"Excuse me - WHAT." - Actual quote from me when I got to that part in Levisthan Wakes.
@bananabreadguy796010 күн бұрын
I've been searching for a space ambience music but little did I know that I really wanted was this, Spore space ambience.
@joseluizdesouzasouza874814 күн бұрын
Essa aeronave ajudou acabar com o terror da 2 guerra
@ProtoTheCheeseGod21 күн бұрын
Im so glad this fandom is keeping itself alive while nobody can do anything with the game for now
@CS-xn6vb26 күн бұрын
Anyone else sleeps to this?
@ThePlasmicAlchemistАй бұрын
I know this music is an actual Brian Eno track, but I can't remember the name of the track, and I can't find it in any of my playlists. The official track has more notes in it than what we hear in the game. Does anybody know what I'm talking about?
@ATMLVE26 күн бұрын
Hopeful Timean Intersect
@ThePlasmicAlchemist26 күн бұрын
@@ATMLVE THANK YOU
@OstermondАй бұрын
Happy 16th, you beautiful game.
@LonelyInLifeАй бұрын
Feeling this harmony helps to focus, calm and makes you think...
@WilfredoWolganGАй бұрын
I could listen to this forever.
@mamanimepranknewbieАй бұрын
1:46 that part of the ambience sends chills down my spine (the guitar sounds)
It ain't the same without the transmission sound ruining everything
@RusTsea196TАй бұрын
If Eros had had a large doorbell, the Mormon ship wouldn’t have missed!
@RaxoFilms2 ай бұрын
Can i somehow acess the online content even though i only have it on steam? I remember making stuff in 2008 and uploading them!
@captain_commenter87962 ай бұрын
Nauvoo: “do you have time to talk about our lord and savior, Jesus Christ?” Eros: *“no”*
@CozyCoffeeLofi2 ай бұрын
I remember I had so much memories with Spore!❤✨👍
@Aditya-f8t5z2 ай бұрын
This is difficult to understand. If it moves and energy conservation exists (assuming on all levels), then what did it displace? 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
@theenigma729023 күн бұрын
It didn't displace anything (that were aware of anyways) but in the books it was noted that Eros heated up with the equivalent energy lost from its initial orbit, which gave everyone (a very slight) reprieve that it's at least following *some* known laws of physics.
@Aditya-f8t5z22 күн бұрын
@@theenigma7290 @theenigma7290 Wait what? 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔It heated up with energy lost from its initial orbit? What does that even mean? Things heat up because of friction. Eros was in space. There is no atmosphere there. And what does it mean to lost it's initial orbit in space? 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔 I'm not an expert, but all bodies in the solar system are exerting gravity on each other. So Eros should have been locked in an orbit. How did something displace it from its orbit? 🤔🤔😚🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔 Someone with Physics plz explain. 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
@logansorenssen7 күн бұрын
@@Aditya-f8t5z It used some kind of reactionless engine to move itself, and heated up because of the work that engine performed. It's the kind of thing we have no idea how the hell to actually do - but the way it happened doesn't *quite* violate the laws of physics. It had a certain amount of kinetic energy in its old orbit, and less in its new orbit (because it slowed down, basically). That kinetic energy somehow got turned into heat - that obeys conservation of energy, but nobody today, nor anyone human in the 'verse, has any idea how to build an engine that can actually do that without expending some kind of propellant (or else emitting a lot of radiation - there is something called a photon thruster, but those are *legendarily* inefficient.)
@Aditya-f8t5z7 күн бұрын
@@logansorenssen hang hang on, do we still believe in causality...or have we suspended that...because I'm wondering what made it move its orbit in the first place.....so...if u say it has less energy in its new orbit and the energy difference between it's old orbit and new orbit is the CAUSE for it to MOVE....well....ok that's circular because there are only so many bodies in the solar system....if all bodies were accounted for...and their gravity DID not make Eros move...THEN WHAT DID..... Now don't say some reaction less engine INSIDE Eros made it move.....because then I'll ask how does that work..... Love to u stranger....🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
@BlueEyesWhiteTeddy7 күн бұрын
@@theenigma7290 This isn't true. What Naomi said is that it heated up meaning whatever they did to accelerate Eros isn't perfect. The second law of thermodynamics still holds as there is waste heat deposited into Eros.
