oh hey, another one of mine! this was written for my good friend HarryBlank's On Guard 43 canon and intended to be an exploration of the horrors of WWI -- I find it often gets overshadowed by WW2 but the Great War was always striking to me in how utterly pointless all of it was, ego and arrogance and runaway nationalism causing a massive conflict over almost nothing at all. That's always stuck by me and was kind of what I wanted to communicate here. I hope it worked for at least someone.
@TheHankinator-z2p4 ай бұрын
Indeed, it’s good to see coverage for it rather than another ww2 story
@autisticmusings22564 ай бұрын
I liked it alot and found you did a good job of making both sides of the argument at the end look human, to Blank it was the evil of the nazis and all that entails, but to Candles they were just more Germans starting another war. Alot of stories about the beginning of ww2 gloss over just how war weary and damaged the world was after the Great War.
@williamlazenby3144 ай бұрын
It was so good! Thanks for writing it!
@abydosianchulac24 ай бұрын
Terrific story you wove, but as to Blank's point at the end: I thought the genocidal aspect with the Holocaust didn't reach Allied awareness until almost the end of the war?
@0The_Farlander04 ай бұрын
@@abydosianchulac2 That's true but I'd say that's hardly common knowledge. And to a kid who grew up believing in heroes and villains instead of understanding the humans behind those concepts, I doubt it was something that factored in much to his reasoning in the moment.
@TrensGemini4 ай бұрын
Every time I hear about the WW1 or WW2 or any other war I remember this quote from M.A.S.H. Hawkeye: War isn’t Hell. War is war, and Hell is Hell. And of the two, war is a lot worse. Father Mulcahy: How do you figure that, Hawkeye? Hawkeye: Easy, Father. Tell me, who goes to Hell? Father Mulcahy: Sinners, I believe. Hawkeye: Exactly. There are no innocent bystanders in Hell. War is chock full of them - little kids, cripples, old ladies. In fact, except for some of the brass, almost everybody involved is an innocent bystander.
@golgotha77804 ай бұрын
Exact quote I was thinking of. As a veteran of the war on terror that quote hits real damn hard. Guess fallout is right with its "war...war never changes."
@HereticalKitsune4 ай бұрын
M.A.S.H. had some extreme depth and terrible momentts. Very good show.
@Isometrix1163 ай бұрын
The most interesting philosophical thing is when you try to consider who benefits from the war. Especially smaller ones like the GWOT that weren't as casualty heavy. The answer the comes first to mind are the corporations that sell weapons and munitions. Then you realize that the politicians benefit too... then somewhat uncomfortably, you start to realize that _you_ benefit too. That oil? That's going toward the market to keep your gas prices down, to keep your cost of living down. That land being seized? That's to take in some extra funds and grow the economic prosperity of the country, something you benefit directly from.
@2yoyoyo1Unplugged3 ай бұрын
@@golgotha7780I’d agree if Solid Snake hadn’t clearly told me that war… has changed.
