze - my mind was absolutely blown when i found out about that one as someone who’s been listening to Virtual Riot for years before I even got into kpop (and same with some other artists like Fabian Mazur & MYRNE aka the Breakthrough by Twice sample)
theres this one sound i discovered that i didnt even know was a sample it’s used in U - choi yena and As If It’s Your Last - blackpink it’s the sound before lisa’s part in aiiyl but i haven’t been able to find the sample for days 😭
people usually just take the audio from my video and re-edit it into their video so it wouldn't really work. also i tried putting it in the middle and it look kinda fugly 😭
@@hanicore ugh thats so frustrating :( audio watermarks dont really work but imagining an audio jungle sound playing through the whole video is very funny
I was looking through the logic loops and samples to see if there would be anything I recognized and genuinely lost my shit when I heard the sticker sample
as a self-taught producer I'm ngl it's very odd to see how prominent and unmodified some of these samples were, you'd think there would be a little bit more original work done to some of them
And I guarantee you most of those samples came from other songs in past years. There’s a finite number of note combinations that are pleasant to the human ear. It’s all been used before.
call me old fashioned but i'm not a fan of how many of these tracks are built upon extensive use of almost entirely unmodified samples - it actually explains why wa da da by kep1er had this overtly homogenised, polished sound that i couldn't quite put my finger on. back in the day, producers would painstakingly craft their own drum loops, fills, bass rhythms, synth patches, etc. from scratch... and if they did use a sample, it'd be something very minor or extensively filtered/reversed/cut up/reshaped, or otherwise completely unrecognisable from the original. obviously it's not all bad or uninspired, and i guess that if you're doing this for a living you're operating within certain time constraints where these splice sample banks would help immensely. but man, if you're someone on teddy's level and you're throwing together major title tracks primarily using those KSHMR sample packs... i frankly think that's a bit lazy
Movies, music, and game companies are all run by businessmen and marketers. It's a miracle that any creativity and/or passion filters down through the hundreds of people and into the final product.
i agree. i think its cool to an extent that so many songs can use one sample and sound different but it makes me feel like all songs have an empty feeling now? i realise why fearless sounded empty to me bc its literally just a kick beat and that sample
@@shineefive i guess it all comes down to personal taste, i love fearless exactly because it sounds this way. it’s clean and simple, but for me that makes it more addictive.
"producers would painstakingly craft their own drum loops, fills, bass rhythms, synth patches, etc. from scratch..." What period of music are we talking about? Are we talking about back before the 1980s? Because the vast majority of the pieces after have been incredibly derivative of already existing material. The soul/funk craze in the 80s quite literally sampled drum breaks with little to no changes. Taking unmodified samples is nothing new and there's nothing wrong with using an unmodified sample if it's in a sample pack. That's what it's for. In the 90s, 2000s and 2010s there were already huge waves of sample packs, the difference was you'd have to purchase those with money instead of heading over to an audio library like splice. Most of music is incredibly derivative and nearly nothing in the history of music has ever been new. Idk why you'd want someone to cut up a sample if it doesn't need to be cut up. You can find most synth patches of the songs popular in the 90s and 2000s on most synthesizers of the time with minimal changes. Using KSHMR or other sample packs can be incredibly helpful especially for experimenting with different cultures, like Teddy did with the Lalisa track. If Teddy finds a loop of Latin American Percussion attractive, I'm not gonna expect him to look into all latin american genres to try and replicate it. That's the cool thing about Splice, different cultures and different blends of things can be made by most people. The only difference between now and then is that sampling is more accessible now, and that's a good thing.
you raise a good point. i do believe kpop producers use samples so often is because they need to whip up a new album every 3-6 months. and/or they don't want to pay people to actually play the instruments or provide vocal chops. all in all it's just to save money and time
It’s so soft and quiet that I doubt most caught it for the sample it was, which is generally what you’re going for. I thought it was a sample but couldn’t, for the life of me, find it anywhere 😭
Welcome back, I have missed you in this account ❤️. Anyways the samples for Never Goodbye, Like It Hot, and Generation sounds so pretty, dreamlike, and funky (for Generation) istg. Also finding out my favorite parts in Love Dive were samples was kind of a shocker but that track is a banger
Kinda surprised the recorder in sticker wasn’t just blown by some manager in SM 😭😭
Or taping the recorder to a ceiling fan blade and setting it on high
NAH BUT IT WAS FROM GARAGEBAND 😭👍
lmfao 😭
lmaoo
Trying to guess in what song they are used is my new favorite kpop game
I only guessed Pink Venom. What about you?
