What if MandaloreGaming and Ross’s Game Dungeon had a baby -> Warlockracy. The accent is a cherry on top.
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! These are some of my favorite channels.
@Callaxes3 жыл бұрын
@@Warlockracy I really love how you take us on a tour of the game and then sprinkle tidbits of USSR lore or game trivia here and there like Ross does. It feels more organic this way. I like the carefully structured essays of Joseph Anderson or NeverKnowsBest too, but I tend to LISTEN to those rather than WATCH them. With your videos, I have to stop what I’m doing and just take everything in.
@TheOneHoddToward3 жыл бұрын
I love this comparison. Very suitable IMHO
@Bigdaddymittens3 жыл бұрын
@@Warlockracy your channel is likely to see a drastic increase in viewership, because of how good each upload is
@JarlFrank3 жыл бұрын
Yeah this channel is gonna pick up. Excellent content.
@ClemDiamond5 ай бұрын
I didn't look at when the video was posted. Video starts talking about how to spell Kyiv or Kiev then... "Let's start the history in the year 753" Me : haha funny Carlson interview reference. But the video is 3 years old. This man was a visionary.
@johnlastname87523 жыл бұрын
Every time I hear that guitar I get nostalgia. Beautiful game series, movie, and book. Edit: I visited Poland 4 years ago to walk 380km from Gdańsk to Szczecin by foot. The only form of entertainment I brought was a copy of Roadside Picnic to read. I read it 2-3 times per day for the whole 2 months I was there. I still have it and it's damaged from rain, wind, and being carried in my bag or pocket so it looks and feels like something you'd find in the zone.
@pasza_dem3 жыл бұрын
You, sir, are man of culture!
@Gniew23 жыл бұрын
Now that's a real backpacker. I hope you enjoyed your travels!
@dmitriantonov26113 жыл бұрын
It's amazing Tarkovsky was able to conjure the movie Stalker out of Roadside Picnic. I thought that story was a dull read.
@rabidredpanda2888 Жыл бұрын
@@dmitriantonov2611 why is that? personally it's my favorite book of all time.
@gyumii Жыл бұрын
@@dmitriantonov2611 I didn't find Roadside Picnic dull in the slightest.
@GrayFoxHound93 жыл бұрын
>starts from the year 753 to explain stalker influences and touch on why it is the way it is along with why many mistake it for a russian game Now that's a quality segment
@angelesintrickov57682 жыл бұрын
It only took a war,thousands of peoples deaths, military conquest of Ukrainian land and ruined South and East of Ukraine so people would finally understand that Ukraine isn’t “basically russia”. That’s how nations are made.
@yourmother1631 Жыл бұрын
GSC is a Ukrainian Company...
@herus1 Жыл бұрын
@@yourmother1631 but im very certain they had people from across all post-soviet union countries in their team at the time
@yourmother1631 Жыл бұрын
@@herus1 The whole development team from stalker were from Ukraine at the time.
@herus1 Жыл бұрын
@@yourmother1631 hm, ok, didnt know
@Bluehawk20083 жыл бұрын
You will probably cover it more in later episodes, but the zone in Stalker's timeline has two founding events: the 1986 reactor explosion explains why there is "Soviet detritus" and radiation everywhere, but it was the first psychic emissions in 2006 that created the anomalies and artifacts and many of the mutants (those not already made in the secret laboratory complexes). To explain this in detail is to spoil the later revelations in the game.
@JenyaIsJustChilling2 жыл бұрын
I was the first guy in my small town who bought and launched S.t.a.l.k.e.r. back in 2007 on its release. But not the first one to play through it, cuz it turned out that office computers at my father's workplace couldn't handle the game at all. So i watched the intro video, listened to Sidorovich's speech in glorious 8 frames per second, walked outside his basement, and saw the whole village turned into a mescaline trip, with weird acid colours, broken geometry, and epileptic sky. And then it crashed couple times. And i got my first PC only in late december of 2007, and finished the game only in spring of 2008. And i think i still have my first playthrough save files and screenshots somewhere.
@JenyaIsJustChilling2 жыл бұрын
I'm from Belarus, btw.
