Been seeing several ppl ask about this, so worth clarifying: if we aim at ourselves every time, we have a guaranteed round 1 death in story mode. This is because in story mode, the first 2 loadouts are 1 live and 2 blanks, followed by 3 live and 2 blanks. Since we go first on every loadout and we have 2 health, we are guaranteed to die before the dealer ever gets a turn where there is a live shell left in the gun if we always aim at self. This means there is no chance of making it to the 3rd round and dying (or even winning) while getting our penalty higher if we follow this strat 👌
@@delightfulkissboy8926is it the optimal strategy though would it be more efficient to win for 17 billion years straight, I’m not expecting a response but is it the most optimal like the title says
That's actually what I was imagining. I wonder if it's possible for dealer to shoot himself so many times over the course of the game while you are only shooting yourself. That you actually make it to 3rd round and make all previous doors kicked moot. I mean even if it has extremely low odds, it would only need to happen once in those 4 quintillion times you're dying.
17 billion is peanuts to the universe. It takes at least 10^40 years for the universe to quit. so you could probably even do a max score run in 128 bit Buckshot Roulette in that time.
@@Tuned_RocketsWhats the difference between two universes each empty with 1 photon one is one light second across and one is a lightyear across and you run them each for that length of time, are they the same?
just a small nerdy fun fact: To get the 2s complement of any number, you invert all the bits and add 1. And in addition to be able to use the same basic addition hardware for subtraction, you can extend it by placing a bunch of XOR gates in front of the second input and additionally activating the carry in to do subtraction.
Dunno if the video mentions this, but we USE two's complement because you can naively add numbers together with no care for whether it is positive or negative, and, exempting overflows, it "Just Works"
@@Manticorn I'd say there definitely is a fuctional difference considering there is supposedly around 40 trillion dollars worth of money in the world. The Apollo space program cost around 300 billion dollars, but with 9 quadrillion you could fund 30,000 Apollo space programs.
@@Ambidextroid This stoopid ass wouldn't and you and me both know it. That guy couldn't care less if he got more or less money, he only cares if he's #1 in personal wealth and about ensuring that it won't change
@@Manticornthere is a slight difference, actually! With 300 bil, you'll likely destabilise the economy, while with 9 quadrillion, you'll completely obliterate it and make that currency completely worthless 👍👍👍
So, I recently found the channel kissboy, and I absolutely love the idea of your channel being a weird combination of coding explanations for these types of games, with MagicTheNoah levels of presentation, and a touch of DougDoug level challenges. Excited to see where the things go from here. Thoroughly enjoying this type of Nerd Alert content.
53:29 As a russian-speaking person, I assume Klubnika is just the Russian word for strawberry (Клубника), which would make the pronunciation be like Kloobneeka (l is hard, n is soft, ee is stressed) He's Mike, though, so the name might have changed/shifted phonetically due to environment, idk
44:20 For reference on just how large we're talking here, an unsigned 64-bit integer can store a value up to *18,446,744,073,709,551,615.* In this case it's a signed integer, so the number is only slightly less impressive, at 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 (down to -9,223,372,036,854,775,808). That's just casually, y'know, quintillions. EDIT: Well, I feel a little silly for saying this, because I really should've figured the full number would come up in the video!
@@AlecSoD well DKB dropped off the decimals each time he divided which is the correct thing to do but only right at the end, so the actual number of deaths is exactly one lower than what he calculated lmao
@@Milbyte11 Imagine spending the 13 billion years getting this record and then 13 more billion years some random guy optimises for your rounding error and beats you
Didn't expect to go from a buckshot video to an explanation of the Pac-Man level overflow bug. Well done, and keep the game programming analyses coming.
Another way to understand Two's Complement is to imagine a number line where it's split at the middle, the higher portion of the line being used for negatives instead of higher positives. You lose half of your highest possible stored value, but you gain the ability to use negatives.
Fun fact, that brief case weighs 203,340,546,421.776 tons, making your character the strongest being in existence, and his car the strongest machine to ever exist.
