See the news from a bird's eye view above the framing at ground.news/nutshell
@Mrnut659 ай бұрын
First to reply 😮
@Steam_Gamer699 ай бұрын
why da hell the video is 5 minutes ago while this comment is 5 hours old
@philippeert9 ай бұрын
@@Mrnut65i wanted to say that
@williamlevison99669 ай бұрын
@@Steam_Gamer69 I know right, they found time travel without telling us
@philippeert9 ай бұрын
@@Steam_Gamer69i think cuz its like set up to be uploaded now
@RadhakrishnanSrinathan9 ай бұрын
For every like I'll study for 1 hour Edit: I have studied for about 2,250 hours and mastered (almost) all of mathematics. I'm thorough with everything in quantum mechanics, and am currently currently doing research on a specific concept in number theory. Am planning to publish my paper before 2026. All I wanna tell you people is, thank you. (And yes, my interest shifted to mathematics pretty soon into this challenge)
@UpInSmoke249 ай бұрын
Don’t study it’s not in you’re destiny Edit: all you eeeedjits can’t see I spelt you’re wrong for a reason 🤦♂️
@Arcane_A.C.9 ай бұрын
@@UpInSmoke24 Pardon, but it's *your
@melgeezy33259 ай бұрын
For each like I get, you have to study the history of porn.
@RadhakrishnanSrinathan9 ай бұрын
@@melgeezy3325 Sir, I'm 15
@Arcane_A.C.9 ай бұрын
@@RadhakrishnanSrinathan I've been doing that since the age of 6
@Jolfgard9 ай бұрын
Statistically speaking, no matter how good Fermi is at approximating things, we're still externalizing from an observation on a sample of N=1.
@FujiwarnerCo1dj9 ай бұрын
Shut up nerd
@Milky13489 ай бұрын
Is that wrong?
@MrWizardGG9 ай бұрын
Yes it's really really stupid to say because we don't see aliens they don't exist.
@drewwellington93379 ай бұрын
sample size is everything!
@giannimojica57999 ай бұрын
Well considering that there's microbial life on asteroids and other planets, I'd say it's more of like N=1.1 lol
@SewayPL9 ай бұрын
An assumption often made is that spacefaring civilisations will be after planets, rather than resources for habitable megastructures and fleets
@gentlemanvontweed71479 ай бұрын
My only assumption is rule 34. Can't wait for my interspecies experience.
@ALLMINDmercenarysupportsystem9 ай бұрын
@@gentlemanvontweed7147 Ummm... I guess look at Mass Effect (or any sci-fi franchise really) for a preview? There's probably a good chance you won't be alive to witness it.
@etienne81109 ай бұрын
Just assuming other species do spacefaring is already a huge assumption.
@zenopath19 ай бұрын
If FTL is impossible, the resources required to launch colony ships across the interstellar void to destinations that may or may not support them seems wasteful. Especially when you consider that with same resources you could build another orbital habitat that could house millions. Which would you rather, build another habitat to reduce the strain on earth's ecosystem, or send a small group of people on a generational trip that will probably end in failure? Humans would probably just densely populate the solar system rather than spread out to other systems.
@skynet58289 ай бұрын
@@etienne8110 Not really. Expansion due to overproductive reproduction is a universal trait of all lifeforms on Earth. It's not a huge leap to assume that alien life behaves similar.
@Limrasson4 ай бұрын
Imagine a star system with not one, but two terran planets. How exciting would be when one notices the other and realizes there is life on their neighbour.
@TL4546b3 ай бұрын
I hate to get your hopes up but that is possible for us.
@aperson32802 ай бұрын
@@itsoddsquadmore like from our oceans
@olaf-chan-72815 күн бұрын
@@TL4546b 💀
@AxDeath14 күн бұрын
the atmosphere and radiation levels of mars are consistent with a planetary nuclear disaster.
@olaf-chan-72814 күн бұрын
@@TL4546b where
@scottie_20249 ай бұрын
I just want to say, analogizing Oceania to space is brilliant
@toddberkely67919 ай бұрын
how lol. you cant fish in space, it doesnt rain and there is no wind.
@pickledgarf9 ай бұрын
i think he meant from an exploration standpoint
@brendanrisney24499 ай бұрын
We've been doing it for years. The number of sci-fi medias that don't equate spaceships to... well, ships in space, is in the single digits.
@greensteve93079 ай бұрын
I'm also impressed by them using the term "Oceania" correctly, so many people incorrectly lump in the entire continent of Australia.
@nocturn9x9 ай бұрын
@@toddberkely6791 it's an analogy for a hostile place...
@MrMoonJooce9 ай бұрын
I was not ready for "its free real estate" to show up in a Kurzgesagt video of all places
@GW2Zaruz9 ай бұрын
An uwu level of 9000 caught me off guard
@phelan_pt9 ай бұрын
@@GW2Zaruz you missed the >, the UwU level is over 9000! 😁
@jayde48729 ай бұрын
I wasn’t expecting it either, but still usual for kurzgesagt to masterfully utilize memes like a baker putting a few cherries on a cake.
@philipbarrett46559 ай бұрын
2 beds no rugs.
@the_electric_slayer9 ай бұрын
@@phelan_pt where?
@Siddharth_Joshi9 ай бұрын
7:35 Flirted with extinction might be one of my top kurzgesagt phrases
@jonnnnniej9 ай бұрын
Weirdly poetic :)
@xamanto9 ай бұрын
Humanity is already at a point of having unprotected sex with extinction imho, the only question is wether or not we can find the cure for the extinction-level STDs we're getting.
@Kritux9 ай бұрын
I've already heard that phrase in a melodysheep video, titled "THE HUMAN FUTURE".
@OsholitloTF29 ай бұрын
What about “How to Destroy the Universe”
@socksWithHolesInThem19719 ай бұрын
I think humanity has not just flirted but exchanged numbers with and flashed a boob at extinction.
@BRwritesmusicАй бұрын
got to respect the effort they put into making an alien script that corresponds with letters 1:06
@thomas.029 ай бұрын
There's one complication: we don't actually need to live on planets. With the high tech that allows interstellar travel, you can easily build giant space stations to live on, powered by your friendly neighbourhood fusion reactor (your Sun) even if you yourself haven't figured out fusion.
@placeholdername00009 ай бұрын
And if you find a decent sized rock with some uranium or thorium in it, you can live on that for thousands of years. This would allow you to travel interstellar distances, just by hanging out and waiting for generations on a rock. Also, the stars move, meaning that any civilization in a star system that lasts for millions of years, will inevitably have a close encounter with another star.
@joost1992079 ай бұрын
But a planet is always preferable though. No tech can match the scale and freedom you have on a planet (that suits your needs). You could get close though, with enormous stations powered by an artificial sun and other trickery. But at that point it's probably easier to just find or terraform a planet.