@WingMaster5622 жыл бұрын
Just rewatching this for the nth time now since last year that I discovered your channel. I thank you for giving a total foreigner like me (Filipino) an unbiased glimpse on the history, culture of (and between) Russia and Ukraine through a video game review, long before the _current events._ Looking forward to the Vampire: Masquerade Bloodlines episode and whether you decide to flee or not, I hope for your and loved ones safety in any case.
@colbywhite27172 жыл бұрын
I was gonna post a reply similar to this one...stay safe no matter what.
@tenissinclair36592 жыл бұрын
Warlockracy knows that he will always be welcome at Ram Ranch.
@JarlFrank3 жыл бұрын
STALKER is an accurate realistic simulation of life in rural Ukraine circa right now.
@jackpott34023 жыл бұрын
Nah
@itsaBoomer3 жыл бұрын
hey hey people
@matrix35093 жыл бұрын
Poppycock. Everyone knows Ukraine is a fictional place.
@briankeys59412 жыл бұрын
@@itsaBoomer I approve of this underground wise crack, also known as a word meme. and his Metal Gear Revengeance videos are many pieces of pure editing white china dope. that when combined, will cause overdose. be wary. why do i start talking like this when STALKER is mentioned?
@briankeys59412 жыл бұрын
this is true statement. also, i am american boy. but even i know S.T.A.L.K.E.R. is Scavengers, Trespassers, Adventurers, Loners, Killers, Explorers and Robbers. how dare u, mr. channel host, pull wool over eyes. i remember this and getting killed 200x in many fascinating ways. eventually i had to start doing hard drugs to push through, to beat game... i was still unsatisfied, but now with monkey on back. side note: with twist of fate, i could have seen Fallout IP going in this MUCH BETTER direction. fucking VATS tricked us all. without that F3 was shit from dog. (FNV not included)
@redgek3 жыл бұрын
subbed because of morrowind vids, stayed for cozy kino vibe
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
I'm not done with MW.
@bigch33se113 жыл бұрын
@@Warlockracy thank vehk
@JarlFrank3 жыл бұрын
This man does not merely cover games. He covers grade A *ludokino*
@5h0rgunn452 жыл бұрын
The sawn-off shotgun is a very viable early game weapon, pretty much up until Rostok. If you learn how to exploit the running and jumping mechanics to their fullest extent, you will be a jumping bean of death.
@erikcarrillo73782 жыл бұрын
Thats how i take out the military at the bridge. Bounce up and put some shells in them.
@DagothThorus3 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad that I've found this channel
@minerman601013 жыл бұрын
This game looks pretty cool, I like how complex the AI is and how the people can be manipulated like that.
@Tekisasubakani3 жыл бұрын
For all its slavjank, I love this series so much. And we have S.T.A.L.K.E.R. to thank for the Metro series, which is fantastic itself.
@ВиталийБуланенков3 жыл бұрын
I was literally sitting and thinking about how cool it would be if you'd release a new video, and here it is. A level achieved before only by MandalorGaming, Sseth and Internet Historian, with some of your videos becoming a mini-insta classics for me (I don't dare counting how many times I've watched the intro to the tamriel video). It never ceases to amaze me how every project of yours is done with such a level of quality, conceptual density and approachability. I myself has been gifted with deep immersiability into the media I enjoy, but few people create something I could that much relate to. I hope you have found something you'll enjoy doing for the concievable future :)
@GMoneyChuck893 жыл бұрын
This game really knows how to crawl under your skin. Reminded me of fallout infused with Silent Hill.
@ZekeTvz3 жыл бұрын
Sorta of, and also hard, and punitive!
@monotone22563 жыл бұрын
@@ZekeTvz and also could give less of a shit about HOW and WHY it kills you lmao
@BrotherSurplice3 жыл бұрын
This video went places that I never expected it would. Also eternal props to GSC for going from bootlegging a Warcraft sequel to making a classic RTS and a legendary shooter.
