it is a real good channel. I especially like when it covers poorly functioning weapons and why they were made and why they sometimes had long lifetimes in spite of glaring flaws.
Sten guns were made out of repurposed pot lids and they forgot to put a handle on and they still beat Hitler
Sten: for when you absolutely positively need to murder approximately 80% of the people* in (or near) the room for a unit cost of 30 shillings or less.
*Contents may vary. Some settling may occur during shipping.
+3
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Shortytouching the meatIntergalactic Cool CourtRegistered Userregular
the sten is one of the best guns in return to castle wolfenstein
Having my video game firearm misconceptions corrected has been a pretty fun experience, all in all. Probably the biggest one is people think that shotguns only have a tiny effective range which is super not true for most kinds of shotguns and shot.
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Shortytouching the meatIntergalactic Cool CourtRegistered Userregular
people use shotguns to hunt birds
birds fly in the fucking sky! they're not usually very close!
Almost all videogames drastically reduce the range of shotguns
And pistols too
Though video games also usually drastically reduce the range of engagements, too.
it isn't any fun to get killed by an opponent who takes up all of 8 pixels in the corner of a window across the map.
I mean depends on how you handle it, but most of the time probably, yeah. I bring that up just because unless you want to solve that design problem, then having realistic weapon effective ranges in your games would mean there'd be no reason to use a weapon with longer range than like, a carbine at most. Metas would probably be all SMGs all the time.
I vaguely recall reading it on these boards, that a good while back, some programmer changed target hitboxes to be player-sized, and players complained it was too hard to hit. Then, iirc, they changer player hitboxes to bot-sized, and players complained that the bots hit them too easily.
Does that sound right/familiar to anyone else?
Play ARMA. Or hell, play PUBG. The shotguns are definitely video game shotguns in PUBG, but everything else is fairly true to life. There's nothing better than killing a player from hundreds of metres away. With any weapon, but my favourites were the VSS (because it's low speed meant that you had to arc the bullets a lot) or the Winchester (because it had no scope [it has a scope now]).
Year 536 Was the Worst Year to Be Alive - What Happened?11:39 https://youtu.be/s3YTfhJmh1I Was the year 536 AD the worst ever? The 6th century boasted many exceptional events, people, and historical contributions. The exception, however, was one year that was particularly burdened with a level of tragedy and strife most historians say surpassed any other moment in history: 536 CE. This was the worst part of the Dark Ages.
To clarify, nobody is calling into question the provenance of the actual Dead Sea scrolls at this time. The fragments were purchased by the idiots who own Hobby Lobby, and they seemed pretty dubious from the start.
Half the stuff in the Museum of the Bible is probably fake, because it's not an actual museum collection. It's the personal collection of a bunch of cowboys who have spent the last few decades hanging out a shingle saying "Will be swindled out of massive amounts of cash for fake Bible shit."
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FencingsaxIt is difficult to get a man to understand, when his salary depends upon his not understandingGNU Terry PratchettRegistered Userregular
Here's another tweet/thread on the Robby HobbyHobby Lobby scroll fiasco that goes into rather more detail about the scope of the fraud and its implications for biblical scholars:
valhalla13013 Dark Shield Perceives the GodsRegistered Userregular
People who hide behind their religion to deny healthcare benefits to their workers while taking their immense fortune and using it to loot archaeological treasures around the Middle East lost millions of dollars?
If you're genuinely curious or interested in learning more about the bastard that founded Hobby Lobby and funded Isis, Behind the Bastards podcast did a two-part show on him.
[60 fps] Laborers in Victorian England, 19015:40 https://youtu.be/5HbElEqm1TQ Upscaled with neural networks footage from the dawn of film taken by Mitchell and Kenyon in North England, 1901. In the video various films taken in 1900-1901 displaying some of the grittier nature of work in those days. As you can see, source quality is really important to make a descent upscale video
MonwynApathy's a tragedy, and boredom is a crime.A little bit of everything, all of the time.Registered Userregular
Oh hey history thread!
Ian has (finally) organized a bunch of the Forgotten Weapons videos into playlists, so if you want to know something about, say, firearms from Ethiopia while you're working from home, you can just click that specific playlist and go.
I'm not really a gun guy, but these videos are great little fifteen-minute bits of history about the context behind why and how a given weapon was created that nearly entirely avoid typical gun-nut canards. (Ian is a collector, so he does sometimes grouse for a sentence or two about the AWB, but that's about as far as it goes.)
How Iran Threw the World's Greatest Party In a Desert30:09 https://youtu.be/6aF0UqC0J48 In 1971, Iran threw an extravagant and exclusive party to commemorate the 2500th anniversary of the Persian empire. The party had a grandeur never seen before in the world's recorded history. It had delicious food from the world's best restaurant, exquisite drinks, luxurious accommodations, medieval European style decorations, and more importantly - the party had the most decorated guestlist - heads of states from 65 different countries, emperors, kings and queens, princes and princesses, sheiks, sultans, and business figures of all kinds from 5 different continents. The venue of the event was not some ancient castle or a seven-star hotel, instead, everything was organized from scratch, in the middle of a desert, by building plastic tents.
The cost of all of this? Not a million dollars; Not a billion dollars; this party almost cost a dynasty. It proved to be a stepping stone for the rise of the Iranian revolution and the fall of the Iranian Monarchy that changed the country forever.
Wow
Nice of them to at least throw a party instead of buying a bunch of ads for a wet fart presidential campaign.
Just very interesting to see how two different manufacturers from around the same time period made different choices designing a simple machine that does a simple job
A trap is for fish: when you've got the fish, you can forget the trap. A snare is for rabbits: when you've got the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words are for meaning: when you've got the meaning, you can forget the words.