@georgea59913 ай бұрын
@@Isometrix116 "The most interesting philosophical thing is when you try to consider who benefits from the war." I agree, but not necessarily for your paragraph of reasons. First, out of the way, the manufacturers of equipment benefit through government contracts. Secondly, politicians strictly benefitting is a childish trope that's shown since WWI, where junior ranks dying by the tens of thousands were literally referred to as "wastage". Politics are adversarial, and while you know you're doing the right thing (by your pov), it can come back to bite you. Quick example while on the topic of WWI: Churchill's reputation after Gallipoli...did _he_ specifically benefit form _that_ ? No. His career wasn't ruined, but was damaged for quite a while afterward. And then, from my own experience in the GWOT era, you'll see that anything with a full bird on it or higher is more politician than traditional commander. How do I know? Look at the formations they are traditionally supposed to lead; companies and battalions were the order of the day in Iraq, and in some case in Iraq and many in Afghanistan, platoons were getting the job done. Next, we come to the juicy parts. We do indeed benefit. Technology is somewhat driven by conflict, and while continuous war with constant disastrous setbacks is the ruin of any nation after long, the "GWOT wars", small in intensity but long in duration, proves a fighting force. And doctrine. Our largest adversaries haven't cycled so many into actual war in over a generation, or did but suffered (or are suffering) staggering losses. And if you've served for a decade or longer in the heyday of said slow burning, low intensity conflagrations, you've been hardened in many ways that haven't been seen for possibly centuries. And no, I'm not uncomfortable knowing my society and its citizens are living well as a result of this conflict; after all, why tf would we be fighting it otherwise?? Name any other country that would prosecute a war as fully, while also doing what it can ( while STILL making mistakes) to minimalize civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure, and rebuilding what it does damage, in modern times. The patently untrue things, at least concerning GWOT, is the "war for oil"....and _definitely_ the "seized land" bit. We never took Iraqi land and just to rent it commercially like it was a resort. And take a look on the EIA website; you'll see that from the time of the invasion in '03, until the end of '18, the US received _less_ oil than pre invasion. So that has been a lie, as well. And again, to suggest Iraqi (and certainly Afghanistan) had "valuable land" is preposterous.
@RedMeansRecording4 ай бұрын
You have gotten so good at inflecting and emoting in these.
@michaelandreipalon3594 ай бұрын
I concur.
@aliveandwellinisrael25074 ай бұрын
That and the fact that he actually "retells" the stories rather than just reading the wiki entries verbatim, has made this channel my favorite channel for SCP content.
@lolkthnxbai4 ай бұрын
Him and the volgun because he actually uses blender to make the 3D models and some of the videos he uses. They're the only two I watch and of the two exploring series is my favorite, even his audiobook readings of lovecraft are fantastic.
@KavzarTheBlind4 ай бұрын
All Quiet On The [REDACTED] Front
@sylph42523 ай бұрын
I absolutely love the fact that their abilities factor so little into the story. When you throw people into a meatgrinder, they get ground up no matter their individuality or exceptionality. People don't win wars, they ether die or survive and still lose too much
@schattentod38484 ай бұрын
Just a minor history nitpick, the treaty of versailles wasn’t signed until mid 1919. What you (or the article) are referring to, would be the 1918 Armistice.
@Coyote_Bongwater694 ай бұрын
It's a different universe in my mind
@Seldonlair4 ай бұрын
Uh, yeah: at Waterloo under Nelson? That line didn't get you? Nelson died before Waterloo. Either the OG writer wasn't so good with history or there is some unreliable narrator thing going on.
@schattentod38484 ай бұрын
@@Seldonlair you are absolutely right, completely overheard that one 😅
@sniksnak5593 ай бұрын
firkin history nerds like remembering shit ruining the fun for all of us /j
@ch1gga223 ай бұрын
@@SeldonlairI would honestly just chalk it up to this fictional reality not being entirely in line with our own
@cjthebeesknees4 ай бұрын
Sheesh, almost 10K SCPs.. we’re getting old boys.
@Connor-ONeill4 ай бұрын
We've come a long way from neck breaking statues and tickle monsters, haven't we?
@The_loathsome_Dung_Eater14 ай бұрын
We,ve had a great year, haven't we?
@grey8931Ай бұрын
Can u boys tell me what this is? Are they images? Shots from a movie? Does he break down the image and give a history lesson?
@winterwombat3 ай бұрын
So much of Canadian pop history likes to look back on WWI (and the Boer war as well) as the moment we proved ourselves on the international stage, earned a reputation as fearless and competent soldiers, proved that we were just as strong as our rowdier neighbors to the south. These narratives tend to overplay our actual contributions and downplay the costs, as all such histories do, especially in regards to poor, rural communities in places like Atlantic Canada. They tell drastically different stories about the wars in Newfoundland than they do in Ottawa.
@Ninjat1263 ай бұрын
As an Australian, we see similar things here. Lots of talk about "sacrifice" and "duty," because it's more polite than the truth of "we offered up our children as a blood sacrifice to earn the favour of the British empire."
