I was so far superior to the other players they all quit
@PPeggythePirate3 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure Romero and specter are the only shotguns that 1 tap at 15m with buckshot
@martinroessler73094 ай бұрын
Hey, 👋 I know this is a little late but, teaching people how botany leads to knowledge in other areas would make a very cool vide. Joust one I can think of the top my head is a plant endemic to my country Tillandsia geissei has a crazy cool way of traping moisture from the air with pentagonal shaped tricomes that steak onto one another. Because the small distance between the tricomes solitaire gets traped. To this day is one of the coolest electronic microscope pictures I have seen.
@skraks21664 ай бұрын
Best Hunt:showdown tierlist creator in existence
@skraks21664 ай бұрын
Great Video :D
@alejandronavarro92264 ай бұрын
I really liked the tierlist, thanks!
@OgOssman4 ай бұрын
Yeah who ever figures out a good way to mimick players is gonna make alot of money.
@HUNTikoerper4 ай бұрын
Shotgun players are noobs
@Shizz-Tizzle5 ай бұрын
one of the reasons why I really like the winfield slate is that its the trench shotgun that made the germans complain
@Flamsleburger5 ай бұрын
I was paying attention until I got distracted by the BattleBlock Theater music
@Ashakona175 ай бұрын
Me watching this with 1500 hours Like 👁️👄👁️
@abbadox3155 ай бұрын
Lemat with slug
@Shawn-sensei6 ай бұрын
where pt:2
@Oldboy..6 ай бұрын
The Uppercut is the best weapon in hunt
@mac23126 ай бұрын
Yeah they use to not be so good I miss those days
@saintofgayfrogs6 ай бұрын
12:06 Jokes on you. I'm always sweating and shaking in any gunfight.
@THEGUYTHEGUYTHEGUYTHEGUYTHEGUY7 ай бұрын
He forgot how much range the specter had
@bassplayer2011ify7 ай бұрын
Single shots if you stick with them also have some off the best scopes in the game. So you can be that guy at 150 plus meters popping heads and moving before they can figure out where you are.
@silvergraphz84587 ай бұрын
6:16 As a Fred Meyer's employee, I heavily relate to this statement.
@SandyCheeks18967 ай бұрын
I really think so heavily weighing the price as a factor taints the tier list. I think this should be purely based on weapon performance and mention the price as a factor. However a lot of average skill players (like me, 1.2 k/d) have managed to accumulate plenty of money and contraband high dollar guns. I play pretty frugal but I’m never afraid to spend big because I know I can get money back reliably.
@orcendre88437 ай бұрын
FINALLY SOMEONE WHO RECOGNISE THE FRAUD OF THE UPPERCUT.
@Oldboy..7 ай бұрын
Dude that intro about mindset is awesome. Courage is everything
@dunderpickle284607 ай бұрын
The specter is probably the best shotgun in the game. It has the same killing potential as the Romero due to the high damage and tight spread and also has another four shots. It’s not even 200 hunt dollars making it a great budget shotgun with more ammo types than the Romero also. All shotguns in the game one shot out to 12 meters just some are less consistent at it. The Romero DOES NOT one shot out to 15 meters. The specter is better in every way except maybe price. You don’t need bullet grabber either just spam the reload during the cycling action. The Romero has never one shot out to 15 unless using slugs before hunt nerfed them into oblivion.
@Ya-got-boyf8 ай бұрын
This video actually got me back into the game. For the love of God why did the developers make their menu screen look like absolute trash but the game is amazing ? I've uninstalled this game three different times over the past 2 years and this video got me to reinstall it. I like to think I'm not a dumb dumb but this is just one of those menu screens that is almost just not worth it. I know at least two other friends that stopped playing because the menu screen was so bad. This is basically first person Vigor with a horror theme and NPCs.
@oak63028 ай бұрын
why hunter over gunslinger?
@cadmium73908 ай бұрын
A true newbie. Runs full tilt. Sets off every dog and crow. Uses bullets on grunts. Then dies to an ambush and leaves.
@BlackWolf99888 ай бұрын
i have 3k hours with gunslinger controlls dont trust this guy at 7:10, there is no reason to use hunter over gunslinger since you can pretty much do the same with holding Q. also another thing he got wrong is that doing the tutorial gives you BBs (they removed that ages ago).
@acalicodragon8 ай бұрын
Awesome video this one and the shotguns one 👌
@buckiemohawk36438 ай бұрын
Aggression wins in this game. Ive Brute forced my way into compounds and destroyed hunters. Ive been knocked down and watch rando teammates try to be sneaky it doesnt work.
@Tory-JJ8 ай бұрын
Fanning soyboys in the comments are whining lol. If thry removed the trait id be overjoyed.
@jimmya53986 ай бұрын
Why you so mad? Shotgun does what fanning pistols do but better. Chill out
@blackbat9088 ай бұрын
I just bought this, it looks so confusing even with this video 😭 Gonna looked around for a friend to teach me
@noeditbookreviews8 ай бұрын
When your perspective is "student of evolution," you can't help but be interested in all things biology.