@@aizpruart I guessed like 20...I should touch some grass
@@sexy_u Same....
@@aizpruart you definitely need to explore K-Pop more, and by your comment which was 9 months ago I hope you actually did
the love dive samples smacked me in the face
Same
RIGHT LIKE 😭i really thought they individually perfected every single beat in that song. not that the samples take away from it being one of the best kpop songs (pop songs in general tbfh) but still 😭
@@pls2213 It does a bit for me honestly.
Almost like realizing you're adopted 😥
You still love your parents but now you know they're not the ones who made you. Feels different.
@@Raphael-2 no because you worded that better than ANYTHING i could ever word something
@@Raphael-2 that was really good but in reality it doesn’t really matter where it/you were originally from as long as everybody’s happy and enjoying it
What I really like about the sample used in both Venom and Dice is that the length, key, and rhythm was altered for both songs, so while we can tell by paying attention that it’s the same sample, it’s utilized in a unique way in each song & also gives a different vibe. Stray Kids used it to give a creepy, crawling feeling, and NMIXX used it to have a jaunty, fun beat
Also, in a very recent episode of Chan’s Room (I wanna say ep.188?) Bang Chan of Stray Kids decided to make a lo-fi track for fun on live, and as he was scrolling through samples, he played the guitar riff from the intro of Lonely Boy by TXT. the chat just started going, “ayyyy Lonely Boy!!” which was fun😂
omg can i have a link to watch the chan video?
I could tell the very first time I heard Dice that it was the same sample because that sound gives me anxiety.
@@nyunation th-cam.com/video/vLX6eeda4BE/w-d-xo.html or alternatively, search “Chan’s Room 188” and it’ll be on JYP’s TH-cam channel :) it’s for the full live
no wonder I love both of these songs so much lol
do you happen to know the name for the sample at all bc im trying to find it myself on splice and having no luck :(
THE FLUTE IN STICKER BEING FROM SOME RANDOM GARAGE BAND PACK IS SENDING ME LMAOO
don’t forget that winx sampled it first
@@boysounds9705 winx as in winx club??
No like literally I've seen so many videos trying to find out where it was originally and it was just in a random garageband back
No cause when I first heard sticker I thought it sounded like someone just picked random instruments in GarageBand and the fact that that’s not actually too far off is killing me
Need more of this kind of shit.
Also a little disappointed in how intact the samples often are. The greats in hiphop tend to transform samples in incredible ways.
Yes
yeah i was thinking the same thing. some of these samples are just made into the whole song or just tuned up or down and used again used for the whole song
=
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
that's what i was thinking, some of these kpop songs are just entirely made of samples that haven't been modified much
*clears throat* blackpink and both Lisa songs
3:26 “dynamite was really successful wasn’t it?” 3:59 “yeah let’s just use 2 samples *CALLED* dynamite to build our next track on haha” …and it worked
My music production teacher always tells us that it's ok to use samples if you cannot think of a beat or cannot make a certain sound like a lead, drum pattern, or a fill etc. but if you do use samples, always edit them in anyway (like rearranging notes, or adjusting the pitch, tempo and frequencies) to showcase your own style and also so you have less of a risk being accused of plagiarising another song with the same unedited sample, especially if a main lead or whatever used as a main melody for a chorus for example. Hearing the same unedited sample in multiple songs is repetitive and loses a song's individuality and can make listening to certain songs a bit dull and boring (not the case for everyone). It's possible to create a song solely with samples and you can get amazing results from that, but it just doesn't show a producer's true, personal ability to produce music from scratch and again, the use of samples will eventually bore a listener at some point if they keep on hearing the same samples in multiple songs. I clicked on this video because I like to discover the little details in producing songs like how producers incorporate samples in music. It's interesting to see the conflicting views on the use of samples in Kpop in the comments of a lot of these videos I've watched, but my take on this is that you can use samples because they're out there for a reason because they might help producers create sounds they might not know how to create but want to use in their own songs, and the samples also help inspire things such as drops or melodies for certain parts a producer might be stuck with creating. I also think my teacher's advice is important to take note of if you wanna use samples in your own songs (The beginning of the comment) :)
i love this comment!
i aint reading allat
@@musatoof your loss. it's pretty insightful
@@musatoof I recommend doing some dopamine detox
Lol I just wanted to comment that I've coincidentally been assigned an essay where I have to write about issues in the music industry and in one section I have to discuss the use of samples in songs 😭 It's taking forever to complete this section because there are so many pros and cons but I wanna say thanks to the creator of this video for giving me examples to reference to in my essay 😂
kshmr at this point should just start charging he could be making so much bank rn
for real!