@EamonnLawler9 ай бұрын
Gravity wells may well be for suckers! In the distant future it may well seem strange to live in the constrictive environment of a planet.
@firewoodloki9 ай бұрын
@@joost199207 Even in real life, we have people living in vehicles, like trucks and boats. If it can be done, it will be done.
@kuney65189 ай бұрын
While I get what you are saying, unlimited energy is not everything required to live, water is important too. Thus, finding a planet with water and actually living on it would be much more cost efficient than transporting that water to a space station.
@Chevifier9 ай бұрын
"Mars is the worst,.... except Venus is even worse" I giggled at that for some reason😂
@aamirrazak34679 ай бұрын
yeah venus makes mars look tame by comparison. it's like a hellish landscape with sulfuric acid and carbon dioxide clouds
@AngelicaCline-i6d9 ай бұрын
Me too.
@rafsan15789 ай бұрын
05:01 way too expensive, too expensive, still too expensive😂😂😂
@zealousdoggo9 ай бұрын
Hey Venus gets less credit than it deserves, sure the surface is hellish but go a few kilometres up and it's a warm earth like temperature and pressure with adequate radiation protection, the same gravity as earth and no acid rain. I see the prospect of making a balloon to be far more in our grasp than making artificial gravity or an atmosphere and magnetic field
@alex399779 ай бұрын
yea its clearly worser.
@Ny0s3 ай бұрын
The analogy is very good, it helps with understanding this very speculative subject
@GentrifiedPotato9 ай бұрын
I really want a Civilization-style video game with Kurzgesagt's art style where I can colonize or conquer space.
@Eagle-24489 ай бұрын
Someone started to, but they didn't finish it
@amongusgaming1239 ай бұрын
Stellaris (minus the art style)
@uriargaman72419 ай бұрын
Spore, the OG
@iglipoleshi15229 ай бұрын
if it was properly made it would be literally terabytes of just maps of galaxies
@mikrikbe9 ай бұрын
OG Master of Orion
@samuraichicken92488 ай бұрын
The thing that really blows my nipples right off is the fact that this conversation is just about one galaxy, the Milky Way. Now remember that there are billions upon billions of galaxies, many of them vastly larger than our own. It's bonkers and absolutely mind boggling.
@BringBackCyParkVendingMachines5 ай бұрын
😂
@ID-su6cv5 ай бұрын
If it blows your one nipple off does that mean your chest now looks like someone winking
@FinalMeep4 ай бұрын
Right?! I find that I constantly remind myself, "and this is JUST the Milky Way" - I don't know what for, since it's not like I can really comprehend the ginormity of the universe, but yeah.
@MrTweetyhack4 ай бұрын
you should be more worried about reattaching your nipples
@JaedenRW3 ай бұрын
With this fact, aliens have to exist
@bobbyd.roberson55889 ай бұрын
04:33 “We stop for nobody” Nice Spaceballs reference 😂😂
@ICountFrom09 ай бұрын
I scrolled to find the jokes about this, was worth it.
@MrNerv9 ай бұрын
Nearly right, although I appreciate the reference highly, it's 'we brake for nobody'! But point taken, nonetheless. 😃
@WindFireAllThatKindOfThing9 ай бұрын
In the grim darkness of the far future...there is only Kurzgesagt.
@Mormielo9 ай бұрын
Not sure it's relevant but he also pronounces Years like the Year in the BadYear Blimp...
@-IE_it_yourself9 ай бұрын
i missed that
@joshuapartridge50923 ай бұрын
in a million years, the descendents of the people that colonized the other side of the milky way will be the aliens we imagined a million years prior
@CHEMopath9 ай бұрын
Every Kurzgesagt video: - Facts - Scares you - Calms you down - Birb (or bird somehow) - Also the remarkable authoritative British accent
@kamberlin229 ай бұрын
Is it really a Kurzgesagt video if you aren't fascinated/frightened by the end of it?
@PhillipWenger9 ай бұрын
The _fake_ British accent, you mean.
@CHEMopath9 ай бұрын
@@PhillipWenger Definitely yes lol!! *FAKE* British accent
@CHEMopath9 ай бұрын
@Haha.your.reading.this.idiot. Just _sounds_ authoritative, you know 😂😂 Honestly, their contents aren't bad, but the scale looks too massive (can't really describe the feeling
@JohnWesleyHardin18539 ай бұрын
@penderyn8794 - "larpers" ! Good one!
@Montlev8 ай бұрын
Just for the fun of it, I have translated every single space letter into our alphabet based on how they are shown in each topic's title. So here's what every single timestamp of the video says: 0:49 - Teddy. Daniela. Mari. Yvo. *Asteroids!!!!* 2:56 - C-A-S galaxy Simba Nala Mufasa Salem Group Mrs. Norris System Cheshire Cluster Tom ?i?i Cluster [Could be Jiji, Qiqi or Zizi. These 3 letters were never presented in their space form] Crookshanks Cluster Garfield Group Meowyh Star 8:24 - Send donuts! 8:33 - The Great Frog Of Frogisland 8:37 - Lunch Date at ? PM Today [Could be any number] Don't forget! *Vessel Approaching!* 8:58 - How dare you!!! 9:04 - Easter System
@bielvv91488 ай бұрын
How did you do this?
@Montlev8 ай бұрын
@@bielvv9148 I noticed that at every transition (such as 1:06, 3:05, 5:54 and 9:23) every word had the same amount of letters in Space Alphabet and Latin Alphabet, so assuming they were the same letters, I have made a little sheet where I converted every Space Letter into their Latin equivalent. From there it was pretty easy to rewrite every other word shown in the video
@Montlev8 ай бұрын
@@bielvv9148 It took quite a lot of time, but I had a lot of fun 😅
@saimonserge69288 ай бұрын
@@Montlev Damn! You are genius
@bielvv91488 ай бұрын
@@Montlev Ooooooh that is so genious, I hadn't even thought about that lol. Good job man! Also, I just thought about it. This means that someone at Kurzgezagt went through elaborating an alien alphabet and writting the words for the video🤯
@_XRMissie9 ай бұрын
Steve whispering "It's free real estate" isn't something I knew I needed to hear
@andrewseguin94439 ай бұрын
This is a Tim and Eric reference right?
@drsax36229 ай бұрын
Absolutely
@Galaick9 ай бұрын
COME GET YOUR PLANET, IT'S GOT YOUR NAME ON IT
@oofoof699 ай бұрын
When
@SomeGuy-sq3vw9 ай бұрын
@@oofoof698 minutes in
@timebubble84216 ай бұрын
"It's free real estate" lmao. Also loved the music in this one
@vick2299 ай бұрын
Kurzgesagt: " Mars is the worst except Venus is even worse " that killed me
@mrdjchasm9 ай бұрын
That and the free real estate whisper.