@sierralawler37298 ай бұрын
I promise to be good to animals as you have reminded me through KZbin but also, the botany 100% and whatever excites you most!
@Conus4268 ай бұрын
I work as a gardener and been rascinated by nature most my life even before that. As a kid i learned as many animal names and stuff from movies and picture books. Then, as a teen/young adult learning about plants felt like relearning everything, like discovering a new alien world(cause as a kid i thought plants were just mildly more interesting than rocks). So yea, can confirm this videos message 100%
@bradypusgaming51428 ай бұрын
Epic vid ❤
@prototype81378 ай бұрын
The cheapest shotgun is the most consistent and best in the game aside from the crown and king. Romero just bangs consistently. I also disagree with lemat shotgun, ive gotten many one shots inside compounds. I find it valuable.
@normanfranklin47848 ай бұрын
Subscribing for more botany info!
@dappersloth8 ай бұрын
I’ll keep it coming!
@michelekendzie8 ай бұрын
I don't know how the KZbin algorithm knew I'd enjoy this video, but it was in my feed today. I do watch some videos on other science topics. I already enjoy nature (I hike a lot) and have very, very slowly been getting to know specific kind of plants better. For instance, for the last couple of years, my favorite tree has been the ginkgo. I'm not into gaming at all (I think that's your other topic in your videos?) but I'm here for the botany. I also like your name, Dapper Sloth.
@dappersloth8 ай бұрын
Glad you stopped by :)
@melanielewismoss29208 ай бұрын
You have such a soothing voice. Hope you make more videos. ❤❤
@onurtosyal81648 ай бұрын
I condemn your disrespect to my very own great grandfather the late Archibald Menzies.
@CODENAMEDERPY8 ай бұрын
I'm currently in a Botany class and am taking a field botany class this coming quarter. This kind of stuff is what I want to keep in mind during the excursions. And also throughout my life. I'll eventually work in agriculture, so, many of my interactions with the natural world will be less about fun and learning and more about diagnosing and prescribing. Hopefully, I'll be able to spread the joy of the natural world with those I interact with. Thank you for the wonderful video.
@dappersloth8 ай бұрын
It’s tough turning a passion into a career but it’s a hell of a lot better than having a dead end job you hate! You’ve got this!
@danita1228 ай бұрын
Such a good video. Got into botany myself only 3 years ago and now i am a biology student. The excitment i felt when i found Adoxa moschatellina for the first time was so cool, and it is seemingy very unremarkable plant. The coolest thing about it is that you starting to see all the connections in nature and understanding it on a deeper level. Sorry for my english.
@davidmende34098 ай бұрын
my most recent dive was into the magic that is sphagnum moss, because i watched some videos about the - frankly absurd - impact moors / wetlands have on the carbon cycle, both good and bad. Example: moors in their deteriorated state cause about 5-7% of total WORLD wide CO2 emissions, thats crazy. Why is there so much carbon in those bad bois? Easy, because they are covered in sphagnum moss, that has a funny way of growing -> it has no roots and doesnt need the ground to grow, it basically just sits in water, the top end growing, the bottom end dying. But because the moss makes the water it sits in acidic (because it takes in nutrients through ionic exchange) there is barely any bacteria and oxygen in the water, which almost halts decomposition entirely (i gotta look into this some more tho). And this going on for millennia. This is where we get peat from - all of it. And it takes AGES. A normal moor makes about 1mm of peat a year 😀 1. So every god damn meter of peat took 1000 years to make - sphagnums growing and dying, for 1000 years. Barely anything else in the moor matters, as long as it rains and the sun shines, the moss will grow (all other plants are secondary - moss calls the shots here). And since most moors began their existence after the last ice age - 12.000 years ago - the oldest moors have a peat layer as deep as 12 meters 😀 thats about the hight of your house. Now here it gets interesting Moors make up 3% of all the land area of the planet. Forest make up about 30%. With this, it may, or may not surprise you to learn, that all the carbon stored in moors (at 3% land cover) is fucking twice as much as all the forests in the world together (in numbers that is 550 gigatonnes of carbon if you're curious). The god damn amazon rain forest - of one the if not THE largest forest in the world - has less carbon captured than some wet piece of land in canada or sibira. And thats causing us some problems right now - because people of the last centuries (and still today) think moors dont do shit, and would rather burn these fuckers (peat), or put some corn field on it (instead of making sure that carbon - stays - in there for good) - so they drain them (cuz, you know, wet) and make them 'usable'. Now remember - the living sphagnum moss is making the water acidic through the way it takes up nutrients - and thats the only thing that stops the decay of the meters and meters of dead sphagnum underneath. Well with no more water present ( or living moss for that matter) all that preserving effect turns to wishful thinking - as ALL OF THE DRIED UP PEAT UNDERNEATH STARTS TO ROT IMMEDIATELY, RELEASING ALL ITS CARBON AS CO2 INTO THE ATMOSPHERE so thats that Thank you for coming to my TED talk
@StuffandThings_8 ай бұрын