@solwindp78-13 жыл бұрын
Loved this video! SoC has such a great feel to it that I never got from the other games. Even just the main menu music is so nostalgic. Cool to hear more historical background as well - too often all that gets brought up is 'cheeki breeki iv damke' and the assorted memes. The starting area in particular reminds me of all the time I spent developing cheese tactics. There is a hidden armor set in the starting village - climb the ladder up to the roof behind Wolf, and use sprint to run/jump to the roof of the next building, then crouch at the broken section of the roof, use the knife to destroy the crate, and pick up the merc suit. Go clear out the bandits from the village - one of them should have a shotgun and another will have a grenade. With these weapons, wait for the military patrol to have their backs turned, sneak behind them from the opposite side of the road of the starting village, then throw a grenade and rush them with the shotgun. With the merc suit you should survive. Afterwards, go to the train tracks and snipe the soldiers in the checkpoint. Like you mentioned, SoC has learned the lesson that satisfying progression doesn't have to be just about numbers and levels, and gaining mastery over the mechanics/equipment is so well done (minus a few balance issues and jankiness that is to be expected) that in my opinion it is better of an RPG than many games on the market these days.
@alexr.m.63823 жыл бұрын
Honestly, your videos are so well produced and so well researched that I only just now noticed how small of a following you actually have. My bet is that's going to change soon! You're doing great, and every tiny bit of effort shines through in your work.
@alexr.m.63823 жыл бұрын
oh and also that image of Todd at the 24 minute mark jumpscared me
@DarkExcalibur42 Жыл бұрын
Madness! The starter pistol in Deus Ex is my favorite weapon in the game. By the time I reached Vandenberg, it was as good as a sniper rifle most of the time and my reliable go-to against basically everything except robots.
@Darkfire78813 жыл бұрын
Come for a video about video games, stay for a fascinating history lesson. All narrated by a man with an epic voice
@alexandergray03 жыл бұрын
You just made a terrific point at 8:30 , holy shit i am amazed because anomalies only react to the forceful entry of a foreign object rather than what kind
@macdeus26013 жыл бұрын
Deus Ex's aesthetic and story is very specifically 90's, not 80's. The goofy conspiracy shit that was everywhere in American culture from 1992 to 2001 was a byproduct of how we reacted to the dissolution of the USSR. Basically, after 50-some years of constant paranoia about a real foreign adversary conspiring against us, suddenly that adversary didn't even exist anymore. And while this was a huge relief, to be sure, the paranoia habit was ingrained enough into our culture that it was hard to drop. So we started getting creative and coming up with ridiculous, imaginary things to be paranoid about (even if, as most people did, we only used these ideas as fiction tropes for entertainment), since we were accustomed to paranoia but momentarily lacking any real threat to be paranoid about. That, of course, came to an abrupt end with the terrorist attacks in 2001, signalling a new era of (somewhat) more realistic paranoia about enemies that did at least exist. We can see a more muted form of the same thing happening now, where the "War On Terror" is kind of coming to an end, and sure enough here come a new crop of people with ridiculous theories about Satan-worshipping, cannibalistic child-molester cults secretly running the government, and shit like that. (Just to give one example.)
@planescaped3 жыл бұрын
I remember getting this game back in 2007. Never once did I expect it'd become as big of a cult hit as it did.
@carlwestman11313 жыл бұрын
Love this video! The real world and historical information you added to this video is well presented and it's been good watching this after recently completing my first playthrough of the game.
@Superschokokeks3 жыл бұрын
Tangent: The Video. Was great. want more of them :D
@cptdumplin3 жыл бұрын
Love your inquisitive and informative video format. This is serious high quality scripting and storytelling tied into a comprehensive, yet not too spoilery review, bringing together objective views with a personal experience. Excellent stuff.
@bronyhub3 жыл бұрын
"So tell me about STALKER." "So our story begins in the year 753..."
@vitaliitomas81214 ай бұрын
And two years later, Tucker had to listen to the exact same thing, enhanced by putin's delusions.
@topleybird24433 жыл бұрын
The historical context for the games really elevates the commentary here. If we ever want video games taken seriously as art then this is a must, good grounded analysis goes a long way in arguing for a medium’s validity. Great channel man, keep it up!
@FPoP19119 ай бұрын
In light tucker travesty of an interview I come back to my favorite Stalker video to enjoy good history work and context. Also the video that introduced me to the madness that is Warlockracy. Love you man.