@Joe-jv5mm9 ай бұрын
You Humans can live in the upper atmosphere and still be shielded from the 🌞 harmful Ray's
@soongwanjun93819 ай бұрын
Well you don’t wanna get poisoned, burn and melt at the same time. That’s why Venus offer right now pretty straightforward I must say, compared to Mars Humans still has chance to survive by bunker inside Mars to avoid radiation
@Electrodexify9 ай бұрын
More CGI and fish lens!
@KenSherman9 ай бұрын
The reasons after is what kills me...or what *would* kill me.
@dragon30859 ай бұрын
I'd love to see an episode exploring this theme more, regarding all the means of communication that other civilizations might be using, that we are not or cannot yet look for.
@bunnychop59 ай бұрын
Apparetnly they use the cosmic web for communication and travel.
@marvind88099 ай бұрын
gravity...and it is not them, it's us
@Dave_of_Mordor4 ай бұрын
@@bunnychop5 they use something called the webway to travel. There are also cosmic entities made up of emotions, looking to possess a mortal
@Vespuchian9 ай бұрын
I find one of the greatest ironies of interstellar colonization is that if you have the ability to create ships to travel those vast distances, or settle on the surface of extremely marginal planets like Mars, you've also the ability to make artificial habitats, bottle worlds, completely undercutting the need to colonize another planet in the most extreme version of an invasive species. This actually makes colonizing other systems easier because you don't need to look for planets to live on, the asteroids within a system become a more valuable resource because of accessability. This also means you don't need to go sailing off vast distances because just about any system will do, which means expansion happens in small jumps rather than great leaps. This keeps inter-planetary civilizations quite compact, even if each system in that civilization might have a much greater population than a planet might sustain.
@Aureonw9 ай бұрын
Yeah and any civilization near a blackhole has a megastructural starting bonus since nearly all blackhole megastructures are fairly easy compared to other objects since its WAY easier to collect energy from a blackhole than a star resource and time wise
@generaldelasmontanas26999 ай бұрын
I feel that this is like saying "why did the europeans colonize america if they had infrasturcture in europe?" or something like that
@MaxMaxx-tb6nz9 ай бұрын
@@generaldelasmontanas2699 Yeah, exactly. People will colonize other planets because we .. emmm.. don't like other people sometimes. And distance is good way to be out of reach of those people. Ask Europeans which go to the New World to go out of European monarchies sphere of influence.
@Vespuchian9 ай бұрын
@@generaldelasmontanas2699 It bears pointing out that what drove the initial wave of exploration from Europe wasn't to settle somewhere, it was to make ridiculous amounts of MONEY by bypassing existing trade routes and monopolies. The colonization was a byproduct. I suppose a decent historical parallel is how the Dutch just made more land to farm instead of relying on colonial expansion. Oh sure, they had colonies, but those were about resource extraction for making said ridiculous amounts of MONEY rather than finding somewhere to live. Dutch colonialism wouldn't have worked without native populations to -enslave- offer minimum wage jobs to, while the polders were entirely homegrown. Another might be the Boat People in SE Asia, where whole communities float on rafts/barges because it's a better use of resources than taking up land with homes.
@jacquelinekirk56019 ай бұрын
Yes that sounds plausible to me, It’s how nature does things, kind of like diffusion.
@naughtmouth97816 күн бұрын
Ocean analogy is my favorite thing about this video. It's how imagine the universe, if societies are connected to eachother they are close enough like country's in continent. Other solar systems could be harder to reach and not worth the trip
@jrodartec9 ай бұрын
I love how Kurzgesagt ranges wildly between (1) extremely grounded facts based on cold-hard-established science; and (2) ambitious speculations based on hot-crazy assumptions. Always a joy to watch, sometimes for the information, while others for the imagination. Best!
@colorgreen49999 ай бұрын
"And this, is a hypothesis surrounding aliens" "Kurzgesagt, this is the ninth time you've shown aliens in class today"
@Beanskiiii9 ай бұрын
This is religious. They’re trying to convince themselves that aliens exist, and that interstellar travel is possible. Just look at their goofy Mars and Venus terraforming videos for reference.
@ZootOfficial9 ай бұрын
@@Beanskiiii yeah, i've noticed this too. not really scientific if you ask me.
@mossybee9 ай бұрын
@@Beanskiiii It IS possible, but nations won't work together to make it happen.
@shoobadoo1239 ай бұрын
@@Beanskiiiivery ironic that you have that username
@shadowknight9969 ай бұрын
@@Beanskiiiiwhy are those videos goofy?
@4RILDIGITAL9 ай бұрын
The concept of the galaxy being an ocean with islands brings a different perspective to our understanding of the universe. I guess we just have to keep pondering and exploring the unknown patiently while hoping to find a good island someday.
@srrealism15309 ай бұрын
We are standing on it.
@jonatand20459 ай бұрын
The ocean is good when you are a fish.
@Zurround9 ай бұрын
Not a perfect analogy. The Polynesians did NOT have telescopes to scope the ocean with (would not work anyway due to curve of Earth) and see the islands from a distance even if they could not get every detail perfect but we have the technology even now to see other stars and exoplanets so a spacefaring civilization would have even better telescopes and other detection devices than we do. So space faring civilizations are not going at it quite as "blindly".
@six1069 ай бұрын
and we will destroy it
@maximipe9 ай бұрын
@@Zurround we can't see other islands neither, not their present at least. Alpha Centauri is +4 light years away, the system could have just exploded and no one would know for +4 years (being the closest to Earth btw). We are as blind as them if you ask me.
@Shmoopington3 ай бұрын
I just realized the thumbnail is the buzz lightyear pointing meme
@matthewegeler9 ай бұрын
"would you go to war because someone's great grandfather killed yours" Actually yes, we've been doing it for centuries.
@SisterSunny9 ай бұрын
right, because Germany and France are famously still at war the century-long conflicts that endure, endure because you have a continued personal stake in it (e.g. religious), and often occur over fighting over a singular resource (be that land/rights/etc)-which isn't really the case in separate solar systems
@matthewegeler9 ай бұрын
@@SisterSunny so nobody will have stakes in a planet which they've already put tons of resources into?
@flowersforferdinand3759 ай бұрын
The fact that people are already replying trying to dispute this is mind-boggling.
@blenderbanana9 ай бұрын
@@matthewegelerSunk Cost Fallacy.
@SpaceCat9089 ай бұрын
You would only go to war because it doesn't take light-years to get there.