@khabeleth23183 ай бұрын
I can't event discribe to anyone how this game and OST fascinate me
@JustHere4Kicks3 ай бұрын
The ads are messing up the experience.
@ATMLVE19 күн бұрын
Sorry, that's all KZbin. Nothing on my channel is monetized.
@gggfff-d7e3 ай бұрын
this is my meditation music
@fredeagerton30094 ай бұрын
My son and I went up in FiFi Memorial Day weekend and what an amazing aircraft of its time.
@ATMLVEКүн бұрын
I rode in Fifi a few years ago. I think back on it a lot! Cool experience to share with your son
@shadowstrider134 ай бұрын
I’m so mad they discontinued this game. I had all the dlcs but because ea didn’t support it anymore it wouldn’t let me log into my account and use the stuff.
@IgneousExtrusive4 ай бұрын
I remember begging my dad to buy me this game after seeing the footage of the original demo. Can't remember if he actually ended up buying it then or if I got it later on, but it was a huge part of my childhood, from elementary school onward. Spore is an incredibly flawed game, and I really wish that Will Wright could have seen out the vision of the game presented in the demo. Even so, it sparked the imaginations of so many kids, including and especially my own. And people are still getting into the game today. I really hope the devs are proud of what they made.
@Adpqayxn3nw8ay2 ай бұрын
Get lost
@a-time93724 ай бұрын
О spore ты останешься вечно в наших сердцах .Ты одорил миллионы людей приятными воспоминаниями. Вилл Райд создал всё же потресающию игру об эволюции.Spore игра которая вдохновила каждого из нас сдесь.....
@votered4 ай бұрын
Circa 2003 I saw B-29 “Fifi” at a WW II era air show. On the ground, it’s amazing how much larger tha B-29 is compared to the B-17 and B-24. I also saw Fifi in flight at approximately 2,000-3,000 feet, and she still looks huge. It’s fair to say the B-29s had their share of problems in 1944-45. The engines were prone to catch fire. That said, the B-29 was highly advanced for its time. It was new and complex. Titian, Iwo Jima and Saipan were captured by the US at a high cost of lives and resources because B-29 bases were needed to bomb Japan. Despite early B-29 bombing missions being less than successful, these planes and their crews rose to the occasion. Tokyo and many other Japanese cities sustained severe damage from B-29 bombings before the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The B-29 program was expensive. Yet think of how many American lives would have been lost in a full-scale land invasion of Japan.
@Z.DeAllen4 ай бұрын
what's with the recent interest in this? I guess all of us commenters just missed this game at the same time lol.
@YevhenSavchuk5 ай бұрын
Nice, but you should have used different sectors for their ambiences, like in the game, not just parker
@ATMLVE5 ай бұрын
I'm sorry
@YevhenSavchuk5 ай бұрын
@@ATMLVE No, don't be sorry! It is still a great video 👍
@ATMLVE5 ай бұрын
@@YevhenSavchuk Great thanks :D
@allgood67605 ай бұрын
The comments are just as interesting and important as the video.. salute and respect to Granddads and relatives that operated these missions in WW2.. never to be forgotten ✈️👍
@DarthGardens5 ай бұрын
Spore was a game extremely of its time. There will never be one quite like it.
@thetruestarking200005 ай бұрын
God I wish I could just fuse the space era of this game with Stellaris. The sheer scale of it was awe-inspiring even by today’s standards, let alone for when it actually came out.