@weecefew3 жыл бұрын
Damn I definitely have to read Roadside Picnic now
@DanTheIsh3 жыл бұрын
Discovering your channel is the highest point of my year!
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@Gorbz2 жыл бұрын
It is interesting to know that a relativly new brand of vodka has come out of Pripyat called, appropriately enough, atomik vodka. Turns out that growing crops in and around the area is viable.
@Taishisama Жыл бұрын
Should’ve called cossacks, ha!
@jhelmut26242 жыл бұрын
There are some pretty good STALKER reviews on youtube. I really enjoy yours because of the random knowledge tidbits and cultural history parts. I hope you decide to come back to this one day and finish the main game. Slava Ukraine
@normanmccollum60823 жыл бұрын
17:03 It's AKS-74U. The S refers to the folding stock, and the U refers to its shortness if I'm not mistaken. Also, I believe it's AK-74M and not AKM-74, which can cause confusion, because the firearm that the original AK-74 replaced was the AKM. It's a TAD simplified, but you can regard the evolution of the Kalashnikov platform as such; AK-47 (7.62x39, there is Type I/II/III but I digress), AKM (still 7.62x39, it is lighter and cheaper to produce than the AK-47, and the AKMS is THE or AMONG THE most popular AK variants and has a folding stock), AK-74 (5.45x39, the AKS-74U came in the late-'70s if I'm not mistaken and is a more specialized firearm rather than a front-line standard-issue firearm), AK-74M, and then I guess the AK-12 though I don't know if it will ever completely replace the AK-74M. Might be that the AK-74M will remain the Russian standard-issue while designs like the AN-94 and AK-12 are more meant for Special Forces, but I don't know that for sure, it could be planned that the AK-12 will replace the AK-74M. There is also the AK-100 series, more meant for export if I'm not mistaken, in fact the AK-101 is in 5.56 Nato. If memory serves, AK-102 is the carbine-length version (not as small as AKS-74U), AK-103 is 7.62x39, AK-104 is carbine length of 7.62x39, and AK-105 is the carbine-length version of the AK-74M, I guess a sort of middle-ground between the smallness of AKS-74U and the full-sized AK-74M. Then the RPK-74 is the LMG version which is bigger than the AK-74M. I like Russian firearms... in fact once upon a time I actually wanted the Canadian Armed Forces to ditch our C7 rifles which is basically our version of the M16 for the AK-101 platform. That would have been interesting to see. 18:09 I have found it to be extremely common to say either "HK" or "H&K." Yeah it's Heckler AND Koch, but the 'and' doesn't seem like a big deal. I had the privilege to fire a civilian version of the HK UMP which was semi-auto only, had a ridiculously long (I think 18" or I guess maybe 45cm) barrel, and I think I recall that it used 5 round mags. Canadian gun laws kinda suck, and with our current prime minister it's getting worse, though we have an election tomorrow and the only properly right-wing party in the country has seen a big jump in support between our last election in 2019 and this one in 2021 so hopefully things will turn around eventually.
@kireta213 жыл бұрын
An-94 is a rather embarrassing story. When trials for AK-74 replacement rolled in, it lost to much simplier AEK-971 almost every time, with exception of 2-rounds burst accuracy, most likely because AEK didn't have such setting. Despite that, it was declared a winner, due to its "futuristic" complexity, which by all common sense should be detrimental factor, not favourable. Luckily for Russian soldiers, unit cost was way too high for economically hurting country to handle, so only small number of rifles was produced, and sent to special forces for evaluation. Special forces returned rifles, evaluating them as unfit for military use, and categorically refusing to use them. Rifles then were send to MVD (think Russian NSA), supposedly to be used as sniper rifles by their special forces. Specops prefered actual sniper rifles though, and An-94s were shoved into reserve storages to gather dust. If not for Battlefield, no one but few gun nuts would probably hear of it. Still less bizzare than AO-63.