@murphjam119 ай бұрын
one of my favorite things about this channel is just how obvious it is that you guys put love and care into every tiny detail of your projects- even your advertisements are selected with thoughtfulness! thanks for all you do, Kurzgesagt!
@lakmalabeyrathne97868 ай бұрын
Man every time i watch your videos i always wonder how much it took for you guys to finish a single frame. Steller animation guys. Keep up the good work
@CASA-dy4vs7 ай бұрын
@@wendigo2442technically yes….
@LORDMEHMOODPASHA7 ай бұрын
You could say it was a...Stellaris Animation.
@LunaTheMoonWitch6 ай бұрын
I think they said in a video it takes about 3 months minimum to make a longer video.
@lethargicastengah5725 ай бұрын
Pretty sure its mostly AI
@LunaTheMoonWitch5 ай бұрын
@@lethargicastengah572 It isn't. They have a team.
@luzifershadres7 ай бұрын
Alien diplomat: So, show me, what is humanitys latest big pop culture series? Alien agent: Sir, its called skibidi toilett. It seems to affect there youngest generation. Here are some short clips for it. Alien diplomat: I thing we wait another 1.000 years before comming back.
@Countryball24004 ай бұрын
Nahhh😂
@eduardofernandez47319 күн бұрын
Why would intelligent beings care about pop? No disrespect, serious question
@ShiroHiro-e7s18 күн бұрын
@@eduardofernandez473it is like knowing about another culture then going to the said country, it is comforting to the locals that you know what they are familiar with, which is what the aliens are trying to do
@AxDeath14 күн бұрын
Thousand? more like hundred thousand
@stevenbrock52813 күн бұрын
@@eduardofernandez473 Why else would they be here? Unless Earth is extremely rare in terms of resources (which we don't think is the case), there'd be no other reason to come than for cultural exchange reasons. A spacefaring civilization from almost anywhere in the universe would've come across better planets and better resources than ours on their way here. It's very possible our planet is considered a trash planet to aliens. If aliens aren't carbon-based, our planet might be Venus to them.
@Insanity-vv9nn9 ай бұрын
“No man’s sky” is a perfect game to represent this idea. If you play the game blindly, you may never find a earth like planet, even a pretty planet can have a environment or creature that will kill you
@Worldcracker9 ай бұрын
Yep. And in that game there are galactic empires so maybe truly at a certain tech level I becomes trival.
@NYKevin1009 ай бұрын
Hilariously, on my current save, I spawned on an inhospitable ice planet... whose moon is basically perfect. It has zero environmental hazards, zero hostile creatures, and I've barely seen any sentinels on it (they are not hostile anyway). Bonus points: I built a base on the ice planet because it's prettier, just on top of a random hill that had vaguely good views and was near a ground station. Then, after I unlocked the resource visor, I discovered that I accidentally built right next to a dioxite deposit... which effectively means my life support will never run out, because I have way more dioxite than I can possibly use up on charging it.
@nerag74599 ай бұрын
I wish they had gas giants you could float around in.
@GojiraBiscuits.9 ай бұрын
In my 400+ hours of playing no man's sky I landed on around 2000+ planets on my journey through black holes to the centre of the galaxy. I came across 3 planets that were similar to earth. The first one was the most similar but had no fauna. The second one had fauna and realistic mountains and continents but was incredibly toxic. The third one ticked all the boxes but had weird floating mountains so was a no go. I'm still trying to find a planet to build my homebase on but so far have had no luck. I should have just stuck with the third one.
@chickencurry694209 ай бұрын
tbf theres plenty of creatures on earth that can kill u too
@RowanOakley9 ай бұрын
Who needs sleep when you can have an existential crisis instead?
@Shaanveer_Singh9 ай бұрын
True
@thedootguy44449 ай бұрын
thats more of an exurb1a thing
@Have-a-good-day27649 ай бұрын
Ture
@Shaanveer_Singh9 ай бұрын
@@Have-a-good-day2764 ah yes, ture
@TituslikesTurtles9 ай бұрын
"Mr president, a new Kurzegesagt video has just been posted"
@lukesmith50189 ай бұрын
To extend the analogy - knowing what happened when other civilisations discovered the Polynesians suddenly makes the idea of us meeting with aliens pretty scary
@steelswarm27219 ай бұрын
They meet us every single day, have done so for a long time now.
@WokeandProud9 ай бұрын
@@steelswarm2721Take your meds loon.
@heck31439 ай бұрын
Kind of a tangent, but I've noticed a lot of media from the post-colonial seem to be unintentionally expressing fear and guilt at what built modern society. Especially the alien invasion. People with an unfamiliar culture and society wielding advanced technology show up and subjugate our entire society in an attempt to wither extract resources, assimilate, or exterminate in order to take the land. The imperial/colonial guilt inherent to the genre doesn't even seem intentional. Especially in the 80s and 90s. But it's there because art reflects life.
@winterwoods26259 ай бұрын
It all depends who meets who first
@greegorygrimlee54879 ай бұрын
I don't know, they have it pretty sweet now.compared to then.
@wildfoodietours8 ай бұрын
Needed this to not feel so alone.
@jamesg8729 ай бұрын
1. Complex life being really difficult to evolve and 2. the chances that two civilizations occupy the same epoch in time really should not be underestimated.
@Zurround9 ай бұрын
It takes A LOT of evolution for a world to evolve a species that has at least human level intelligence and is even more advanced than we are. If you look at our world over a span of 4.5 billion years you will see countless species of life from the smallest microbes to the largest whales and dinosaurs yet in all of that time our world has only produced ONE species that is somewhat tech advanced. I say "somewhat" because we sure are not at the level of the aliens in this video. I do not believe that life is rare. I think its very common but that only a very very tiny percentage of worlds with life get to the point of advanced technology. I believe that almost all inhabited worlds just have plants, animals and sometimes beings with human level intellect but low technology. 2 high tech species being near each other (within 10 light years lets say) is like 2 state lottery winners happening to be next door neighbors.
@MrCarpediem69 ай бұрын
I've heard the same
@Zurround9 ай бұрын
It takes a lot of evolution for a world to evolve a species that has at least human level intelligence and is even more advanced than we are. If you look at our world over a span of 4.5 billion years you will see countless species of life from the smallest microbes to the largest whales and dinosaurs yet in all of that time our world has only produced one species that is somewhat tech advanced. I say "somewhat" because we sure are not at the level of the aliens in this video. I do not believe that life is rare. I think its very common but that only a very very tiny percentage of worlds with life get to the point of advanced technology. I believe that almost all inhabited worlds just have plants, animals and sometimes beings with human level intellect but low technology. 2 high tech species being near each other (within 10 light years lets say) is like 2 state lottery winners happening to be next door neighbors.