@BoBiknotchicken5 ай бұрын
someone will say minecraft this childhood someone will say the old parts of call of duty this is childhood and I will say a SPORE is childhood
@BoBiknotchicken5 ай бұрын
someone will say minecraft this childhood someone will say the old parts of call of duty this is childhood and I will say a SPORE is childhood
@dugl6 ай бұрын
Maybe the only one piece of art of all history of humanity that gives this kind of eternal calmness, feeling of how the universe, our galaxy, is our beautiful home and it just exists and will keep us alive as long as it exists. I think it's something that connects every living creature on our planet, every human: many of us connect with this feeling by beleiving in god, but I think this "something" is just so undescribable, like every molecule in our bodies feels and remembers that it always was a part of the universe, like literally atoms in our bodies at one point drifted in some star or around some black hole. It's like somehow we all can feel and remember that billions years ago we were somewhere else and something else and we will never forget our roots.. and we're still not sure where it all started, science talks about singularity and big bang, many believe that god created it all. Whatever it was, I just can't stop feeling that we all were at one point, at one place, we all were connected at the beginning.. No matter how many depression, war and violence we have on our planet and in behavior, I'm truly happy to be alive and be a part of this beautiful universe, and growing up playing Spore - I can't remember what else could give me do much power and calmness and feeling that everything will be all right, even when I die, at some point maybe I will be a part of other creature that will feel a deep feeling at least once in their life, reminding of how I lived my life and how life of my atoms was after I died. How do creators of this game, Will Wright, did it? Do they know something that we don't know? Or you think I'm just a dreamy person, and it's just nostalgia, etc.? Or maybe the feeling of nostalgia is not that simple that we all think?
@rhiannongruner22836 ай бұрын
I was crying while listening to this... there are too many memories and feelings that I don't understand. I dunno what to do
@ATMLVE6 ай бұрын
Nostalgia. A happy sadness, longing for a time and sitatuation you know will never happen again.
@TheEnderGuardianFR6 ай бұрын
I don't know why but right here, right now, listening to this makes me feel like sharing, so here goes: I have such strong ties with this game. I discovered it at 8yo, being mesmerized at my dad playing the demo in which you could only play the Cell Stage, and later asking him to try it too. Day after day. Then he bought the whole game. I very quickly fell in absolute love. It is crazy how this game encompassed the thrill of discovery so well. You discover new funny looking creatures, new environments, new gameplay phases with different mechanics, but this whole time you experience it with YOUR creature, the species YOU created. I remember loving the Creature stage when I discovered it, I somehow felt, in a way, that this is what it was like to be an animal. And that you had a whole PLANET to explore, along with the creature friends you made along the way. It was simply the innocent, childlike sense of wonder, creatures going about their little adventure exploring their planet. And I was exactly feeling like that too, especially that my life at this time was not that bright, this even emphasized further how much playing this game was a sweet bubble of safety, awe and wonder to little me. The discovery of Tribal stage was fun too, I had never played a game with the top-view where you could control several individuals like this. And even to this day, I am totally under the charming spell of the 'Giddy-Up!' and 'Flowers' songs, respectively the ones that play when you domesticate a wild animal and when you give a present to another tribe. Again, such sweet memories. And the total amazement (and a little bit of fear) when I first saw a spacecraft in the Creature or Tribal stage abducting another creature and simply just leaving. Civ stage felt like a true strategy game to 8-9 year old me, and I loved being able to design the own buildings and vehicles of my species. It was fun, but I was definitely not prepared for what was about to come: namely, the Space stage. I don't think I had much prior knowledge about space before that, except for the basic names of the planets of the solar system. And DAMN, this game delivered. Seeing how beautiful space was, with so many different-looking planets, some with very particular feats (the 'rarities'), some with rarer spice, some with life, and having a whole GALAXY at my reach, it was just absolutely mind-blowing. I'm not even telling you about when I discovered binary systems, let alone black holes, worm holes and quasars. Plus your species' quest to expansion, and how accomplished I felt when I carefully picked a planet, raised it to T3 and placed my first real colony, that was just