@lightreign80214 ай бұрын
“ Kaiser? Brouhaha? Canadian hubris? Flying canoe?” You sob….I’m in.
@CharlotteTheMango4 ай бұрын
Im beginning to think Rounderhouse is an amazing writer behind some of the best stories lately and should be encouraged to keep writing
@percy4454 ай бұрын
only beginning???? he’s dominated the game for years at this point
@moonlightsunshine71114 ай бұрын
@@The_loathsome_Dung_Eater1 nah it might get a little edgy sometimes, but a lot of his works have very good writing and also quotable
@bakonzetaim4 ай бұрын
@@moonlightsunshine7111 His redtape series is really good!
@YoungTummy4 ай бұрын
Better late than never
@diogene_s80324 ай бұрын
This scp is phenomenal. The exploration of how the war was ultimately fought for nothing is great.
@Mazaroth4 ай бұрын
To be fair, all wars are useless waste of life and resources over small minded people's hubris for stuff that actually do not matter.
@MaleusMaleficarum4 ай бұрын
Like almost every war in the last 300 years, it was fought for the elites.
@Ihavpickle4 ай бұрын
"All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others"
@scmontgomery4 ай бұрын
"Four legs good! Two legs better!"
@LordHypertronUniversum4 ай бұрын
@@scmontgomery This means zero legs are superior.
@R5O-63O84 ай бұрын
@@LordHypertronUniversum Why not just anomalously have negative legs? Even better!
@sadgirlhours40883 ай бұрын
The part that stuck out to me the most about this was Lansky. He was only mentioned for about a paragraph. A child thrown into the meat grinder and the only one out of the 5 to not survive the war. His lungs were shredded by poison gas and died drowning in his own blood. The imagry was so simple and so effective.
@IsaacMayerCreativeWorksАй бұрын
the fact that he was a Jewish kid, killed by poison gas, and his death was then used as an excuse for McCandel to refuse to care about the Nazis who would kill millions of Jewish kids the same way, is an exceptional irony
@ziggyzaggy17914 ай бұрын
Obligatory “oh boy it’s 3am” goodnight everyone.
@valkoroska23694 ай бұрын
12:30 btw
@HazzardousEco4 ай бұрын
"Who watches an Exploring Series video at 3 AM?!"
@MoiraWillenov4 ай бұрын
@@HazzardousEco me.
@HazzardousEco3 ай бұрын
@@MoiraWillenov Guess you missed what I was referencing...
@MoiraWillenov2 ай бұрын
@@HazzardousEco nope.
@Didymus20X64 ай бұрын
"Glad he kept his Sabatons." Okay, given the lyrics I've been posting, I'd be lying if I said I didn't laugh at that line.
@acetar5743 ай бұрын
Your comment stood out to me immediately 😂. This video came out in a perfect time for me, for more than one reason
@zenerstorm953 ай бұрын
God, I love SCPs like this. The ones where the anomalous aren't the point of the article at all, but the horror comes from something genuinely real and not only has happened, but continues to happen every day. Kudos, author. You've written an amazing article here.
@0The_Farlander04 ай бұрын
That may be what heroes do, but you get one chance at being a hero, and if you don't become one, you break. There's no trite "living long enough to see yourself become the villain" or whatever. You survive long enough to be broken by the next atrocity you try to prevent. Eventually you get tired. Heroes get tired, and they're only heroic in retrospect. They're heroic in the moment they had and the moment that was talked about. That moment is eternal if someone writes it down. But the hero goes home and has to live with themselves and all the frailty of the human mind. I think they all bled enough the first time. Other people picked things up when they couldn't. That's just how it goes. It's never pretty when idealism comes up against cold reality but there's only one outcome there; the idealist is going to cease to exist as they are, in one way or another.
@the-answer-is-422 ай бұрын
Reminds me of my grandfather. He went to war as a young man, to help a neighboring country stave off an invasion. He went there, filled with pride and will to fight, and he did. Earned medal after medal for his bravery. But after he came home, he hated war. Nightmares haunted him for the rest of his life, and those medals? One day he couldn't stand looking at them on the wall, so he tore them down.