@ddplzz9 ай бұрын
Another thing is the jump from complex life to space faring societal life. Complex life was on Earth for well over a Billion years, full brains, cortexes, highly specialized abilities etc etc were here for hundreds of millions of years and not a single one of them figured out you could use rocks to break stuff. Let alone space travel. Humanity existing is a very recent thing, humanity having space travel is a very very VERY recent thing in the geological scale.
@lawrencelopez98399 ай бұрын
there's also the assumption that alien civilizations will appear in a form that we'll understand
@joefrew16149 ай бұрын
8:10 I love the “It’s free real estate!” Joke
@dstovell9 ай бұрын
So good!
@coreythosaurushair28219 ай бұрын
It got me
@JohnnyTronny198419 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr Heidecker
@definitelynotanAIchatbot9 ай бұрын
For your health!
@RobertoDeMundo9 ай бұрын
That timestamp is way too late It's more like 8:00, 10 seconds earlier
@dl_972019 ай бұрын
4:34 Spaceballs: The Colony Ship! Nice!
@ICountFrom09 ай бұрын
If your living in a bubble and you haven't got a care....
@bricc99649 ай бұрын
Well you’re gonna be in trouble ‘cause they’re gonna steal your air…
@MrNerv9 ай бұрын
"WATCH OUT "!
@greensteve93079 ай бұрын
May the Swartz be with them.
@hrishikeshvnambiar75584 ай бұрын
Him saying 'oceania' at 1:09 gave me flash back from ingsoc (1984)
@SuhaybSuhayb-sc2po4 ай бұрын
Remember, war is peace rasim is Freedom!
@anzaklaynimation9 ай бұрын
8:02 “It's free real estate” most intrigued me.
@dangerfly9 ай бұрын
Why do we still have the primitive need to spread and colonize like animals if we have advanced control of our biology? Why is the future advanced in ONLY one way? We have starships, but medicine hasn't advanced at all? Makes zero sense.
@robbyburty9 ай бұрын
Thanks for that. Was watching on my phone, and totally missed it. Pretty funny, though. You're right
@justinnicholson68859 ай бұрын
It's a good Tim and Eric reference!
@luinérion9 ай бұрын
At 0:12 I was watching without sound and thought for a moment Kuzgesagt was bringing back the old Brilliant intro sequence lmao
@AndyRamirez-b5y3 ай бұрын
After seeing how stupid we act do you really think a advanced civilization will want to deal with us, they wouldn't even consider us mating.
@luinérion3 ай бұрын
@@AndyRamirez-b5y Perhaps they could be a species who can comprehend pity, and feel so for us underlings. Maybe they themselves reached their level of advancement because another alien civilsation showed pity to and helped them. If we open our minds to the concept of alien civilisations in the first place, why not open our hearts as well? :D
@Mr--_--M8 ай бұрын
I see the Dune inspirations throughout the video and it’s awesome 😊
@waitcube6985 ай бұрын
dune was awesome
@danielfrisk9256 ай бұрын
The greatest filter - planet population being stuck watching Kurzegesagt intead of studying, researching space travel.
@idlewildwind8 ай бұрын
Love this alien font. The Cat Galaxy replacing the Polynesian Islands! Simba, Mufasa, Tom, Cheshire et al. :D
@solarduckspace9 ай бұрын
It's fascinating to ponder the possibility of thousands of alien empires scattered throughout the Milky Way, each navigating the challenges of interstellar existence. The comparison to islands in an ocean paints a vivid picture of the vastness and complexity of our galaxy. It's a reminder that while we may feel isolated on our own "island" of Earth, there could be countless civilizations out there, each with its own story and struggles. The idea sparks both curiosity and humility, reminding us of the enormity of the cosmos and our place within it.
@theroyalteabagyoutube49289 ай бұрын
This comment has chat gpt prose
@jlil28369 ай бұрын
Star wars taught us that they needed hyperspace travel to connect the galaxy
@iamthechangemaker9 ай бұрын
Life IS teeming all over the universe and a lot of it is cloaked out of our field/ability of sight. Some of us have crossed over the Stix and gotten insights, others have forced their way into insights with chemical help or DMT. Each galaxy is a world of its own and some have many civilizations. We are so. not alone -even on this planet.
@shaharazad.9 ай бұрын
Remember that according to scientists, humans only exist because of multiple mass extinctions in the right way, evolving only the survivors of each extinction. Most of the time evolution only produced animals from animals, you'd need a planet that somehow can hold life and evolve in a certain way to produce intelligent life. There might be only 10 planets in the universe with "aliens" in the whole universe with those odds
@solarduckspace9 ай бұрын
@@iamthechangemaker It's intriguing to ponder the vastness of the universe and the potential for life beyond what we can currently perceive. The idea of multiple civilizations within each galaxy is awe-inspiring. we need to explore and understand.
@emissne9 ай бұрын
i wish that if we meet aliens, they will be entirely chill and just explain things and talk to us about cultures, math, and existence.
@mioszskrzynski71019 ай бұрын
It sounds wonderful, but, if You could indulge me, how would you communicate with them?
@emissne9 ай бұрын
@@mioszskrzynski7101 we have actors
@mioszskrzynski71019 ай бұрын
@@emissne What actors? Movie actors? How would actors talk to aliens? I am genuinely curious
@luisyupari9 ай бұрын
@@mioszskrzynski7101math is a universal language
@mioszskrzynski71019 ай бұрын
Hello, let's assume that math is universal. My problem with communication with aliens is empathy, or rather intentionality. In general, you need to know when someone is sending a signal or not. For instance we emit transmissions, heat and radiation into space all the time. And yet we send probes with special information for aliens. Sure, but how do they know what is part of the engine and what isn't? We recieve Magnetic waves from space from time to time, but how would you know what is a message and what isn't. And even worse is the language itself. It is very dependent on your content of everyday life. Communicating with aliens wouldnt be like speaking to humans, talking to Animals or even to plants. It would be closer to trying to communicate with s rock, or sand. I Hope what I wrote was understandable. If you disagree with it, feel free to write back. Goodbye
@03Griffen8 ай бұрын
finally! you guys are thinking outside the box and using parallel in the right way
@Mehrunzebub9 ай бұрын
It's funny, I start to get the itch to watch a new Kurzgesagt video and suddenly a few days later, bam, they drop one. Love it.
@ao_tsuri9 ай бұрын
I have now witnessed the birth of a Kuzrgesagt video
@Huh_10389 ай бұрын
They finally uploaded fr
@Have-a-good-day27649 ай бұрын
Same
@supranova5659 ай бұрын
huh
@christopherrobin16169 ай бұрын
lol
@SansULB299 ай бұрын
Same, this is rare
@senyor87749 ай бұрын
I was just thinking about this and I saw "5 seconds ago", like no way.