magical. And the missions, the relationships with other alien spacefaring civilizations, I always felt a bit of anguish when the first contact icon appeared, hoping that it won't be a warmonging or zealot civilization, but I thought that slowly improving your relationship with an alien species to make them your best friends even after a rough first contact, when people don't understand each other yet, was so cool, and it still is. And boy, when I discovered how to use the monolith and the hologram tool, my mind shattered. This sums up how amazed I was when playing this stage, and its whole music score greatly emphasized it, like the delicious icing on the cake that it is. I remember now how afraid of the Grox I was too, I never wanted to approach the center of the galaxy haha. And I actually made quite a few friends in online Spore, we were chatting under the comments' section of our newest creations, that was my first social media and it was so sweet, sometimes we were naming our creations "Gift for [nickname]", and we really made creations as a gift to our online friends, and I was aged 10-11 too, that was so sweet, I was so ecstatic to connect everytime and to see what had been up with my Spore friends. And the second shock came when I discovered Galactic Adventures haha, I absolutely loved getting my mind to the weirdest and dumbest scenario that I could create, and going through what other's creative minds had birthed. But yeah, I am writing this 15 years later, I am now finishing my studies (I should write my thesis but I'm writing this instead, priorities you know), I am now able to understand English as well as 2 other languages, and have become an independent, grown-up young adult, and I cannot be thankful enough for all this game has brought me, from my eternal passion of astronomy, my ability to let my creativity speak, to my deep interest in science-fiction and possible scenarii, and my ever-lasting curiosity and interest about biology, animals and nature in general. If I am lucky enough to have a child one day, I would love to share this gem with them, around the same age I was when I first played. I don't expect them to feel the same way I did back then, but I feel that it appeals to my sense of duty to at least try to share it with them, as it might represent the gorgeous life-changing experience that it was for me and that I still cherish to this day. Or not, but at least I would have tried, and that is totally fine. And there goes my little time-capsule comment, one day I'll go back to it years later, and be surprised at how much of this is still true :)
@Norgenation11 күн бұрын
Holy yappington that's 2 essays in 1 I'm not reading that whole bro fr made a whole book
@kamil_mugavara10 күн бұрын
Bro... we're so old now.
@Austin-lp3iy6 ай бұрын
me
@Thenoobyone29813 ай бұрын
me
@CritXIV3 ай бұрын
me
@2Twenty0Ай бұрын
me
@sedrifarhad6 ай бұрын
extremely nice game and music
@roywhitman71096 ай бұрын
BAD ASS!!!👍🇺🇸
@Hgdhgfdssxvbbnjoo6 ай бұрын
Wild how many were built, and now there are only two left flying
@jmw99044 ай бұрын
FiFi was pulled out of the Mojave Desert in 1971 to join the Confederate Airforce flying museum.
@HeliosRed957 ай бұрын
I played the space stage of this game so much, I at one point established communications with several of the other creatures I had made on their home worlds with one another. Then finding Earth and making my (poorly) made attempt at a human to populate it. There was Something truly indescribable about this game back then, I wish I could recapture it.
@LeDeux117 ай бұрын
ain't no space horror like a lovecraftian entity moving planetary objects and changing laws of physics at will
@kenanderson-q7q7 ай бұрын
Under powered and often over weight sent into combat with brave airmen aboard, indeed part of the greatest generation.
@DynamicK-r9o7 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. Love seeing the TBM. My father trained to fly it in WWII, but the war ended before he saw combat.
@lunarose25297 ай бұрын
Can't sleep. I watch this video. I start to drift off. Then an ad appears.
@ATMLVE19 күн бұрын
All on KZbin :( This channel isn't monetized.
@lasinleonid7 ай бұрын
Джиронимо... Вот это настоящее мужики и не то что сейчас из себя представляет сша, тогда не было 100 гендеров а были мужчины и женщины, летящие на войну... А что сейчас куда катиться этот мир
@mattaustin212823 күн бұрын
How’s life in Zasransk?
@fabricemartin18507 ай бұрын
Tubo compound
@CS-xn6vb7 ай бұрын
How do you find matchmaking?! I want to play so bad but I’m on ps5
@ATMLVE6 ай бұрын
Hi, sorry for the late response! We play a community modded version on PC. If you have the game on steam you can join us. Regardless you can join the community at Faction Files, just google Faction Files Discord server
@CS-xn6vb7 ай бұрын
This soundtrack gives me goosebumps of nostalgia. I wish multiplayer was active on ps5
@alonzowinston54707 ай бұрын
I had a chance to see here in Cleveland OHIO,a burk lake front airport, took a tour though it, and had to see it land and take off! One Beautiful plane!