I was halfway through the video when I realized I wasn't paying attention because I zoned out and was jamming to the sweet bops in the background and I still understood the presentation
you're more confident than I am, putting code from a decompiled game up on the internet I've been doing a lot of decompiling of Lethal Company recently, to the point where I almost have the entire thing fully functional in editor, but I don't feel confident even in just including bits of the code in a mod to make my life easier. Instead I've been transpiling new code into the existing code to try and make it work, and I think I'm going to even need to learn how to do reverse patching for some things just to get an extra level of control over everything without leaking original game code
love your videos. Just earned a sub. This stuff is great for learning basic concepts. I think i’ll show it to my brother, im sure he’ll find it interesting
I really enjoyed the binary/coding review! I’m only an amateur programmer and barely dip my toes into C++ at times when I’m not using python, so the review of binary, binary arithmetic, and general programming analysis was fun. I hope you are able to showcase some more of this, because you did a great job of explaining those concepts!
as a time traveler im pleased to inform you that this video one day does come into use, though sadly in the year 1,352,982,248 Earth has recently become inhabitable and a lot of these "video games" and "gaming technology" ended up being left behind both physically and technology-wise and slowly dwindled until nearly forgotten, completely overshadowed by far greater methods of entertainment that i can not describe here for my own safety, as well as yours
I wish teachers like you were in school. Like, holy, my teacher just told my class that there are bits and bytes and binary about it. You know what is more hilarious? With this knowledge I managed to complete an exam, which all graduates from school in my country do, 85/100. It may sound not that impressive, but it is actually is, because it is very complicated, and only computer geeks, who like to code in their free time instead of game and friends, manage to do it better. Just crazy how these basic and important things I don't know because they are not really mentioned in exam
Based that you don't like Elon too He really just added *even more* harassment and awfulness to Twitter. It's also been particularly bad for niche and minority communities. He like amplified the worst and dumbest people. Also if you didn't know, he was the reason the first Starship launch broke. They had planned on it launching months after 4/20, but, of course, Elon pushed it up to that date as a meme. Which meant the launchpad that was planned (a proper water cooled steel pad which we know is needed for heavy lift vehicles) couldn't be installed, instead he had them build a hastily made concrete pad. As predicted, it exploded from the heat (it's pretty well known that concrete doesn't like extreme heat, it tends to violently explode). Parts of the concrete pad then got launched up back into some of the engines, mostly on one side, which caused issues later like loss of control.
i really like your presentation style during the educational bit that i hope people didn’t skip. it reminds me of my own way of trying to explain things to people, and this is high praise coming from me. (i have an extremely positive opinion of myself, dunno if it’s earned)
honestly stunned that my favorite gambling game guy was able to explain something so intensely nerdy and foreign to me and have it be fun and make sense
This is interesting because the way to make sure this exploit can never happen is simple, and something I've done as a toy problem in my secure software class. You just have to check if the number is outside expectations at all, namely numbers above 70k being also set to zero.
9,223,372,036,854,775,807 is almost as much as the average 17 year old's car insurance quote here in the UK if they dare try to insure an engine larger than 50cc
Subscribed for being the first youtuber who shows game footage as well as adding their own code to make things more interesting. I also like how you break down the coding process in a way that someone who has no knowledge of coding can understand
Thank you so much for the optimal strat yet again kissboy! I'll make sure to start on this tonight after work- i might be busy but surely I'll manage to get this done. Even better actually I'll make sure to do it without using cigs and beer too!
To be fair i dont think he cares if anyone decompiles his code. Especially with the names he gave to the variables. He made the game by himself so it obviously wasnt an inside joke he probably just left them like that for anyone who'd look into the code.
I wanted to add my friend found a similar score exploit in Master of Orion 2 which allows him to get insanely high scores by conquering all the planets except for one, ensuring they can never be a threat, then passing on the turns into the thousands and then surrendering. You actually get a higher score than if you win.
i learnt binary addition and subtraction in school, and they did such a shit job explaining two's compliment, that i just learnt how to do straight subtraction in base zero without even swapping the numbers you've explained it so simply and well, that now, 8 years later, i finally actually get it!
so TL;DR you boost your doors-kicked-counter until it's large enough to create an overflow when the final score is calculated whoch will give you the (almost) maximum value for the used integer number type. Also the length of an integer value depends on the language/compiler/implementation. In C and C++ for example I think it's usually smaller than 64 bits. Great video. Beautiful cabin crew 🌹 Scarlett Johansson 💋💋
To be honest I've always been kinda neurotic of int and float value limits. It often takes every ounce of strength not to save every damn variable as a long double. I just have trust issues with lossy data formats don't judge I'm seeing a therapist I didn't ask to be this way.