I mean he does charge, just Vol. 3 is $40, although considering how so many kpop songs use them he could definitely charge more
@@aquatized ah, i wasn't aware of this. i was thinking more in terms of royalties because if he got a percentage from every song that used his samples he'd be set for life, his sound is so integral to the backbone of 4th gen kpop
KSHMR is huge on Splice & I assume he also makes a lot of bank on his other selling platforms. Basically he's gonna get "paid" each time someone downloads his samples, but he won't get royalties.
I swear everytime I watch these videos there’s a new sample found for Lalisa, Teddy really said lemme just sample the whole song because I’m out of ideas
That’s just any recent blackpink song tho
wait until you find out basically all kpop songs have samples, i actually think teddy is one of the few to almost always alter them
@@Jauhelihakeitto having samples is not the same as building a whole song using just samples....
@@ailem2707 oh u mean hits like eleven, hype boy, nxde, after like, stay tonight, (especially) love dive, hwaa, attention, moonlight sunrise,...? the list goes on
@@Jauhelihakeitto Is Attention composed of just samples. Not being skeptical, just curious. There's two that I hear and know of, although it could just be one dramatically altered sample: "You make me feel good" that continues throughout the pre-chorus, and then is pitch shifted and chopped for the chorus itself, and I suspect that the "marching band vocalization" heard in the beginning is a sample too. But everything else strikes me as original.
LMFAO THE WAY THE ANNOYING ASS FLUTE SAMPLE IN STICKER WAS FROM GARAGEBAND STOCK SAMPLES 💀💀
the never ending sampling of that sticker whistle
I’m so impressed that you can find and recognize all of these!!
it's so interesting how producers can change the mood of a sample by simply changing the pitch, tempo or removing or adding elements to it.
I'm never really disappointed by use of samples, it just depends on how creative they get with it imo.
WA DA DA is really addictive to my ears lmao
I would have never expected for the sticker sample to come out from GARAGEBAND out of all places 😭😭😭😭😭😭
In my opinion Kshmr makes the best samples for the best songs! ✨
Hey sisters! today we are going to learn the difference between options and facts
omg i cant believe were witnessing the end of the hanicore sticker sample saga! congrats on finally finding it!
The transitions between samples to the real sound track are EPIC!!
i love how u format these videos sm!!!
glad u like it!
The Maniac and Paradigm samples are so dope
i literally never knew that maniac had a sample in it 😭 but i’m never mad with samples because if i like the song i like the song
The thing about samples is that they exist to be used for the sole purpose of adding to a song, so I don’t know why people get so disappointed when they find out something is a sample. If it’s used in too many songs sure, but a lot of the time it just adds to it and I think it’s neat.
why is no one talking about the fire transitions from sample to song? 🔥🔥🔥
1:30 that transition was fucking great
Seriously
Wtf teddy is doing in the studio?
kshmr should be considered a kpop producer now 😂
ik there were 2 skz examples from this year in here but I was hoping to see the Virtual Riot sample used for Freeze - my mind was absolutely blown when i found out about that one as someone who’s been listening to Virtual Riot for years before I even got into kpop (and same with some other artists like Fabian Mazur & MYRNE aka the Breakthrough by Twice sample)
ooooh i actually know the sample that you are talking about but idk stray kids have a song that used that sample 😭
Kshmr samples really have the industry in a hold
I’ve never loved the use of a sample more than the kshmr sample in girls, girls has one of, if not my fav instrumentals because of it
samee it is SO addictive to me and i have no idea why i just love it i love the sample and the change they did in girls
I hope 2023, no one steals this content
5:43 the transition omg i'm ascending 🛐🛐🛐
oh my god butter by bts and aloha by pristin both use the same sample for the beginning of both songs! thats so cool!!