@Norra12349 ай бұрын
this was 2 minutes ago and i saw 1.8k views already i came to yt for music but this is way better
@Reflected49 ай бұрын
No way...
@nico.deluxe9 ай бұрын
creative way to say "first"
@unknownlegendsfreefire18439 ай бұрын
Yeah me too😮
@drdoom71579 ай бұрын
I was playing stellaris and then saw a new Kurzgeasgt video saying uploaded 3 minutes ago
@paulbenbrook55426 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the plot in the Galactic Civilization series of games. Faster than light travel was based on gates that had to be towed into place at sub-light speed, taking decades or centuries to create a new FTL lane. Humans showed up with ship-based FTL travel and suddenly massively distant civilizations were close neighbors and the entire galaxy went through a huge upheaval. It was really a great premise for a grand strategy game, terrifying if it's based in reality though.
@Someone-ym1ny9 ай бұрын
Ngl, watching these videos always gets me excited about space. Just imagining the fact that there could very well be beings which we’d call alive, going about their day or whatever their form of that concept of they even had it, right at this very moment. Just vibing or struggling like I am rn, and perhaps impossible to ever meet. It’s surreal
@drewwanderer9 ай бұрын
Same. It's a fascinating concept.
@amc11409 ай бұрын
What about the decent chance of Aliens being here now? Those navy UFO sightings, Lazar, etc are pretty convincing
@Dereliction29 ай бұрын
For their sake, I hope they don't know about Communism.
@Tyler-z8r2 ай бұрын
@@amc1140 There is no proof of aliens having visited Earth. At least no proof that has been declassified by any governments. UFO sightings mean nothing. UFOs are not alien spacecrafts. They are "unidentified flying objects". What's more likely, those UFOs being aliens, or being some advanced Chinese aircraft spying on the US? If you hear hooves, think horses not zebras. There is not a "decent chance" aliens have visited us. Either aliens have been here and there's somehow zero concrete evidence of it in any way, or no aliens have visited us. The ladder seems far more likely to me.
@TSwiftie13-ts139 ай бұрын
You guys at kurzgesagt are so awesome at making things simple to learn and grasp. Keep up the great work ❤
@manolomosquerah9 ай бұрын
The kuleshov/Eisenstein/Hitchcock reference on your Ground News ad really cracked me up, thank you.
@JosePineda-cy6om9 ай бұрын
what minute was that?
@realmrbzerk6 ай бұрын
Just saw a PBS space time video explaining we are relatively early as a species compared to the overall civilizations possible to exist in the whole of the universe, in the expected time before the heat death of the universe. That might be one explanation to why we havent encountered any other civilisations yet
@christinaleite65885 ай бұрын
Do you happen to remember the title or main topic? I'd love to see that vid & browsed a few but must not have been the same one you referred to.
@EvonneSol8 ай бұрын
Spore is actually a pretty great example of this concept in action. When you finally get into space in the game, you can barely make it to the nearby handful of systems, and you have to spend a lot of money to terraform them and put colonies on them. Starting empires are small and usually confined to a handful of systems, at most. It dumbs down the travel times and the difficulty, but gives a decent framework of how this concept would work out. I think it's the most realistic explanation, colonization and expansion is just difficult outside of a home system. You can't see the planet you're traveling to well until you get there, and the chances of it being a waste of resources is high, so it's smarter to just take care of what you already have. If alien species have traveled to other systems, it was probably out of necessity, not an attempt to control multiple systems at once. On the other hand, in Spore you have pirates and raiders that try to take over or blow up your colonies. The most profitable kind of expansion relies on taking advantage of planets that already have life on them, destroying tribes or cities and putting down your own colonies. We can see examples of this in human society and how we've expanded as well. Personally I'm hoping that most sentients aside from ourselves prioritize their own survival over trying to take advantage of less advanced planets. The best outcome for us really is that colonization is so difficult that most don't attempt it, so we co-exist and avoid causing trouble on other planets that could result in mutually assured destruction. I'm also hoping that humanity, down the line, realizes that this kind of co-existence is the best outcome for us.
@anh260799 ай бұрын
"The extremely isolated Pitcairn islands" meanwhile Easter island in the corner be like "we're definitely in touch with island thousands of kilometers away"
@Me123x-29 ай бұрын
Thanks kurzgesagt you always make videos for us even through it takes hours and loads of work,thank you kurzgesagt
@MCArt259 ай бұрын
it's almost as if they were literally paid to do this
@Me123x-29 ай бұрын
@@MCArt25 no one said kurzgesagt couldn’t be cheapskates
@LunareonnTF8 ай бұрын
@@MCArt25Can't even appreciate something anymore without someone being an ass
@larzcaetano9 ай бұрын
I love how Kurzgesagt destroys all my expectations and dreams during the entire video, but brings me hope by the end every time.
@butchcassidy96259 ай бұрын
This was perfect. Awesome job. 😊
@TheSystemIsFlawed9 ай бұрын
One of the spookiest explanations for the Fermi paradox is that civilizations might create their own virtual universes to live in, instead of colonizing into space. Considering how hard humans are diving into the Internet and virtual reality, this sounds really plausible. Imagine a galaxy full of civilizations that live in computers, maintained by robots, living in a virtual "heaven" until the computers finally degrade and shut off.
@mukilanselvakumar49279 ай бұрын
Like a Matrioshka Brain?
@fryncyaryorvjink21409 ай бұрын
Or the matrix
@STroB9 ай бұрын
It's what makes more sense. Send too much radio waves out, a biger civilization kills you. Best plan to assure existence whould be. 1 Consume ALL ressources of the planet as much as possible so it lowers the chances of being taken over. 2 Hide every outgoing signal. 3 take brains, connect them to a computer almostnthe size of the planet. 4 encarnate into a simulation of the universe where we are alone and don't remember that there's a world outside this virtual world.
@ButzPunk9 ай бұрын
Seems pretty nice tbh
@gmork10909 ай бұрын
Pretty sure that will be the goal of AI for us. Much like The Matrix I suppose, but a bit less intentionally evil. It will love us as its creators and want the best for us, but will not tolerate us being in its way as there are so many of us and we are so antagonistic to anything that looks like it might disagree.
@hihowsitgoing28674 ай бұрын
Some visual references to space movies in here, love it Past the middle a little bit you can see the beach from “contact”
@philippeert9 ай бұрын
This is way better than studying
@Edgtheow9 ай бұрын
*than. Perhaps you should go back to studying, after all.