In a single game, yes, this method will give you the largest number in one go. However, If I were to take the money gained per second and compare it to a speedrun of the game, this method gains ~$16.67/second; Whereas a speedrun taking 6:50 would give ~$169.53/second!
This helped me understand why the outcome of some logic gates was so confusing. I don't know if I am the only one that thinks that. But the outcome of some logic gates didn't seem "logical" from an outsider perspective. But this explanation of "base 2, bit math" helped me think about logic gates differently.
I clicked to see what the ridiculous title was about. Ended up learning how to read binary. Love you! Also I'll make sure to start using this strat asap
Listening to an hour of Delightful Kissboy's dulcet tones explain things to me that I already know is a treat. Man has the voice that's a mix between Patrick Warburton and ManlyBaddassHero. I don't know how I feel about that particular mix, but I'd be lying if I said it wasn't soothing.
I LOVE YOUR INTRODUCTION TO BINARY! i already knew all about binary and stuff, im just absolutely floored to see another passionate nerd who does dumb shit with games because its fun!!!
The repeted iteration of calling two's compliment stupid math was so funny. Yes these are the limitations of the model we are sacrificing the smart math to store negative numbers. Never thought of it like that before
But IS that optimal? Let's suppose I played double or nothing for 17 billion years, statistically what's the highest cash-out potential I should expect to reach? (We ALWAYS double or nothing, so we always eventually lose. What's the highest offer we get?)
Been seeing several ppl ask about this, so worth clarifying: if we aim at ourselves every time, we have a guaranteed round 1 death in story mode. This is because in story mode, the first 2 loadouts are 1 live and 2 blanks, followed by 3 live and 2 blanks. Since we go first on every loadout and we have 2 health, we are guaranteed to die before the dealer ever gets a turn where there is a live shell left in the gun if we always aim at self.
This means there is no chance of making it to the 3rd round and dying (or even winning) while getting our penalty higher if we follow this strat 👌
Makes sense. I didn’t know round 1 was completely deterministic like that.
Tbf I didn't either until I spent an hour playing round 1 over and over again 😂
Based Elon Hater 😊. Let's go
Elon hater is based
@@delightfulkissboy8926is it the optimal strategy though would it be more efficient to win for 17 billion years straight, I’m not expecting a response but is it the most optimal like the title says
Now imagine that after 17 billion years you go into the third round and lose
That's actually what I was imagining. I wonder if it's possible for dealer to shoot himself so many times over the course of the game while you are only shooting yourself. That you actually make it to 3rd round and make all previous doors kicked moot. I mean even if it has extremely low odds, it would only need to happen once in those 4 quintillion times you're dying.
@@icycloud6823 round 1 death is guaranteed
this is why GOD's waiver was bloody. He knew this strat.
The lore! You just created the best bit of lore possible for this game!
Gives new meaning to "more money than God"
Godly headcanon
Oh, _that's_ why heaven is corrupted and abandoned. God's been occupied for 17 billion years!
@@Sky_Guy
And now he's retired
Did you know gambling addiction is correlated with self-harm?
But i can stop at any time so any self harm has no correlation to my gambling habits.
wanna bet?
@@milankurienov6768bruh lmao
@milankurienov6768 you may think that :)
I must be a statistical outlier. I don't gamble. :P
Ah yes, waiting past the death of our sun and possibly the universe is the new meta for highscore% runs.
the universe isnt going to end for an inconceivable amount of time let alone a few billion years lol
@@rasberiii The universe ends the moment you win, because it goes bankrupt
17 billion is peanuts to the universe. It takes at least 10^40 years for the universe to quit. so you could probably even do a max score run in 128 bit Buckshot Roulette in that time.