@LezlyLikesYuri4 ай бұрын
War.... War never changes.... This was a somber one. Forces you to dwell about things best not dewlt upon. Made my gut clinch and remember my dads stories from Vietnam. He was just a bright eyed boy too.
@lholliday1984 ай бұрын
What an amazing story. Even in the end, I couldn't tell who had the right stance, and I really enjoys stories that have conflicting views with valid points.
@Astadyl4 ай бұрын
This is a great video as always *but* as a European viewer (especially a French one) I do have to say that describing WW1 as having caused "little changes" is a very american perspective and does dismiss a lot of things. Sure it didn't end by dropping 2 nuclear bombs but it still had a MASSIVE impact on the world. To name a few things: -Shell shock as a term for what would be later defined as PTSD was coined during the war to describe the trauma of the solider that came back from the trenches -this was a pivotal moment for women's right, as the fact that women went to work in factories to assist the war effort helped to cement their place as equal to men -countless borders were changed and entire nations appeared after WW1: the Russian empire crumbled and led to the creation of Poland, the Baltics, Finland, Ukraine etc. The end of the Austrian-Hungary empire led to the creation of Austria, Czechia, Yougoslavia. In general, most big Empires of Europe died with the war -Culturally, WW1 is often considered the most brutal of the two in Europe because the fights lasted a lot longer than in WW2. The horrible struggle of the people in the trenches really made a lasting impact in the common memory. Heck WW2 would not have happened without WW1 because of the resentment among the German people over the harsh terms of the Versailles treaty -the end of WW1 also lead to the league of nation, which, while it failed to prevent WW2, would later evolve into the UN So yeah, I do not intend to be mean spirited in this criticism, and I understand the script calls for more succint hooks in the introduction, but saying "little changed" is much too reductive
@bairdrew2 ай бұрын
Good point well made, and one i'm quite in agreement with.
@braidenfoster927714 күн бұрын
I would say that it isn't an American perspective, assuming that Canadian history curriculum is comparable to American. We were taught all of these things, excepting the European cultural standpoint on which war was more excruciating. I think you have it right though. WW1 was uniquely horrific in a way that I imagine is impossible to replicate. The world learned too much about war on a global scale to ever make *all* the same decisions and mistakes
@manvsmanatee17934 ай бұрын
Having a sick and awful night and this is a real pick me up
@seanbrazell70954 ай бұрын
I'm still waiting for an OCP where a new agent accidentally goes to an ICP concert and calls down an orbital strike.
@carolynallisee24634 ай бұрын
When I was studying for my end of statutory education exams ( a mixture of CSE's and O'Levels, which gives my age away) I was put into Modern World History, a subject I came to loathe almost as much as I did the teacher teaching it. Of course, it being the 1980's, both World War One and Two being recent, were taught. We spent a very long time looking at its causes, the events leading up to the outbreak of the war, and everything that followed. Up until that time, we learned, the British people at least had a romantic notion of warfare... and the horrors of places like Ypres, Verdun and the Somme eventually taught them the truth. The way many of the wounded were treated was appalling, many branded as cowards and deserters when they refused to go back to the trenches. It took people a very long time to understand that these unfortunate men were suffering from what they then called 'Shell-shock': what we today would call Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. I don't know how many of these poor men were shot for refusing to go back to the front lines. Even back in Britain, you weren't safe from the scorn and criticism of your neighbours if you didn't volunteer to join up. Unless you had an obvious condition that made you unfit for service, , you were likely to be shunned as a coward, and would be sent white feathers in the post,. I can't recall now exactly what those feathers meant, but 'Chicken' springs to mind. It has been more than a hundred years since World War One started and ended, and I guess its appropriate that there should be an SCP about it. War is dreadful, not only for the men fighting it, but for everyone, and WWI showed us exactly what modern warfare is. .. something to be avoided at all cost. There are going to be times when, for whatever reason, war will become necessary, but it must not be glorified, or chosen as an immediate solution to various issues. There's a saying - "Those who are ignorant of the past are doomed to repeat it." World Wars I anbd II, and their accompanying atrocities, must never be forgotten... otherwise, we'll end up doing them all over again.