@normanmccollum60823 жыл бұрын
@@kireta21 I laughed so hard when I learned that the AN-94 literally uses a wheel and pully system inside of it. I may not have been finished while the USSR existed, but I think the internet nickname of 'Commie Space Magic' is apt. I mean, it's still nowhere near as complex as the Kraut Space Magic that is the G11, but dang did they try. The Americans ditched the effort of a sort of 2-shots with 1 trigger pull concept too, by stuffing two or even three projectiles into a single .30-06 cartridge back during or shortly after WWII as I recall. Wanted to increase hit probability, but the experiment was eventually abandoned at some point.
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine2 жыл бұрын
@@kireta21 The AN94 is a neat piece of engineering to look at, but it's one of those pipedream guns like the American SPIWs or German G11. I recall the unit cost of a single AN94 rifle was supposed to be $5000, which is ridiculously expensive, you can get a whole bunch of AKs or M16s for that kind of money, and they will be basically as good, better actually.
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine2 жыл бұрын
@@normanmccollum6082 They experimented further with so called "Duplex" ammunition, one prototype was a variant of the American trials FAL which fired two smaller caliber projectiles (.243 caliber I think, versus the .308 caliber of the 7.62mm NATO). Then, much later, you had the Advanced Combat Rifle trials. AAI and Steyr submit complex flechette rifles, and H&K submits the famous G11. What does Colt submit? An M16 with funny furniture, an optic, and loaded with Duplex ammunition, it's by far the least technologically ambitious of the ACR trials, but it's also the least worst rifle. Steyr's ACR jams like a jazz club, cannot go through a single magazine without failure, and it's kind of difficult to shoot, AAI's rifle functions better, but falls victim to the same inherent trouble as all the old SPIW designs, flechettes are just very finicky as single projectiles, the trajectory disturbing easily from things like wind and raindrops, and constantly wavering between good and abysmal terminal ballistics, on top of being way louder than other rifles. H&K's G11 works well enough for the time it's tested, but aside from you having seen the grand clockwork internals, which no grunt on earth can hope to diagnose when say, fine grit sand inevitably finds its way inside when in a desert environment, or a smaller part seizes up or breaks, the gun is actually hard to shoot. If you go and look at the old footage, they actually picked a single soldier for the demonstrations and coached him on getting used to the thing's recoil, and still you see him occasionally readjusting the stock against the shoulder because the hyperburst kicks him around quite a lot and often it slips a little. At the end of the day, none of the entrants improve hit probability by all that much, the goal of the ACR program being to improve it by the ambitious 100%, but at least with Colt's rifle you could load it with a magazine of normal ammunition and it would behave like a normal rifle. The optic they had was actually quite decent for the time, and you would see it on normal M16s and M4s afterwards.
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine2 жыл бұрын
Looking at the first carbine he gets, it has the heavily curved magazine of a 7.62x39mm rifle, rather than the much less curvy 5.45x39mm magazines, so not even AKS-74u would be correct. AKMSU would ostensibly be the appropriate designation, though there was no such standardized short 7.62mm carbine in Russian use.
@blakeforbes7682 жыл бұрын
I have a problem I keep watching all of Warlockracy’s videos on loop
@maelstromg8767 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for including the history of that whole area. It's not only incredibly relevant right now but also extremely interesting. Lots of fascinating details that I (being from the US) had completely overlooked due to the cultural divide.
@pi1982738 ай бұрын
12:23 Bro predicted Putin's interview
@soleuce38783 жыл бұрын
Best part of the stalker games is the shadow of Pripyat mod. I don’t really care for the story of the games but I enjoy just fucking around in the world
@MM-en2hi3 жыл бұрын
Stalker made me realize what games could be, and how involved you could get into a worlds environment without ever visiting it. I've since played all 3, own roadside picnic, and haven't loved a series more since.
@RichieW3 жыл бұрын
Definitely my favourite Euro Jank outing. I'd love a video on the top 10 Euro Jank.
@paulipippola25753 жыл бұрын
Great video of a great game, you have found a fine balance between being educational but still entertaining! Can't wait for the next part!
@Bigdaddymittens3 жыл бұрын
Found my new favorite analysis channel. Your narrations are superb. Every game seems up my alley too.