@@Tuned_RocketsWhats the difference between two universes each empty with 1 photon one is one light second across and one is a lightyear across and you run them each for that length of time, are they the same?
@@bencheevers6693youve just described giant differences between them yet still ask if they are the same? you already answered the question my man
More youtubers need to slip in mini computer science lessons into their videos to help combat brain rot.
You calling the penalties "cancer bills", "price of new leg bones" and "DUI fines" got a really good chuckle out of me
Thats what theyre called in the game files
@@TheEggDev Oh my GOD. That's amazing
fucking towels
just a small nerdy fun fact: To get the 2s complement of any number, you invert all the bits and add 1. And in addition to be able to use the same basic addition hardware for subtraction, you can extend it by placing a bunch of XOR gates in front of the second input and additionally activating the carry in to do subtraction.
Right! Forgot to mention how to compute the 2's complement #, thanks for mentioning this 👌
Dunno if the video mentions this, but we USE two's complement because you can naively add numbers together with no care for whether it is positive or negative, and, exempting overflows, it "Just Works"
I dont know what XOR is for but all i think off is à fnaf character whit that
@mikesavard2144 XOR gate takes two inputs (which can be either 0 or 1), and will give 1 if exactly one of the inputs is 1, and 0 otherwise.
@@_chirp_6108That's true but written in a way i've never seen before. I've always heard it as "1 if they are different, 0 if they are the same"
> Die for 17 billion years
> Lose final round anyway
Leave my man alone, his head was hurting.
This is actually an accurate representation of hell and once you reach the overflow number you're let out
DKB: Who is the guy that I’d like to condemn to an eternity of shooting themself?
Me (To myself): Probably someone like Elon Mu-
DKB: Elon Musk
I was literally thinking elon too it's crazy how great minds think alike
i would choose George instead in that 👍
Cringe minds think alike.
@@Zorro9129 Elon haters be like:
"why do you hate Elon?"
the person: "ehh, he bought twitter, that's why i want him to suffer🥴😭😤 "
same
> Hates Elon
> Hurts him
> Gives him 9 quadrillion dollars in the end
Is this what they call a "tsundere"?
To be fair, I don't know if there's functionally any difference between 300 billion and 9 quadrillion. There's only so much to buy, lmao
9 quintillion by the way, it's stupid amounts of money
@@Manticorn I'd say there definitely is a fuctional difference considering there is supposedly around 40 trillion dollars worth of money in the world. The Apollo space program cost around 300 billion dollars, but with 9 quadrillion you could fund 30,000 Apollo space programs.
@@Ambidextroid This stoopid ass wouldn't and you and me both know it. That guy couldn't care less if he got more or less money, he only cares if he's #1 in personal wealth and about ensuring that it won't change
@@Manticornthere is a slight difference, actually!
With 300 bil, you'll likely destabilise the economy, while with 9 quadrillion, you'll completely obliterate it and make that currency completely worthless 👍👍👍
Congratulations. You have tricked me into learning basic computer science. How dare you. Pulled out the powerpoint and teacherspeak too.
Clicked for bizzare strats, Stayed for Comp Sci 101
So, I recently found the channel kissboy, and I absolutely love the idea of your channel being a weird combination of coding explanations for these types of games, with MagicTheNoah levels of presentation, and a touch of DougDoug level challenges. Excited to see where the things go from here. Thoroughly enjoying this type of Nerd Alert content.
53:29
As a russian-speaking person, I assume Klubnika is just the Russian word for strawberry (Клубника), which would make the pronunciation be like Kloobneeka (l is hard, n is soft, ee is stressed)
He's Mike, though, so the name might have changed/shifted phonetically due to environment, idk
he is Estonian
@@NBU38 oh, makes perfect sense. Then it's most likely that the pronunciation is unaltered at all.
The buckshot roulette music in the background makes this computer science lesson feel like a fever dream.
Jojo fans might recognize this as one of the universes Diavolo got punched into.