YOU FINALLY FOUND STICKER YEAAAAHHHH
i also noticed that the vocal sample in the beginning of fire by EXID is in one of the kshmr sample packs!
I think the sample at 3:43 that was used in The Feels was also used in Rollercoaster by Woo!Ah!
a joy as always! finding out sticker was from a jam pack did it for me 💀
"I ordered takeout... And all you got was this stupid sample pack"
Well someone is salty💀💀💀 like thats so funny wth
OH MY YOU LEGEND YOU DID IT YOU FOUND THE STICKER SAMPLE ORIGIN
3:42 this transition ⭐⭐⭐
5:51 - 6:05 the transition was so satisfying
Wow I had no idea how many of these mega hits were from samples, you've peaked my interest a lot. Great video!
THAT VENOM + DICE SAMPLE SOUNDS SO NICE AAAAAAA
5:14 sugar rush ride intro sounds like this sample a little
theres this one sound i discovered that i didnt even know was a sample it’s used in U - choi yena and As If It’s Your Last - blackpink it’s the sound before lisa’s part in aiiyl but i haven’t been able to find the sample for days 😭
Love options in the intro >>
4:41 THE TRANSITIONNN
I was waiting for the sample used in apinks dilemma and mamadols wooah hip 😭😭
it's in the video before this one!
To add something, 6:52 that elephant sound is from KSHMR, Sounds of KSHMR Vol. 2>FX Elements>Animals>KSHMR Animals 16 - Elephant Cry (F).
I would suggest moving your watermark closer to the middle of the screen by the way! Makes it harder for people to crop it
people usually just take the audio from my video and re-edit it into their video so it wouldn't really work. also i tried putting it in the middle and it look kinda fugly 😭
@@hanicore ugh thats so frustrating :( audio watermarks dont really work but imagining an audio jungle sound playing through the whole video is very funny
Yes queen is back
omggg you finally found the OH YA YA YA and Like It Hot sample
KWEEN IS BACKKKKKK
I was looking through the logic loops and samples to see if there would be anything I recognized and genuinely lost my shit when I heard the sticker sample
of COURSE the sticker flute sample was from garageband
Starting part of PV was the iconic part and it was sample OF COURSE 🥴🙂
This is such a cool video!! I'm so impressed with your searching ability to find all these samples :)
as a self-taught producer I'm ngl it's very odd to see how prominent and unmodified some of these samples were, you'd think there would be a little bit more original work done to some of them
THE WONYOUNG AT THE END ICONICCCCC
at this point I'm fully convinced that Teddy searches through his Kshmr's sample packs first and then composes his songs around them...
An interesting one for the future is music from the scene “Mysterious Mr Gatsby” is used in Red Velvets “Birthday” 🎉
are you talking about gershwins rhapsody in blue
the fact you used 'love options' for the intro :') it's literally one of my all time favs.
Editing is so professional but also personalized and cute. Then your personal quotes are funny as hell 😂💙
I think itzy‘s loco in the beginning is so similar to loredana angst and no one talked about it
that transition to the feels was so smooth omg
And I guarantee you most of those samples came from other songs in past years. There’s a finite number of note combinations that are pleasant to the human ear. It’s all been used before.
I MISSED YOU SM OMG
OMG FINALLY YOU'RE BACK😭💕
call me old fashioned but i'm not a fan of how many of these tracks are built upon extensive use of almost entirely unmodified samples - it actually explains why wa da da by kep1er had this overtly homogenised, polished sound that i couldn't quite put my finger on. back in the day, producers would painstakingly craft their own drum loops, fills, bass rhythms, synth patches, etc. from scratch... and if they did use a sample, it'd be something very minor or extensively filtered/reversed/cut up/reshaped, or otherwise completely unrecognisable from the original.
obviously it's not all bad or uninspired, and i guess that if you're doing this for a living you're operating within certain time constraints where these splice sample banks would help immensely. but man, if you're someone on teddy's level and you're throwing together major title tracks primarily using those KSHMR sample packs... i frankly think that's a bit lazy
Movies, music, and game companies are all run by businessmen and marketers. It's a miracle that any creativity and/or passion filters down through the hundreds of people and into the final product.
i agree. i think its cool to an extent that so many songs can use one sample and sound different but it makes me feel like all songs have an empty feeling now? i realise why fearless sounded empty to me bc its literally just a kick beat and that sample
@@shineefive i guess it all comes down to personal taste, i love fearless exactly because it sounds this way. it’s clean and simple, but for me that makes it more addictive.
