Thanks very much for the tips Kirania. A Green World is a very confusing map for me so I'm thankful you covered some of those games. I'm already feeling a bit of improvement on region guessing the vibe from north to south on eastern Australia coast now. All the locs you covered help me a lot. Appreciate it🐐
@asura936816 күн бұрын
this is a tough watch 😭
@kirania914016 күн бұрын
Almost as tough as it's gonna be facing you with all you've learnt from these mistakes😈
@miallo16 күн бұрын
Thank you for another very nice video! On red soil in general (not just US 23:45): It is usually created by a chemical process which requires a relatively warm and humid climate - that is why you would not see it that far north. What do we learn from this? Learn your chemistry - it can help you with Geoguessr 😅
@chir0pter16 күн бұрын
I've actually looked it up and I am still not satisfied with the answer. Seems it's not of the same origin everywhere, different processes can create it- volcanic, or just modification in-situ. And there's some debate about which chemistry is actually responsible. It does correlate with warm and humid climates- and the Southeast used to be a lot more of both before our current icehouse climate.
@miallo16 күн бұрын
@@chir0pter That is indeed true - there are volcanic sources of red soil as well. But if you think about non-volcanic areas where you get red soil - which countries come to mind? Brazil, Australia, Cambodia, Central&South Africa. From my understanding of a discussion with a Geography student, those are all examples of Laterites, which are indeed in-situ withering of the rocks under warm conditions with dry and humid periods. I might be wrong though and I am very interested in this stuff - if you have more info then I would be very happy :)
@chir0pter16 күн бұрын
23:59 Soil in the Piedmont (halfway between Appalachians and coast) in North Carolina (perhaps SC too) is often very red. You can see it from satellite in construction sites near Raleigh for example. edit: yeah easy to find in SC too
@JustKoala16 күн бұрын
🐐
@sean255220 күн бұрын
this is fucking absurd
@sean255221 күн бұрын
nice, get better mic king
@sean255221 күн бұрын
would love to watch this but it's genuinely unlistenable just cause of the mic, pls sir
@droptopboatmobile22 күн бұрын
The Texas trees are called honey mesquite and are indeed extremely common throughout hill country and as far north as Oklahoma. They are completely spammed in central Texas though. Fun fact they were spread across the state from the cattle drives as cows eat the mesquite seed pods and poop em out.
@PIKAGEOGUESSR23 күн бұрын
cheers man, helped a lot for what i did wrong!
@miallo23 күн бұрын
15:50 In Germany the orange reflectors on bollards are at intersections, so just by the reflection in the dark you know that there is a crossroad. If you are not sure if it could be Lith/Germany, look if the bollard is at an intersection and then you can consider Germany - I don't think there are orange reflectors lining a "normal" part of the road here. I plonked into a few Lux locations and it seems to be the same there
@georepler621623 күн бұрын
22:37 also the rumble strips being on the outside of the outer lines is most common in nsw. it does exist in vic but more rare.
@chir0pter23 күн бұрын
13:36 I absolutely love those fall coverage spots in eastern Aysen/western Chubut with the southern beech trees, very distinctive with the small leaves and just a very interesting genera of trees. Many are evergreen which is beautiful too, like the NZ species seen in Fellowship of the Ring- but you have to appreciate the beauty of an Aysen farmscape with southern beeches in red fall colors. Also if the compass is useless like it is here it’s an amazing trap location lol. Winning games on that type of round is my favorite thing in GeoGuessr
@dusty_dusty23 күн бұрын
Super informative stuff, great work mate
@busdriver828927 күн бұрын
are you ill?
@mikejb76728 күн бұрын
Thanks for the pointers beast! I want to keep working on nmpz. Will remember those tips for the future 👍
@JustKoala28 күн бұрын
I feel like the old mic sounded better, might be a setting issue though because it sounds very robot-y
@Gqlactic29 күн бұрын
Thanks for the tips 🐐
@PandersGeo29 күн бұрын
I was in the game against TreezErik and it was NMPZ and not NM, a bunch of the things you talked about was not visable to us.