Glad to see that botany is finally, _finally_ beginning to just catch on in the internet these days. I've been a huge nerd for botany for like... 7, maybe 8 years now, and its such a fun subject through and through, so interactive and there's so much depth you can literally never run out of interesting stuff to dig into. CPBBD was one of the first channels I subscribed to, back in like 2019 or so when he was a good bit more obscure than today, and I've followed Weird Explorer's fruit hunting and botany adventures for even longer. I 100% vibe with the points this video makes, and basically have the exact same set of feelings about the subject. Growing plants is also a really fun hobby, and a great way to learn hands on some stuff about plants, hell sometimes even stuff that hasn't even been recorded before (I've noticed my Akebia quinata doing a little bit of mimicry, and I'm starting to suspect that the entire Lardizabalaceae is capable of mimicry to varying degrees after reading that Lardizabala has been noted to do it too, its not just Boquila that can mimic!). Its always nice to take a break and just observe or research the natural world from time to time. Literally the only downside so far with my botanical interests is that for like the past 6 years I have developed an unhealthy obsession with the Kauri forests of New Zealand which... yeaaaaah, those are kind of hard to come by... (long story, but combined with a previous geology interest I dug a little too deep into paleobotany and got some anemoia for forests of periods past, and NZ is basically Cretaceous park) Also ironic that I also happen to be from the PNW and hate plants named after people too lmao. Fun fact about the Douglas fir, the tallest tree on the planet used to be a Douglas fir (the tallest reliably recorded, the Nooksack Giant, was roughly 465 feet tall), its just that all the tallest ones were all cut down.
@RickCheesman8 ай бұрын
Botany videos! How about how to set up a small green house
@RickCheesman8 ай бұрын
So proud of you! Congrats in the 1000! I see another 0 being added to that number soon! 10,000 is right around the corner!
@dappersloth8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@arthurxws8 ай бұрын
Do you think the Royal Botanic Garden Kew website is also a good resource? (especially to see the distributions) please become the naturalist of youtube
@dappersloth8 ай бұрын
Absolutely a great resource! :)
@brightmooninthenight21118 ай бұрын
First time seeing your channel, i love this video. In the past year I've fallen in love with observing and exploring nature and recapturing lost childhood feelings towards the natural world I had lost. Ive lived over 20 years in the same region and only in the past year have I actually seen many of the most common plants! I have been absolutely blind to original creation around me and it shocks me, the most blatant staples of the ecosystem I'm only now experiencing. I'm embarrassed to admit I've never noticed red maple seeds transition out of flower stage at the end of winter and turn into red seeds (before drying out and ready to drop). I've lived in South Georgia my Whole life and never noticed this.. and red maple trees are Everywhere. The human world is so insular and everything else was just a blur. All I saw was a blur of leaves and tree trunks and weeds that meant nothing and could not be differentiated. And I was missing out on the deepest beauty. none of this was taught to me in school. No respect or admiration for our own environment is encouraged to kids at school. That's a travesty. Now I notice all the birds and their songs. And I'm exploring the wilderness on a regular basis, I'm actually about to go right after this. I live by a great wilderness called Okefenokee Swamp, its over 440 thousand acres. I used to be very ungrateful for being born here. It didn't help that most of the woods I saw were pine plantations, equal rows of pines that obscures the original ecology. I believe that kids are so insulated from nature in this human constructed world they have no chance of a basis or foundation of understanding what life really is. It's amazing you are making this video, you are really doing a service to spread passion and wonder to help reconnect people with the earth in a time where alienation is at an unprecedented high. I look forward to more videos of nature if you make them
@dante-cr8fq8 ай бұрын
fantastic video, loved every second of it. made me rethink my perception of botany. keep it up!
@basketball75158 ай бұрын
The book collection you shared was fascinating. You’ve made me want to hunt that set down and read through them because it’s so wonderful when there’s a level of artistic expression within science or nature books. Keep making videos!! I really enjoyed this one & it made me laugh too. Sending good vibes from a fellow seattle artist.
@andrewbarnett45188 ай бұрын
My journey into botany started with looking through a microscope at a sample from a cesspit during my first year of archaeology. Learning to recognise, and later identify, seeds and fruits was rewarding and let me to specialise in archaeobotany. I collect lots of diaspores (seeds and fruits) for a reference collection. Most countries or regions have flora's, books about plants, often with a key to identify the species. If you are keen on the hobby, its worth investing in one of your region. You could always contact a local botanist, for example from a university or knowledge institute, to ask them what book they recommend! There are also nature associations were they count plants for surveys or have excursions, were I am they are mostly popular with elderly people who gladly pass on their knowledge to any young folk.