I mean it's a death loop so technically it's canon
44:20 For reference on just how large we're talking here, an unsigned 64-bit integer can store a value up to *18,446,744,073,709,551,615.* In this case it's a signed integer, so the number is only slightly less impressive, at 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 (down to -9,223,372,036,854,775,808). That's just casually, y'know, quintillions.
EDIT: Well, I feel a little silly for saying this, because I really should've figured the full number would come up in the video!
I cannot explain why, but Delightful Kissboy's cat being called Gus is just so fitting.
I like how you subtracted the initial door kicks like it actually meant anything
It does. Did you not read the code?
@@HarrisnF I know it has “an effect” but it’s basically a rounding error. But when you’re in the nerd zone, you gotta be exact!
@@AlecSoD well DKB dropped off the decimals each time he divided which is the correct thing to do but only right at the end, so the actual number of deaths is exactly one lower than what he calculated lmao
@@Milbyte11he was close atleast
@@Milbyte11 Imagine spending the 13 billion years getting this record and then 13 more billion years some random guy optimises for your rounding error and beats you
Didn't expect to go from a buckshot video to an explanation of the Pac-Man level overflow bug. Well done, and keep the game programming analyses coming.
Is your pfp Buck Bumble? A Space Marine? Both?
Integer underflows my beloved
5:55
Wait, Delightful Kissboy, DK... Coconut gun...
It can fire in spurts
if he shoots you@@_chirp_6108
Another way to understand Two's Complement is to imagine a number line where it's split at the middle, the higher portion of the line being used for negatives instead of higher positives. You lose half of your highest possible stored value, but you gain the ability to use negatives.
Dealer wheeling with the tripple saw double spyglass deluxe.
I'm glad you are Delightful Kissboy rather than Detestable Pissboy
How delightfully kissboy of you.
very kissboy, delightfully so
new_leg_bones_price has got to be one of the variable names ever
I just got a lesson in binary and overflow from Kronk playing Buckshot Roulette. _What a time to be alive._
Love the shift from buckshot roulette to a 40 minutes math lesson lmao
according to the general release waiver, if you win you also apparently inherit the dealer's student debt.
i think this video has single-handedly gotten me interested in computer science
Watching your videos gives me a feeling of watching my older brother plays videogames.
If you continue to watch these videos, you'll be the one making the games for your brother.
I got to say, his ability to say numbers out load is impressive. I get lost trying to figure out what number it is past a million.
One million and one.
@@TheUndeniablyPowerfulH 🤯
@@cheep5645 such a mindblowing feat, right? i am so s m u r t
Fun fact, that brief case weighs 203,340,546,421.776 tons, making your character the strongest being in existence, and his car the strongest machine to ever exist.
when you said "Who is the biggest loser I can think of" my mind immediately went to Elon lmao. Glad we're on the same page
You're all so much better than Elon, true winners.
I tried to think of one of the guys from Impractical Jokers to be tonight's big loser.
Only like Trump and Matt Walsh can compare in my mind when it comes to sheer loserness
These comments are sad.
@@linhero797 ? have you seen the man
i've never heard of delightful kissboy before but just based on his name and this video title i subscribed
aaaand 1 minute in he says fuck Elon Musk 🤙👏👏👏👏
I was halfway through the video when I realized I wasn't paying attention because I zoned out and was jamming to the sweet bops in the background and I still understood the presentation
not two minutes in and you're already sayin the good stuff, i like you
I did not expect to get a programming lesson in a video of delightful kiss boy playing an indie game, but it was pretty good
Welp time to put this in the background while i try not to believe the first round isn't a live 😂
you're more confident than I am, putting code from a decompiled game up on the internet
I've been doing a lot of decompiling of Lethal Company recently, to the point where I almost have the entire thing fully functional in editor, but I don't feel confident even in just including bits of the code in a mod to make my life easier. Instead I've been transpiling new code into the existing code to try and make it work, and I think I'm going to even need to learn how to do reverse patching for some things just to get an extra level of control over everything without leaking original game code
I now realize I didn’t see lecture slides with “but delightful kissboy” on them in college nearly enough
love your videos. Just earned a sub. This stuff is great for learning basic concepts. I think i’ll show it to my brother, im sure he’ll find it interesting
I really enjoyed the binary/coding review! I’m only an amateur programmer and barely dip my toes into C++ at times when I’m not using python, so the review of binary, binary arithmetic, and general programming analysis was fun. I hope you are able to showcase some more of this, because you did a great job of explaining those concepts!