"producers would painstakingly craft their own drum loops, fills, bass rhythms, synth patches, etc. from scratch..."
What period of music are we talking about? Are we talking about back before the 1980s? Because the vast majority of the pieces after have been incredibly derivative of already existing material. The soul/funk craze in the 80s quite literally sampled drum breaks with little to no changes. Taking unmodified samples is nothing new and there's nothing wrong with using an unmodified sample if it's in a sample pack. That's what it's for.
In the 90s, 2000s and 2010s there were already huge waves of sample packs, the difference was you'd have to purchase those with money instead of heading over to an audio library like splice.
Most of music is incredibly derivative and nearly nothing in the history of music has ever been new. Idk why you'd want someone to cut up a sample if it doesn't need to be cut up.
You can find most synth patches of the songs popular in the 90s and 2000s on most synthesizers of the time with minimal changes.
Using KSHMR or other sample packs can be incredibly helpful especially for experimenting with different cultures, like Teddy did with the Lalisa track. If Teddy finds a loop of Latin American Percussion attractive, I'm not gonna expect him to look into all latin american genres to try and replicate it.
That's the cool thing about Splice, different cultures and different blends of things can be made by most people.
The only difference between now and then is that sampling is more accessible now, and that's a good thing.
you raise a good point. i do believe kpop producers use samples so often is because they need to whip up a new album every 3-6 months. and/or they don't want to pay people to actually play the instruments or provide vocal chops. all in all it's just to save money and time
your editing is just chefs kiss
3:25 is also in vibin' by youngjae !!
when i heard love options at the intro i thought it was from my spotify 😭😭 i love that song, i thought was the only one who still listens to it
not me immediately recognising that first sample from love dive and not knowing it was a sample 😳
So glad you’re back! I missed these
When producers job is more about copy-pasting than actually making music.
The Love Dive sample 🤌
At first, I thought it was modified/taken from Jiafei scream 😃
Yay you are back!! I'm so happy we get more of your content, it's always top tier :))
I really love this video. I hope you made more videos.
The queen is back!!
lowkey disappointed to find out about generation, pink venom, and sticker being samples but FINALLY A HANICORE COMEBACK
Generation sample made me disappointed idk why
Hanicore is back
The Feels sample kind of reminds me of TXT’s Blue Hour dance break
first wadada transition scratched my brain so good
OH MY GOD UR BACK WE LOVE U !!!!
its so funny wow when i hear a sample sometimes i’m like “ive got no idea where that could be from” and other times i’m like “thats from wa da da”
Yet to come's completely threw me off. I would have never caught that
It’s so soft and quiet that I doubt most caught it for the sample it was, which is generally what you’re going for. I thought it was a sample but couldn’t, for the life of me, find it anywhere 😭
Glad to know I’m not the only one getting infinite mileage off my splice membership
Also glad you didnt dissapear!!!!!!!! Your channel is so interesting and well made!!
5:00 now why did i think this was antifragile
I'm not sure how to explain it but the kpop songs here sound nostalgic
Welcome back, I have missed you in this account ❤️. Anyways the samples for Never Goodbye, Like It Hot, and Generation sounds so pretty, dreamlike, and funky (for Generation) istg. Also finding out my favorite parts in Love Dive were samples was kind of a shocker but that track is a banger
OMG! bestie in the intro :"))))
YAYYYY TY FOR FINDING THE SAMPLE FOR VENOM AND DICE
5:42 OMG THANK YOU!! i searched everywhere but couldn't find it
Omg I was just watching your videos the other day I’m so excited that you’re back!!
NOOO STICKER DIDN"T ACTUALLEY SAMPLE WINX NOO
OMG YOU’RE BACK?!?!?!?! YES AAAAAAAAAKDKDJSJSDKSJS
I never realized that dice and venom had the same sample like k always associated the sample with venom XD
YOU SAID YOU WERE GONE AND I'M GLAD YOU LIED!!😭💓
omg 3:26 also Aloha by Pristin
your video is always the best