@pepegroda96099 ай бұрын
@@Edgtheow you are my favorite person
@philippeert9 ай бұрын
@@Edgtheowssssst (It was a joke cuz yk the spelling mistake and studying, i didn't think someone would find it this fast tho lol)
@bibbagamer12849 ай бұрын
Sure it was@@philippeert
@gabrielgoncalves27639 ай бұрын
@@philippeert yeah... you totally made a "joke"... nobody is falling for your bullshit.
@MrJoberg9 ай бұрын
I feel like for interstellar communication or interaction between civilizations. You need to have one of three things: 1) Travel speeds above light speed 2) Wormholes 3) a species which ages very slowly. If their life expectancy is 2000 years, traveling for some hundred years is still feasible
@AshiBoiiBS9 ай бұрын
Sadly above lightspeed is impossible
@gmhs29 ай бұрын
I mean technically as long as you have enough dV, you can get interstellar voyages down to decent levels (at least, for nearby stars), but breaking the lightspeed barrier is essentially impossible, no matter how it's done. The good news is those *on board* the ship would experience time even slower, to the point where time experienced increases non-linearly with distance, so that's nice at least.
@notapplicable69859 ай бұрын
@@AshiBoiiBSSo far and probably forever, but there is still the slimmest possibility. But it is an astronomically slim possibility
@AshiBoiiBS9 ай бұрын
@@notapplicable6985 I mean doesn’t that go against the laws of nature?
@notapplicable69859 ай бұрын
@@AshiBoiiBS There is always a slight chance we don't fully understand the laws of nature
@johnnysnowman999 ай бұрын
Please make more Kurzgesagt Puzzles! I love the Dino Puzzle and cant wait for another motiv with your amazing artstyle to piece together 🙌
@StarBoundFables17 күн бұрын
Howard, from Writing Excuses, recommended this channel. Great video
@donaldengel17058 ай бұрын
The idea of this video is amazing; it's a fabulous example of free association coming up with new ideas.
@Koolasookis9 ай бұрын
This has genuinely become my favorite channel on KZbin
@lexfridman9 ай бұрын
This video is truly amazing. Thank you Kurzgesagt! 🙏
@FictionHubZA9 ай бұрын
Hey Lex. 👋
@paulkaufmann81177 ай бұрын
Loved all the small references and details of this video. I will be sure to have a can of perri-air
@moanamartel15069 ай бұрын
0:07 kinda looks like my country 1:25 ngl I didn't think I'd be hearing about my people in such a video 2:56 Ahhhhhh, THAT's why Thank you Kurzgesagt for the credit, incredible video as always
@lithunoisan9 ай бұрын
Moana.
@Pryam9 ай бұрын
Awesome work, as always! Love the deep dive on an angle that pushes further than the rather bleak perspective of the Fermi paradox. Keep going! Thank you Kurzgesagt Team :)
@SaturdayNightRizz5 ай бұрын
Videos like this always make me think about the possibility that we are going to reach a planet where there may have been life and find out they didn’t leave they died, and it’ll be one of the carbon rich planets and only point us towards our own doom
@blakebuchanan14209 ай бұрын
Are you kidding me with the Spaceballs Reference 😂 4:36 I love this channel so much ❤
@StompDeni429 ай бұрын
Finally someone pointed it out. :D
@marcasrealaccount9 ай бұрын
"it's free real estate" xD
@davidpacifico10199 ай бұрын
8:01
@maxwellabbushi16509 ай бұрын
Jim boonie!! It’s free!
@ly29 ай бұрын
xD
@ArthurMorgan_Gaming9 ай бұрын
Never thought I'd hear the Kuzrgesagt narrator say that
@eyyy22719 ай бұрын
I love their pop culture references lol
@Galateja9 ай бұрын
"Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us." Calvin
@@jotarokujooraoraoraoraoratake a good look at all of human history
@sophisthemlock2469 ай бұрын
@@jotarokujooraoraoraoraora It's a reference to the Calvin and Hobbes comic strip. IIRC Calvin is discussing how species keep going extinct because of humanity.
@BOBBOBBOBBOBBOBBOB699 ай бұрын
@@jotarokujooraoraoraoraora It's a joke
@chandimasubasinghe99976 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for uncovering all thesemysteries because duringmy whole i wanted to find the answers to all problems we face
@theredbastard9 ай бұрын
I feel like a lot of people overlook the time problem, especially with fermi’s paradox. The universe was extremely hostile to life forming planets up until very recently. We are probably one of the earlier planets that has been around long enough to develop intelligent life, and it is reasonable to think that other planets are also just breaking into interplanetary travel
@TheFinalChapters9 ай бұрын
You're close, but your final conclusion is seriously flawed. Life has thrived in the galaxy for billions of years. Unless intelligent life is abundant (which is clearly isn't), it's extremely unlikely for two civilizations to form even within tens of millions of years of each other. In other words, we are the only planet in the galaxy with such a civilization. Otherwise, you have to come up with absurd theories like the one in the video to explain why aliens haven't even been here, let alone colonized here.
@N120159 ай бұрын
@@TheFinalChaptersOR any more advanced civilization is so far away we can't detect them. Still, the result is the same, we won't contact aliens for thousands of years at best.
@ehta24139 ай бұрын
@@TheFinalChapters Either that or we are the aliens, as we might be genetically tailored invasive species, dropped on the planet to fill their grand plan. My hypothesis is that the grand plan is to lift life from this solar system and keep spreading it like a galactic virus. :D
@TheFinalChapters9 ай бұрын
@@N12015 Well, "far away" in this case would need to be outside the galaxy.
@joelt20029 ай бұрын
"Long enough", we have a single data point. We don't even know what the average "long enough" would need to be to expect to see intelligent life. There are a lot of factors that go into that, such as extinction events.
@SciMinute9 ай бұрын
Honestly, I think aliens exist in this vast universe, but within my knowledge that we can't move faster than the speed of light, we probably won't be able to see aliens in our lives..😢
@disguy61689 ай бұрын
hopefully never if at all, or that we're the earliest sentient life in the galaxy. i understand why people would like to see non earth life atleast once but honestly if we come into contact with aliens that have nuclear fusion tech they'd transform our planet into a larger wetter moon in a few million years, even lesser should they have ftl and decide to chuck asteroids at us.
@dylanbowers62929 ай бұрын
But that's going by the assumption that extraterrestrials don't have superior knowledge about physics and superior technology since they could be millenia ahead of us in technology
@universaltoons9 ай бұрын
C
@disguy61689 ай бұрын
@@dylanbowers6292 i almost hope they have tech faster than light. we wouldnt even have to know if they come in peace, or want us gone. id rather have my death be so quick it goes from biology to physics.
@ShoeBun9 ай бұрын
@@disguy6168That's scary and interesting at the same time :0
@Countrytournament9 ай бұрын
I like the idea that life is actually very common in the universe, but coincidentally not in our really dead galaxy or region.