@UGNAvalon3 ай бұрын
Alternate Title: What if Captain America fought in WW1 and got PTSD?
@daniel111194 ай бұрын
Omg, that sneaky quote at 37:51 absolutely destroyed me 😀
@brandthacker89134 ай бұрын
From what?
@daniel111194 ай бұрын
@@brandthacker8913 Well, it is a quote of Trump that "quoted" Robert E. Lee in one of his speeches.
@theoneguyoverthere3 ай бұрын
Anyone else wonder if these lads ever ran into a certain Corporal Lawrence during their time in the trenches?
@mattd52404 ай бұрын
This reminds me of a character I came up with who was a Canadian WW1 soldier who through German experimentation after being captured, became an unkillable soldier. His abilities were kind of similar to the zombies from overlord, besides the super strength and could heal rapidly. He was a trench raider who would be sent into the gas because it couldn't kill him.
@NyloElLobo3 ай бұрын
This hits different for me as a German and European in general. I live within the still visible scars of both wars every day, and I can perfectly understand both sides, also having read "Im Westen nichts Neues".
@Leo_Cameron4 ай бұрын
that tank ad the end was hard to look at in that nice painted representation. i remember part of this one and it make you think about who's eye you are looking through when you see these images. when you have a very different experience of life than other people before you we must always take time to trust in the believe that knowing about difficult times in the past it gives us the strength to remember why we must work so hard to make sure the world is a better place for more people to live in.
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment4 ай бұрын
I like how the SCP number is one number away from 1918
@ROUNDERHOUSE4 ай бұрын
that was a deliberate choice! unfortunately 8914 was already taken otherwise i would've gone with that
@Abominable_Intelligences4 ай бұрын
@@ROUNDERHOUSE I always look forward to your works!
@generalnawaki4 ай бұрын
The year the world found out Canada calls war crimes fair play.
@kadoj4 ай бұрын
Just to be a nit picker, i feel I should point out that while one digit is altered away from 1918, it’s actually 7000 numbers from 1918… you know, because the 8 occupies the 1000’s place and such… I know I know, I’m an asshat.
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment4 ай бұрын
@ROUNDERHOUSE still an appropriate choice and well done btw
@DeathAlchemist3 ай бұрын
Oh I read this one whole reading through the articles tagged with superheries. Great choice for a video.
@mrhick013 ай бұрын
"Military historians write their dissertations with one hand..." Heh.
@silentpoet753 ай бұрын
This war shaped both CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien. CS Lewis talked about falling asleep marching and waking up and still marching.
@mvslice4 ай бұрын
The Death Korps would have loved WWI
@kadoj4 ай бұрын
Well, considering that’s absolutely what the death korps of krieg is based on, yeah I’d say you’re probably right about that…
@WASDLeftClick4 ай бұрын
Their uniforms are literally a mish-mash of German and French WW1 uniforms.
@DoomFlavored4 ай бұрын
I’ve been so interested in hearing more WW1/WW2 era SCP lore. Especially with all the talk in-universe around what went down at the Somme.
@paragonofhonor99524 ай бұрын
Thank you for the perfect birthday gift to start my day off (at 36 minutes past midnight) Cheers mang
@sdb98844 ай бұрын
Happy birthday!
@11679MRT4 ай бұрын
DC Comics does actually have a "Fab Five" - although it's a nickname and not an actual team name. That team would be the original Teen Titans: Robin, Kid Flash, Wonder Girl, Speedy, and Aqualad
@michaelandreipalon3593 ай бұрын
@@11679MRT I remember that roster. They were supposed to be the one for a Teen Titans show set in the DC Animated Universe that never came to fruition.
@lakewobegonesbest87253 ай бұрын
The author transformed the heroes into mundane soldiers to elevate the soldiers to heroes. Brilliant!