as a time traveler im pleased to inform you that this video one day does come into use, though sadly in the year 1,352,982,248 Earth has recently become inhabitable and a lot of these "video games" and "gaming technology" ended up being left behind both physically and technology-wise and slowly dwindled until nearly forgotten, completely overshadowed by far greater methods of entertainment that i can not describe here for my own safety, as well as yours
I wish teachers like you were in school. Like, holy, my teacher just told my class that there are bits and bytes and binary about it. You know what is more hilarious? With this knowledge I managed to complete an exam, which all graduates from school in my country do, 85/100. It may sound not that impressive, but it is actually is, because it is very complicated, and only computer geeks, who like to code in their free time instead of game and friends, manage to do it better. Just crazy how these basic and important things I don't know because they are not really mentioned in exam
Elon was the first name that came to my mind too thats crazy
Based that you don't like Elon too
He really just added *even more* harassment and awfulness to Twitter. It's also been particularly bad for niche and minority communities. He like amplified the worst and dumbest people.
Also if you didn't know, he was the reason the first Starship launch broke. They had planned on it launching months after 4/20, but, of course, Elon pushed it up to that date as a meme. Which meant the launchpad that was planned (a proper water cooled steel pad which we know is needed for heavy lift vehicles) couldn't be installed, instead he had them build a hastily made concrete pad. As predicted, it exploded from the heat (it's pretty well known that concrete doesn't like extreme heat, it tends to violently explode). Parts of the concrete pad then got launched up back into some of the engines, mostly on one side, which caused issues later like loss of control.
kinda a merciful fate for elon ngl
the nerd alert had me cackling brother, but im learning how to code so this was actually really interesting to me
Inflation 17 billion years later: Wow, now you can buy a lollipop!
several, even!
i really like your presentation style during the educational bit that i hope people didn’t skip. it reminds me of my own way of trying to explain things to people, and this is high praise coming from me. (i have an extremely positive opinion of myself, dunno if it’s earned)
i had a vague concept of what overflow is but this video made it click it for me, very cool!
me with ~17 billion years left in elon musk's body:
I would have sent Kurt, you know, he had experience in this kind of gameplay
NAH 💀
this is fucked but i cant not laugh at it
Who is Kurt?
@@thelittleredhairedgirlfrom6527 Kurt Cobain, if you don't know who he is, Google his name
honestly stunned that my favorite gambling game guy was able to explain something so intensely nerdy and foreign to me and have it be fun and make sense
This is interesting because the way to make sure this exploit can never happen is simple, and something I've done as a toy problem in my secure software class. You just have to check if the number is outside expectations at all, namely numbers above 70k being also set to zero.
I doubt most people are going to encounter this naturally by playing for 17 billion years though
similar names
9,223,372,036,854,775,807 is almost as much as the average 17 year old's car insurance quote here in the UK if they dare try to insure an engine larger than 50cc
The fact that this would make almost exactly $60,000 per hour is wild.
1:43 Actual CHAMP moment. 10/10
I feel like I'm back in 2014 with the little to none edit. I absolutely love it and it makes me want to start a YT channel again
Pretty neat to discover Patrick Warburton's alter ego.
hitting this door for 416 years crashes buckshot roulette
I was already well aware of the nerd section, but it was still very fun to watch through. Makes me want to see you play through Turing Complete.
Subscribed for being the first youtuber who shows game footage as well as adding their own code to make things more interesting. I also like how you break down the coding process in a way that someone who has no knowledge of coding can understand
Thank you so much for the optimal strat yet again kissboy! I'll make sure to start on this tonight after work- i might be busy but surely I'll manage to get this done. Even better actually I'll make sure to do it without using cigs and beer too!