@alvarez3323 жыл бұрын
the many history bits were unexpected but so welcome and integrated incredibly well
@FallingSkywards3 жыл бұрын
You're a content providing machine!
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
I wrote a script for this four months ago. Didn't have the time to work on it until now.
@hadin95633 жыл бұрын
I'm genuinely surprised how fast these are coming out while still retaining the quality and uniqueness. Loving everything you've put out so far!
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@stinky18953 жыл бұрын
This video is by far my favorite of yours. I love your perspective on games as an artistic medium, and it's really refreshing to see someone bring their knowledge of history into reviews like this. I can't overstate how much I've enjoyed your videos in the last week or so since I discovered your channel, keep up the fantastic work! P.S. Do you have a patreon? I'd like to support these videos if possible
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I will eventually make a Patreon (after my portfolio grows by a few vids). Your support means a lot.
@ashwinnmyburgh93643 жыл бұрын
Love this guy's channel.
@Mk37843 жыл бұрын
I love this game it's a timeless master piece, i keep coming back to it after years.
@kupokinzyt3 жыл бұрын
For once I am glad you showed up randomly from getting your community feature. Congrats and I love the channel!
@acemaclace1627 Жыл бұрын
I come back and rewatch this video from time to time for the tangent at 11:00 and have shown it to multiple friends, you should start covering history my guy, you've a gift.
@hunter_02213 жыл бұрын
Exceedingly well-made video about one of my favourite game series. It's great that you explain the basic concepts of the lore while showing related gameplay, all in an objective and accessible fashion. Going to bookmark this down in case I need to introduce somebody to STALKER, which might well happen now with STALKER 2 being rather around the corner (at least in comparison to how it used to be for the past few years).
@C3lticlord3 жыл бұрын
Love the section about art, looking forward to more videos from you!
@Arrath7772 жыл бұрын
I love SoC and always will. My single most heart pounding, terrifying moment in all of gaming still stands out in my mind: encountering my first bloodsucker in the underground. Fuck that was tense.
@TheBeird Жыл бұрын
What you said about games being time capsules speaks to me man. It's why I'm frustrated by game fans clamouring for remakes all the time.
@gooren3 жыл бұрын
What a hidden gem of a channel. I wish YT algorithm gods soon notice you. I also hope to see you play something like Amnesia/Penumbra/Soma soon, since that could create the slightest chance you will play our Lovecraftian yet unannounced horror game as well one day, now that would be bloody amazing
@kid98933 жыл бұрын
Found your channel a day ago. Very good content my friend. Keep it up!!
@PositivelyGhost3 жыл бұрын
Underrated channel. Thanks once more youtube for suggesting a good channel
@apugalypse_now3 жыл бұрын
Try the ZRP mod the next time you play. It's basically Vanilla+. It gives you the option to have a sleeping bag in your inventory, nullifying your complaint(?) about not being able to fast-forward time. It lets you pay to have weapons repaired at the Duty and Freedom bases. And dozens other quality-of-life changes which you can toggle at will in an easy modifier screen. I can't play S.T.A.L.K.E.R. without it anymore.
@therevenancy2 жыл бұрын
I usually watch your videos for the "funny funny ha ha's", but this video in particular strikes me as some fantastic writing. Especially the end. Cheers!
@CristianMalaquias3 жыл бұрын
You're doing a great job, Warlockracy.
@obj.0712 жыл бұрын
me: wow stalker review! yay! video: "...so story begins in 753..." me: thats not exactly how i remember it...
@fastestdino23 жыл бұрын
I think the quote about the million dollar space pen was more in regards to how every single little detail of the trip to the moon was accounted for.
@Darkstar_8473 Жыл бұрын
When you spoke about the marked one who has to find strelok then hovered your position on the map where it said this is you was next level and is why I love your channel so much.
@booradley68323 жыл бұрын
That picture of the flea market has Arthur Rubenstein's Chopin renditions center frame. He's my favorite performer of Chopin. That's awesome.