@mecca7774 ай бұрын
Very poignant, thought provoking and outstanding!
@Antony_Coomier4 ай бұрын
There's nothing better than waking up and cooking breakfast listening to a new SCP thanks brother 💪🤠🍻
@tophatvideosinc.58583 ай бұрын
Yaknow, i remember reading a comic with superheroes wearing white with a red maple leaf on them. I googled the fab 5 but all that came up was DC comic's robin and his compatriots... But there was Captain Canuck, who fit the description i remember... Theres supposed to be more, i definitely remember, it was the first superhero comic ever given to me and it stuck. Anyone else remember similar?
@FNTM2k33 ай бұрын
Marvel has a Canadian team, I think they’re called Alpha Flight.
@Didymus20X63 ай бұрын
@@FNTM2k3 Yep! And I think their leader wears a maple-leaf themed outfit as well. Guardian and Vindicator are two of his aliases.
@tophatvideosinc.58583 ай бұрын
@@FNTM2k3 thats the one! Thanks, i tracked down the comic too. Sadly its too expensive for me to even think of buying now, so ill have to stick with the foggy memories of 6-7 (ish) year old me. I definitely remember the cover art, seeing it now. It was 2002 i believe. The comic is Alpha Flight #1 from 1980-something. My grandma gave it to me on my birthday, a few months late, but she probably pulled it off a shelf in her house as my dad was into comics and must've been his at one point. Anyway, awesome to narrow it down sucks that the same comic is worth its weight in gold now.
@marshalzhukov45713 ай бұрын
7:40 “At Waterloo, under Nelson”? Alternate history where Nelson, a naval officer, survived Trafalgar in 1805 and also transferred to the Army to command ground troops in 1815?
@TheHalogen1313 ай бұрын
That "its easy for you to say sitting in that chair" kinda rings hollow to me, considering this is an SCP researcher. He has probably seen shit, that rivals and surpasses Pashendale, Somme and Gallipoli.
@gummyboots3 ай бұрын
Him complaining that the WW1 vet didn’t want to fight in WW2 rings hollow considering he works for SCP which has access to stuff that could make the holocaust never happen or cure all cancer forever amongst other things
@Prodigi502 ай бұрын
I was thinking that myself. The average SCP researcher has seen some absolutely HORRIFIC stuff and still comes to work.
@Prodigi502 ай бұрын
@@gummyboots Yeah but a regular researcher can’t make those decisions. All he can do is his best.
@rancorious77852 ай бұрын
The annual reset alone is enough PTSD for one lifetime.
@Mr_Spooner3 ай бұрын
Missed opportunity for “war. War never changes “
@stargazingskeleton59174 ай бұрын
This hit hard. Well done, TES❤️🧡💛💚💙💜
@Floyd_McGerkin3 ай бұрын
@TheExploringSeries, love your stuff; minor correction though. War isn't hell; the people in hell deserve to be there. That is all, keep it up!
@eck33194 ай бұрын
Little change after the first world war? Are you serious? There wasn't a bigger repainting of the nations map with wildly inventing new nations (Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia) as after WW1.
@BromdenChief3 ай бұрын
Little changed other than empires falling and monarchies ending and maps being redrawn and old power balances tipping over and new ideologies taking over the world. Y'know, just minute things.
@hiroshi10463 ай бұрын
The problem is that Dr. Blank is an accurate representation of what a lot of adults think these days. They’re the same types of people that sent thousands to die for a couple feet of soil. They want all their problems in the world solved by stronger men and criticize when those men break under the impossible odds set against them.
@wcookiv3 ай бұрын
Best narrator on KZbin.
@varsityathlete62233 ай бұрын
So happy to hear a reference to the chase gallerie, the flying canoe in a scp!
@Am_magicman4 ай бұрын
Maybe it's from the Death's End Hub, it just looks like a separate object?
@bakonzetaim4 ай бұрын
It was actually written for the 'On Guard 43' canon!