Delightful kissboy is truly the goat of buckshot roulette
This man explained coding better than my coding teacher
To be fair i dont think he cares if anyone decompiles his code. Especially with the names he gave to the variables. He made the game by himself so it obviously wasnt an inside joke he probably just left them like that for anyone who'd look into the code.
Everytime DELIGHTFUL KISSBOY makes a DELIGHTFUL VIDEO I can feel the power of his big brainyness generating energy for orphans in congo
I wanted to add my friend found a similar score exploit in Master of Orion 2 which allows him to get insanely high scores by conquering all the planets except for one, ensuring they can never be a threat, then passing on the turns into the thousands and then surrendering. You actually get a higher score than if you win.
i learnt binary addition and subtraction in school, and they did such a shit job explaining two's compliment, that i just learnt how to do straight subtraction in base zero without even swapping the numbers
you've explained it so simply and well, that now, 8 years later, i finally actually get it!
DOORS KICKED STRAT
so TL;DR you boost your doors-kicked-counter until it's large enough to create an overflow when the final score is calculated whoch will give you the (almost) maximum value for the used integer number type.
Also the length of an integer value depends on the language/compiler/implementation. In C and C++ for example I think it's usually smaller than 64 bits.
Great video.
Beautiful cabin crew 🌹
Scarlett Johansson 💋💋
da real shinji?
Okay now what's that hourly.
About $60,000/hr 😂
Beautiful, well-presented strat. Everyone ought to start using it right away.
Genuinely would love to listen to you teach coding/computer science for hours. You made it interesting and fun to learn about!!
Fascinating video!
I just want to bring up the fun fact that half a byte (so 4 bits) is a nibble :)
To be honest I've always been kinda neurotic of int and float value limits. It often takes every ounce of strength not to save every damn variable as a long double. I just have trust issues with lossy data formats don't judge I'm seeing a therapist I didn't ask to be this way.
thank u for the shoot gun lottery kronk from emperor's new groove
h o w d e l i g h t f u l
Did you know that 90% of gamblers quit just before they hit it big?
In a single game, yes, this method will give you the largest number in one go. However, If I were to take the money gained per second and compare it to a speedrun of the game, this method gains ~$16.67/second; Whereas a speedrun taking 6:50 would give ~$169.53/second!
This helped me understand why the outcome of some logic gates was so confusing. I don't know if I am the only one that thinks that. But the outcome of some logic gates didn't seem "logical" from an outsider perspective. But this explanation of "base 2, bit math" helped me think about logic gates differently.
the nerd zone segment feels like Patrick Warburton explaining two's compliment and honestly? i'm all here for it
names his run "elon", based
also, nerd segment was my favorite part of the show, i didn't know about two's compliment before and now i do :]
I'm not sure what I expected coming into this but I freaking love this video 😂
Perfect sign off too
Wow, this can almost get you a home in Vancouver.
17 billion years to underflow the math so hard you make your score positive again. Also gotta love comments in the Godot code
I clicked to see what the ridiculous title was about. Ended up learning how to read binary. Love you! Also I'll make sure to start using this strat asap
Did not expect to learn binary while watching this. I feel like I gotta show this off somehow. Great vid!
Listening to an hour of Delightful Kissboy's dulcet tones explain things to me that I already know is a treat. Man has the voice that's a mix between Patrick Warburton and ManlyBaddassHero. I don't know how I feel about that particular mix, but I'd be lying if I said it wasn't soothing.
I LOVE YOUR INTRODUCTION TO BINARY!
i already knew all about binary and stuff, im just absolutely floored to see another passionate nerd who does dumb shit with games because its fun!!!
10/10 computer science professor
Didn’t think I’d walk out of this video fluent in binary but here we are
Ah, yes, me when I kick down 6 doors so I need 6 new legs
The repeted iteration of calling two's compliment stupid math was so funny. Yes these are the limitations of the model we are sacrificing the smart math to store negative numbers. Never thought of it like that before
With that amount of money you could give everyone on earth a little over 1M
But IS that optimal?
Let's suppose I played double or nothing for 17 billion years, statistically what's the highest cash-out potential I should expect to reach? (We ALWAYS double or nothing, so we always eventually lose. What's the highest offer we get?)