@bakanur3 жыл бұрын
Just found your channel yesterday and just wanted to say that your content is amazing and I hope you get the attention you deserve
@awkwardcultism2 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed that short essay about video games as time capsules. It's one of my favorite things about the medium and your words echo my thoughts on the matter. I recall an interesting encounter I had at a small community drama production. There was a ten or eleven year old boy who had been dropped off by his parents too early and had nothing to do, so I lent him my copy of _Alleyway_, the simple brick breaking launch title for the monochrome Game Boy, which I happened to have on my person. This was around 2013 so the game was significantly older than he was. When I came back later to retrieve the game I asked him what he'd thought, and he said he'd never played anything like it. The game is so old and so simple it's quite different from a modern conception of a video game. It was a short interaction but I think about it a lot. _Alleyway_ itself is no great work of art; even for the time of its release it was outdated and derivative. But despite that, it acts as a piece of history, a living remnant of how the world used to be. And unlike a painting or a sculpture that is vulnerable to the weathering of time even under ideal conditions, or a story or poem that becomes increasingly hard to understand as the language it was written in evolves, a game is a pure string of data that can be preserved effortlessly. A child a hundred years from now could play _Alleyway_ just by loading up a ROM and the game will be in the exact same state it is now. Not only will they get to see the history, they get to enjoy it, live it, be a part of it. They will share an experience with the children who played the game when it was new, with me, and with people who will play the game after they are dead. When I realized this I felt a great sense of oneness, that I have a small connection to many people I will never meet, that even after I am dead people will be able to know me a little through our shared experience, and learn that I am not so different from them. That is one of the things that makes games so unique to me. It's the closest thing to time travel. Experiencing history, and even getting to leave your own mark on it by the actions you take. Every time I save a princess in an NES game I can't help but smile. It's the same feeling as finishing a good book. It isn't so much the quality of the game as it is getting to share that authentic experience of another moment in time. It's always special.
@julien29833 жыл бұрын
Great video, especially enjoyed the last couple of minutes.
@Eindamir3 жыл бұрын
The video is absolutely great but I must highlight that this is the first time in my life I have ever seen anyone reference Tom Lehrer in a KZbin video. If I could I would subscribe again just for that. But alas, I already clicked that button many videos ago. Keep it up my man!
@lux26253 жыл бұрын
16:59 the good knife so simple but at the same time efficient.
@Mateo-oq7ui3 жыл бұрын
how do you only have 4 digits of subscribers you deserve way more
@TisMeBc3 жыл бұрын
allstar game lineup you chose for your reviews
@bigch33se113 жыл бұрын
Kino Kingdom here
@fatmanul186 ай бұрын
Так вот в какой я варкрафт играл в детстве, я думал, что это какие то ложные воспоминания про ядерные удары в варкрафте
@MegaGeoffro Жыл бұрын
Watching this for the first time now... RIP Vladimir Yezhov
@JoelMarch-j9b Жыл бұрын
Amazing work, loved the history class… No sarcasm, thanks for the video
@yigitdemir37233 жыл бұрын
Wow. This review was fucking amazing. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
@Chibi19863 жыл бұрын
This game I'll always remember for getting me interested in Fallout before I'd even played Fallout.
@ArkayeCh2 жыл бұрын
Came for the STALKER review, stayed for the Crusader Kings-level of world lore.
@Churundala4 ай бұрын
Damn, that was a pretty deep dive for an old game review. And I enjoyed every last bit of it, even though I've completed that game countless times
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine2 жыл бұрын
The reason regular pencils are a horrible idea for writing anything in zero-G is because the graphite pulverizing into tiny powder as you write won't just gather on your paper like normal, it's free to move around in the air all over, where it'll get into bad places, possibly even starting electrical fires. Conventional pens are very unsafe in space.
@GioTheVax Жыл бұрын
I kind of like that this game doesn't have attribute stats. In a way it makes sense, if this were a real situation then the accumulation of more powerful assets and resources translates to how much more easily you can survive in the Zone. It conveys the progression in a material way, rather than putting points into boosting your own innate assets like superpowers.
@Glogdome3 жыл бұрын
this game gets absolutely brutal during the final sequences. Must have reloaded the same hallway in the powerplant 10,000,000 times
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
the finale is basically "god damn we spent all this time making a detailed full size chernobyl replica we need to use it for SOMETHING"
@Glogdome3 жыл бұрын
@@Warlockracy I mean why not send the entire Russian military if their isn't actually a wish granter. I really appreciate the reply man your videos offer some great insight on a lot of my favorite games!