@masoneraa4 ай бұрын
Im literally laying down for sleep. I praise you, and I hope my youtube red pays you well
@watersage73953 ай бұрын
I was a 68W during OEF. The why in this story hurt because I asked and still ask the same damn thing.
@toxicman91283 ай бұрын
“Why?” “I don’t know.”
@brookeberesford4 ай бұрын
Good choice, Mangg. Well told.
@ponyboyraila4 ай бұрын
so good! another banger
@vikkimcdonough6153Ай бұрын
I wonder if McCandel would've still thrown that "[a]wfully easy to say from that chair" line at Blank if he knew he was talking to someone who'd personally helped stop literal apocalypses?
@fullmontyuk4 ай бұрын
My only beef with this story is its reliance on the myth of WW1, as related by politicians years after the war to justify their own incompetence, rather than the reality. Which is not to say the Western Front was anything but horrific but the reasons for, and the nature of, that horror bears little resemblance to the lies repeated since the late 1920s.
@waterbears98743 ай бұрын
man i havent heard that voice in a while, glad to see youre still going
@iah68663 ай бұрын
Ahh, this one was a banger!!🎉
@ItsaLaz3 ай бұрын
Cue "The War was in Color."
@fireraider984 ай бұрын
Never meet your heroes.
@SheepyGiblet4 ай бұрын
Holy crap the thumbnail
@connerlajoie31423 ай бұрын
Very interesting one, think you’ll do one on SCP 8190? It’s another one in the admonition series, slowly reading it and it’s rather interesting
@DanielRisberg4 ай бұрын
The Emu War wasn’t too bad.
@nebricback14303 ай бұрын
Always great to listen to chill me out
@The-Last-Prime4 ай бұрын
For a moment, I forgot that I was listening to an SPC story.
@sayerslayer18543 ай бұрын
Please never stop making these. When you started making 40k videos, which I enjoyed almost as much as your SCP videos, i noticed you seemed a bit confused or maybe bored and unsure what to make videos about, and i noticed afterwards your SCP videos were coming out less frequently and were getting less views. I think if you continue producing videos on a consistent basis the views will go up exponentially. People love your SCP videos. I never watch TV, instead I listen to videos like yours. People will continue writing articles for the SCP universe so you have a lot to work with! I also noticed standalone videos tend to get more views. Anyways, i dont know you at all but really enjoy your videos. Please dont stop!
@xCriZpyCRinGL3xАй бұрын
Would love to see one of these for "Grave Encounters". Both the first and the sequel!
@razorblade67464 ай бұрын
I love that the second in my recommended is SCP 4216 Contain the Bismarck
@MarkDobbs6973 ай бұрын
We need another 1000 video, more of the lore and mentions in other SCPs
@therongjr3 ай бұрын
You got your wish!
@arrrrden44 ай бұрын
That was so good
@Didymus20X64 ай бұрын
The thing is, when looking at the horrors of the First World War, one can easily as the question: what's the difference between the horrors experienced by the soldiers of WWI and the horrors inflicted on innocent people of WWII? What difference is it really whether the people you feed into the meat grinder are wearing soldiers' uniforms or stars of David? In both wars, innocents were brutally and needlessly murdered. Is there really any difference whether the poison gas was released in a closed chamber or on the battlefield? I can totally get where he's coming from. You have to remember: every military man was once a civilian; it's only compulsion that puts him in the uniform.
@dadudeme3 ай бұрын
That depends massively on the military, a military volunteer is very different from your neighbour that got taken away by armed police. That is not condoning chemical warfare or industrial genocide. Both are really fucked up.
@gummyboots3 ай бұрын
This one was good but I think the scientist getting mad at the end was ridiculous in its own way. Like dude works for the organization that has solutions for many of the world’s problems but locks them up because they’re anomalies and he isn’t doing anything about it himself.
@georgep55903 ай бұрын
The horrors of war are never learnt by the leaders
@Drewggles4 ай бұрын
You're one of 3 KZbinrs who can get my shorts to shrink every time I see your notification
@houskacmaxkalbovic21594 ай бұрын
War is NOT hell. You suppose to go to hell only if you sin but war doers not care who it hits. Most casualties of wars are just innocent bystanders.