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MayabirdPecking at the keyboardRegistered Userregular
If you're genuinely curious or interested in learning more about the bastard that founded Hobby Lobby and funded Isis, Behind the Bastards podcast did a two-part show on him.
Yeah, I was going to mention that in buying antiquities, real or not, Hobby Lobby was majorly funding terrorism. A lot of people suffered and died because these holier-than-thou monsters wanted to be the holiest-than-thous.
Remarkably open and frank with a lot of "we knew nothing and were duped". Although this should be credited to the testers for insisting on a public test. The fragments have also fooled genuine experts.
Three Historical Accounts of the Dog-Headed Men // Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta and Sir John Mandeville7:12 https://youtu.be/DMAC8Pc0QDA
Somewhere in the distant seas past India, these three famous explorers from completely different backgrounds came across a race of men called the Cynocephaly: a remarkable people with the "heads of dogs". Though Sir John Mandeville's account (and very existence) is heavily questioned by historians, quite what brought the otherwise reliable Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta to corroborate the ancient legends of the Dog-Headed Men is less clear...
The Ides of March - All the Roman Conspirators Who Took Down Julius Caesar13:48 https://youtu.be/KlEG_VvmnZI The Death of Julius Caesar...What does the saying "Beware the Ides of March!" mean? It refers to the day - March 15, 44 BCE - on which Gaius Julius Caesar, a one-time dictator of ancient Rome, was murdered. His grisly assassination was legendary. But just as infamous were the conspirators behind one of the most well-known deaths in history. So just who had Julius Caesar killed?
I read a book by one of the leading scholars on Germanic religion
I already knew that much of our information comes from authors who saw everything through the lens of Christian and Greco-Roman religion (with its more or less well-defined pantheon of gods), but it's still surprising just how weird and alien actual belief systems must've been
Posts
https://www.paypal.me/hobnailtaylor
Sten: for when you absolutely positively need to murder approximately 80% of the people* in (or near) the room for a unit cost of 30 shillings or less.
*Contents may vary. Some settling may occur during shipping.
birds fly in the fucking sky! they're not usually very close!
Almost all videogames drastically reduce the range of shotguns
And pistols too
their depictions of hells armies are spot on
https://www.paypal.me/hobnailtaylor
it isn't any fun to get killed by an opponent who takes up all of 8 pixels in the corner of a window across the map.
Does that sound right/familiar to anyone else?
https://youtu.be/s3YTfhJmh1I
Was the year 536 AD the worst ever? The 6th century boasted many exceptional events, people, and historical contributions. The exception, however, was one year that was particularly burdened with a level of tragedy and strife most historians say surpassed any other moment in history: 536 CE. This was the worst part of the Dark Ages.
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
To clarify, nobody is calling into question the provenance of the actual Dead Sea scrolls at this time. The fragments were purchased by the idiots who own Hobby Lobby, and they seemed pretty dubious from the start.
Half the stuff in the Museum of the Bible is probably fake, because it's not an actual museum collection. It's the personal collection of a bunch of cowboys who have spent the last few decades hanging out a shingle saying "Will be swindled out of massive amounts of cash for fake Bible shit."
https://www.paypal.me/hobnailtaylor
they got sued and sanctioned for doing that
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobby_Lobby_smuggling_scandal
https://www.paypal.me/hobnailtaylor
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
Sounds like a good start.
https://youtu.be/5HbElEqm1TQ
Upscaled with neural networks footage from the dawn of film taken by Mitchell and Kenyon in North England, 1901. In the video various films taken in 1900-1901 displaying some of the grittier nature of work in those days. As you can see, source quality is really important to make a descent upscale video
This actually feels pretty surreal as heck
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
Ian has (finally) organized a bunch of the Forgotten Weapons videos into playlists, so if you want to know something about, say, firearms from Ethiopia while you're working from home, you can just click that specific playlist and go.
I'm not really a gun guy, but these videos are great little fifteen-minute bits of history about the context behind why and how a given weapon was created that nearly entirely avoid typical gun-nut canards. (Ian is a collector, so he does sometimes grouse for a sentence or two about the AWB, but that's about as far as it goes.)
Nice of them to at least throw a party instead of buying a bunch of ads for a wet fart presidential campaign.
A WW2 French light mortar:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxxBbH-6_2w
and a WW2 German light mortar:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnQkLt3VJF8
Just very interesting to see how two different manufacturers from around the same time period made different choices designing a simple machine that does a simple job
Yeah, I was going to mention that in buying antiquities, real or not, Hobby Lobby was majorly funding terrorism. A lot of people suffered and died because these holier-than-thou monsters wanted to be the holiest-than-thous.
I gotta hand it to the museum for being so forthcoming, but I wonder if they're all gonna get fired by their boss soon.
https://youtu.be/DMAC8Pc0QDA
Somewhere in the distant seas past India, these three famous explorers from completely different backgrounds came across a race of men called the Cynocephaly: a remarkable people with the "heads of dogs". Though Sir John Mandeville's account (and very existence) is heavily questioned by historians, quite what brought the otherwise reliable Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta to corroborate the ancient legends of the Dog-Headed Men is less clear...
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
https://youtu.be/KlEG_VvmnZI
The Death of Julius Caesar...What does the saying "Beware the Ides of March!" mean? It refers to the day - March 15, 44 BCE - on which Gaius Julius Caesar, a one-time dictator of ancient Rome, was murdered. His grisly assassination was legendary. But just as infamous were the conspirators behind one of the most well-known deaths in history. So just who had Julius Caesar killed?
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
I already knew that much of our information comes from authors who saw everything through the lens of Christian and Greco-Roman religion (with its more or less well-defined pantheon of gods), but it's still surprising just how weird and alien actual belief systems must've been