@coolkid0069 ай бұрын
or dark forest
@doubleFay9 ай бұрын
Our galaxy doesnt have to be dead. Our radio signals have barely left a single arm of the milky way. So for everyone outside that arm, life here might maaaybe detectable by spectroscopy or something. Likewise there might be life all around us in the milky way, their signals might just not have reached us. Or when they do, there is no intelligent life here anymore, or none yet.
@Arnaz879 ай бұрын
@@coolkid006"dark forest" usually has a darker implication, which is that civilizations are intentionally hiding because it's dangerous, not that they just don't wanna enter the forest.
@coda5679 ай бұрын
I prefer an idea similar to this video but less optimistic from the start. "Rough Ocean" implies that intelligence is already common in the galaxy just isolated. I prefer "Arid Desert" existentially. Microbes are common. Large fauna are not. Intelligent technical fauna are extremely rare. Less than a dozen per Milky Way of stars. Asking for an excellent one capable of sending living members across interstellar distances for realistic profit on sensible time scales just isnt "reasonable". It's not. They're not common. At most, there could be a couple neighbors in the galaxy with machine drone explorers that can get around very quickly.
@thebozo-m4j9 ай бұрын
@@coda567i am of the belief that life is common, but intelligent life is exceptionally rare
@cruzefrank8 ай бұрын
Earth is the hood of the universe where everyone avoids and locks their doors if having to pass through
@brokenglass06429 ай бұрын
"We Brake For Nobody" Nice Spaceballs reference And the Rear Window reference!
@illestvillain19719 ай бұрын
I didn't catch those I kept thinking of starship troopers and Helldivers watching this
@92snowboarder9 ай бұрын
I see men of real culture around here 👏👏
@leonardoperelli13229 ай бұрын
damn! Also noticed the Rear Window reference and thought I was the one going mad :)
@ShadowEclipex9 ай бұрын
Adding this video to my inspiration playlist. Great things to think over for my scifi setting.
@The_Real_Mr.Horsey9 ай бұрын
BRING BACK THE INTRO😭😭
@iburstabean8 ай бұрын
where the F#$*! is my intro?!
@helloimyomommy8 ай бұрын
And outro!
@lief34147 ай бұрын
Unsubscribe from trash channels := :=
@iburstabean7 ай бұрын
@@lief3414 huh?
@Sanstheskeleton-69hehe5 ай бұрын
@@lief3414???
@GameFusion274 ай бұрын
Imagine if one astronaut goes to mars and randomly finds aliens, I doubt that it'll actually happen but if it DID, then it'd be big news
@Sadabahar9999 ай бұрын
The video has allowed viewers to expand their vision of the galaxy. thank you
@zachb80129 ай бұрын
Bot detected.
@SisterSunny9 ай бұрын
aaaaaahhhhh I love how every new video Kurzgesagt releases fundamentally changes the way I think about a topic
@Toysz879 ай бұрын
I was waiting for something kinda 3 Body Problem of video from Kurzgesagt, but this is way better. You guys never disappoints!
@LutraLovegood9 ай бұрын
They already did that video.
@Toysz879 ай бұрын
@@LutraLovegood what? what's the video title? I'm really looking forward to it
@TinyOasis17 күн бұрын
Realistically, our Solar System is located on one of the fringe, outer arms of the Milky Way, and it does seem that the stars are closer together towards the center
@EssensOrAccidens9 ай бұрын
0:30 "But this idea is built on a lot of assumptions." That's a succinct summary of every Kurzgesagt video.
@_ayohee9 ай бұрын
Assumptions lead to interesting ideas. Not to say interesting ideas can't come from ground truths, but assuming "what if...?" can lead you down many interesting roads, including many which end up leading somewhere.
@DarthQuantum-ez8qz9 ай бұрын
Well said.
@Beanskiiii9 ай бұрын
@@_ayohee or nowhere, because, it's easier to make popular videos for atheist NPCs than using scientific facts that strongly point towards that aliens do not exist and that humans will never colonize the solar system, let alone achieve interstellar travel
@reiforsale29 ай бұрын
Kurzgesagt videos like this are supposed to be speculations
@The13thRonin9 ай бұрын
Kurzgesagt: "The Polynesian islands are free real estate." Europe: *Rubs hands together.*
@eliserhodes8379 ай бұрын
Me wondering if it was the disease from Europe 😅
@thenovicenovelist9 ай бұрын
@@eliserhodes837And that's why we shouldn't ever visit North Sentinel Island. They have made it very clear they don't want visitors and are perfectly fine with bucket communication instead.
@The13thRonin8 ай бұрын
@@thenovicenovelist So... You're saying that they're easy to conquer?
@leghunter23169 ай бұрын
kurzgesagt is one of those serious channel but also manage to sneak in jokes such as "its free realestate"
@dangermonkey239 ай бұрын
love them sm
@sudhirkakde3 ай бұрын
very informative and beautiful video 👌👍
@leonestello9 ай бұрын
The idea of divergent galactic civilization evolutions is fascinating, and that they may never be in touch with each other🤯 Wow! Just Wow!
@chrisgriffin6987 ай бұрын
like we have anything but endless waring to offer them, no wonder the aliens avoided us with the way we are.
@mikebauer69179 ай бұрын
Best of your videos yet. Thank you. Very thought provoking.
@LeonMRr9 ай бұрын
This made me realize one thing: We don't need to worry about alien invasions, the aliens are just waiting for us to terminate ourselves before settling.
@Joe-dy7bb9 ай бұрын
wow platitudes
@Eric02259 ай бұрын
Trying to exterminate humanity is like trying to exterminate all the ants on Earth. We are one of, if not THE most populated mammals on Earth, 8 billion of us. We have technology allowing us to adapt easily. Not to mention, you only need a few hundred to repopulate Earth, that is nothing. Like, if you killed everyone on Earth except the city of Amersfoort, we would still have MORE THAN enough to repopulate Earth.
@danielmedela87259 ай бұрын
Maybe. Or maybe they terminated themselves first.
@borntokill4429 ай бұрын
Aliens are watching us all the time
@TheTurbineEngineer9 ай бұрын
Or perhaps they've been around for millions of years, maybe longer. We might even owe them our existence.
@CentauriBros28 күн бұрын
I usually only watch educational, sciencey, math KZbin videos about once or twice. But for Kurzgesagt I can watch their videos over and over and over again. Thank you Kurzgesagt for all you do and inspiring me to make a real impact in the world. Don’t worry, one day I’ll set foot on Mars and it’s almost all because Kurzgesagt started it!!
@heatherclyde66539 ай бұрын
Can you guys make a coloring book? I would buy it in a heartbeat. Your art is so pretty!