@kirania914029 күн бұрын
Sorry about this, I didn't realise until erik told me right after I uploaded. Your NMPZ guesses are just so good I assumed you were playing NM 🤦
@PandersGeo24 күн бұрын
@@kirania9140 Oh ok np :)
@erikas2272Ай бұрын
an interesting vid, but saying "uhmm" every 2 seconds with that type of voice really annoys sadly had to mute you and watch with captions
@kirania914029 күн бұрын
I'll try to improve the audio in the next video
@vybeeggАй бұрын
🐐 🐐 🐐
@GeoGreedyАй бұрын
thanks goat
@chir0pterАй бұрын
this isn't shade or anything but i honestly enjoy when kirania says you can clearly see the difference between these two photos and there's like no discernable difference. Most anyone else you'd protest "you're just post hoc judging" but it's kirania so you can bet there's a vibe difference you'd see if you get gud. Sometimes it be like that, no whining
@chir0pterАй бұрын
link to the map at 28:37? looks interesting
@halikaru7757Ай бұрын
look up "Russia dominant tree species map" and you should find it
@dasvidanjatvАй бұрын
SOOO EMBARRASING
@phophiclesАй бұрын
i have a humiliation kink
@avocadoguacАй бұрын
EP 3 LETS GOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@PIKAGEOGUESSRАй бұрын
Do i just have to add you. Which i already have.
@treezerikАй бұрын
Ig u gotta play worse
@chir0pterАй бұрын
Maybe pick out one round the player can be proud of too not just errors?
@chir0pterАй бұрын
If that gold iii player knew bollards he would not be in gold iii lol. However the uk bollard is easy to remember, its like a little amogus guy
@chir0pterАй бұрын
31:18 pretty sure the light green leaves are the distinctive star shaped leaves of liquidambar aka sweet gum, very common tree in the southern us, not found in Europe
@chir0pterАй бұрын
20:00 I haven’t looked at a topo map but I thought the difference in how close the green gets to the coast is simply a function of how high and wide the mountain ranges are- they are higher and/or wider in the south vs north. Because Peru gets essentially all its rain from easterly flow, none from the pacific
@chir0pterАй бұрын
Northwest Baja is extremely dry because it has a summer-dry Mediterranean climate where it doesn’t rain in the winter either lol
@chir0pterАй бұрын
For that Delaware location I wonder if the lower trees could be because of coastal dryness- sometimes having a more maritime climate can temper the incidence of thunderstorm convection in the summer. Haven’t looked at other locations there but a priori there’s no reason to expect lower trees in the mid Atlantic seaboard at least inland
@piskanaftАй бұрын
12:08 lol was that a cat interruption
@street_resident7208Ай бұрын
thanks, these are helping me a ton as a beginner who doesn't want to study on my own 😅
@Issy_OwenАй бұрын
Anyone gonna point out how he says Peru like poo😂 I know I'm a child. Nothing against you bro just something I found funny👍
@PaQeZzАй бұрын
these are awesome videos! I'm loving the format and how much information you can give out per loc
@slowsnailАй бұрын
These videos are awesome, please don't stop making these 🙏 love how these are long episodes; really enjoy how they are not too heavily edited, there are not many moments of silence or redundant info. super engaging + lots of good tips and knowledge!
@GqlacticАй бұрын
Hey Kirania, could you analyze synchronistic 🙏🐐 (he needs some tips) thanks
@KevLajАй бұрын
1:41 Ukraine non-EU plates have facked me over many times. It's not a reliable meta, especially in built-up areas, for deciding whether Russia or not.
@mialloАй бұрын
Such a helpful series! Thank you! 5:45 just for completeness: Complete blue bar is WA, but Victoria has a small blue triangle in the top center (think "V"ic) :)
@kirania9140Ай бұрын
Yep that's correct, and in Vic the blue is usually darker and often hard to make out
@mialloАй бұрын
@@kirania9140 Again: Thank you so much for this series! As an intermediate beginner this is one of the most valuable things on KZbin I feel...
@CatawgАй бұрын
Thanks for the explanations. They are very helpful. I love this series. 🐈🐕
@kirania9140Ай бұрын
🐈🐕
@johnpauldiodati9421Ай бұрын
Missing South Dildo is critical
@PIKAGEOGUESSRАй бұрын
🐐
@yepok6074Ай бұрын
Im Jordi in the episode, thank you for these useful explanations 🐐As a new player (around 1,5 months) you can sometimes apply meta and get good guesses but sometimes lack of knowledge and experience doesnt get you anywhere so simple metas for basic regionguessing are really helpful
@swordslicer56Ай бұрын
Thanks so much! That Bangladesh round was just really bad lol, but the explanations were really helpful. Didn’t know about the Newfoundland trees being slightly different. For Kazakhstan Ive been practicing it a lot so would probably get it now. I might need to practice some Texas coverage cause we saw the Texas road, but to me it didn’t look like Texas so I went Oklahoma 💀