@georgea59913 ай бұрын
That researcher got a much needed rude awakening when he realized heroes were just people, and some of the people who idolized them were selfish and naïve. Grew up (supposedly), but still expects the knight in shining armor to come save him from all of the evil he perceives need vanquishing?
@elpepe-wx7oj3 ай бұрын
God i loved this so much
@Ralphopotamus3 ай бұрын
Between this, Conscript and replaying The Bunker, WW1 keeps popping up for me
@cowboyandy834 ай бұрын
Reminds me of scp 4007
@michaelandreipalon3594 ай бұрын
The Unit 731 iteration?
@DanielSan17764 ай бұрын
*OH BOY! IT'S 3AM!!*
@dmign4 ай бұрын
reddit
@nerovanguard8463 ай бұрын
Another great narration by TES. I've been following this channel for years and I must say, he's really the best at narrating SCP articles. However, I HATE these types of SCPs. I'm here for the anomalous, the super natural, the fantasy aspect, not some f*cking war stories SCP articles really need to look back at the early days like SCP 079, the hateful sun, Sarkisism, all the super natural stories and not making fantasy into a documentary of a real event
@Comrade0073 ай бұрын
Yeah I don't understand this at all, what is Scp community is doing
@mattwoodard25353 ай бұрын
It's funny that people are saying that Blank has experienced the horrors of war. Have people forgotten what Blank has been through with some of the alt universes? Even if Blank does not remember, he has experienced things as bad as WWI. sm
@Arwcwb3 ай бұрын
That war was so fucked. Send every single man who can fight to the front and none come back because everybody wound up suffocating in their own lungs because they caught a dose of chlorine. I think if people could appreciate the scale that war was waged on, how much more brutal it was than the second,that thing didn't end in any sort of conventional victory, it ended because there was nobody left alive to fight. Both sides sent ten year old boys to the front at the end.
@brokenst33l4 ай бұрын
That was a great one.
@brandonporter23213 ай бұрын
40:13 oof, this part randomly reminds on how the Flash got murked in that one terrible injustice movie. Horrible execution mind you. But yeah, realistically, this might've how it actually could've went down.
@silver_colonel2 ай бұрын
Based McCandle
@Eldagusto4 ай бұрын
The this was a damn good article surprised me
@GuyUnderTheBridge3 ай бұрын
Hard to imagine the RCMP is any kind of impediment to the Foundation securing anomalies.
@Ninjat1263 ай бұрын
Depends on the canon- the author has actually commented on this video that the article is intended to fit into On Guard 43. The RCMP might not be able to impede the ENTIRE Foundation, but the Foundation usually has lots of other priorities to deal with. 682 makes 6 escape attempts in a week, there's a murder Santa kidnapping children, a self-help book is turning people into reality benders... Someone in the budget department looked at all of this and said "nah, we're not going to war with the RCMP over a handful of self-containing anomalous humanoids."
@NCVluminati4 ай бұрын
NEW VIDD WOOOOOOOO
@rdf43153 ай бұрын
Only the Dead see the end of a war .
@AmigoRoberto3 ай бұрын
Wish I could like this one twice
@literalsarcasm18303 ай бұрын
WWI was humanity at it's most brutish
@nono95433 ай бұрын
8918 already?
@kevinbowens32003 ай бұрын
Great Story 😢
@NihalKhote4 ай бұрын
3 am already, hot dog!
@dracorex42628 күн бұрын
The old man lied. He said he'd have done anything to prevent just one kid from going through what he went through, but he didn't. He could've taken one kid's place in WWII. Maybe more than one. But he didn't.
@Your_Greek_Guy3 ай бұрын
Hi everyone so in the past months ive been interested in the SCP lore and fandom so like can someone tell me where to start learning the basic lore and how to join the fandom or sth??
@Howard-Hamlin-from-HHM3 ай бұрын
Google the SCP wiki and just start reading. Don’t go through the stories chronologically, just click randomly or use the top ratings list.