@stonebear8234 Жыл бұрын
@@Glogdome aged like radioactive milk
@skarjj13 жыл бұрын
cant wait for you to do a video about S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chernobyl when it comes out.
@nickgotvyak58902 ай бұрын
16:15 small correction - A-life of was basically like radiantAI of Oblivion in Shadow of Chernobyl. It started off really complex and massive, when the game was considered to be more like a system game than a story game (sid meirers pirates or mount and blade come to mind a little). Then the scope ballooned to the point they were forced to pivot to a story-based shooter (arguably by THQ). Problem was that A-life consistently was breaking the game (by some random NPC killing story characters). For shadow of Chernobyl it was scaled back significantly. Almost half of the NPCs were just glued to their spots, activities were dumbed down to just going from point A to B, maybe stopping to sit in a random spot. Mutant cycles might have been more dynamic right away. (though combat AIs of many mutants weren't as fleshed out as they would be later) Then GSC started to bring original features of A-life bit by bit. Clear Sky focused A-life on faction war (groups of units dynamically fighting for bases). And then Call of Pripyat is the game which had A-life which resembled the original idea the most, and that iteration was "radiantAI but works". Faction stuff was cut as it wasn't a focus of the game, but you could easily follow a group of units on their cycles and see how cool they were. For example, loner groups would leave the base early in the morning or after an emission and go to an anomaly, one dude would go around it with a detector, then they would go to the next, maybe stop and chill at some camp spot, then go back to the main base for sleep. Bandit, Duty or Freedom cycles were more focused on patrolling the map looking for skirmishes with their faction enemies.
@vanyaimportant6693 жыл бұрын
good job, warlock. I´ve dedicated my channel to STALKER, and i support everyone with stalker content. Keep it up ;)
@Warlockracy3 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@JoshSweetvale3 жыл бұрын
5:40 "The man we are supposed to find, Strelok-" While onsceeen it says: 'THIS IS YOU' I see what you did thar.
@noelsweet17722 жыл бұрын
Peeped Tom Lehrer and imediately subscribed, have good day bro
@garethmartin65222 жыл бұрын
As a counter-point to Auteur theory, I refer you to Allan Kaprow and his "happenings".
@Aaron0673 жыл бұрын
Love the little foreshadowing at 5:41
@ИванКруглов-э4щ8 ай бұрын
Warlockracy predicted Putin's "30 seconds" of basic facts of ruso-ukrainian relations
@TheBaca2193 жыл бұрын
17:38 This is stalker's accuracy in a nutshell XD
@antipsychotic4512 жыл бұрын
"Stalker has a day-night cycle..." Correction - Shadow of Chernobyl has a day-evening cycle. It only gets about as dark as it would at sunset or dusk in this game, real nighttime lighting (or lack thereof) isn't really implemented until Clear Sky for some reason.
@ShootingStar1313 Жыл бұрын
19:13 No way! Is this for real?! Were youngsters actually hanging out in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone? It just seems so surreal. 😵💫
@holedplot3 жыл бұрын
This channel is a treasure
@butter13398 ай бұрын
They finally added all the games to consoles
@TAURON852 жыл бұрын
24:30 I had the feeling if I google beetroot soup(Borscht) I'm gonna get the exact same picture under the "Borscht" Wikipedia article, and I was not wrong! 😆
@dcorbin5779 Жыл бұрын
Every few years i go bacl and replay all the stalkers but one is still my fav
@HappyBeezerStudios11 ай бұрын
As someone said at some point "Stalker makes every game feel dissapointing. Even Stalker"
@helgasq5 ай бұрын
Dude, your depth of immersion melted my heart😂❤
@SeaDoge132 жыл бұрын
"Now I have a machine gun...Ho ho ho"
@kanrakucheese11 ай бұрын
"We never learn who this man is" I've seen people note his appearance, in particular his unique red hair, matches Redrick “Red” Schuhart of Roadside Picnic. 5:40 Cute.