I think it's neat that laios love of monsters **did** originate in part from a feeling of isolation and resentment toward other humans, always feeling more affinity to animals, but he's still able to be rational and put ethics above his feelings, being mindful of the balance of the ecosystem and putting the safety of others first, even though he has an unfavorable view of humans due to his life experiences. I think a lot of people who think they hate humans really just hate /society/, but don't realize it, and just blame it on some innate human quality rather than all the complicated cultural norms and rules that were largely invented by the upper classes throughout history, but that's a whole can of worms of it's own.
@MahiMahi-yu5jo3 ай бұрын
This is exactly why I relate with him. Being isolated for being slightly different is painful, which is why people like us gravitate toward non-human creatures. That doesn't take away such people's empathy towards other humans. They just don't have the patience to deal with societal BS
@BJGvideos2 ай бұрын
Though society doesn't cause people to act irrationally. Society comes as a result OF irrational behavior and is built by it.
@JCperfection9 күн бұрын
I wonder how that worm would taste like...
@FlubbedPig3 ай бұрын
Something I find neat, judging by the cross-hatching in the manga art, Fishmen appear to have scales, while Mermaids don't. Furthermore, the orientation of their tail fins are different, with the Fishmen flns being vertical, and Mermaids' horizontal. I'm absolutely NOT a zoologist, but from what I can tell, this shows that Mermaids do not in-fact have fish lower-halves, but seal or whale-like lower halves, fitting with their mammalian designation.
@afairyonacid3 ай бұрын
They're probably based of the myth of selkies
@TyBe-uo4ud3 ай бұрын
@@afairyonacid I love that they made it apply to mermaids in general tho. It seems more cohesive
@TyBe-uo4ud3 ай бұрын
I also love the all mermaids appear to have breasts, although it wasn't stated as male mermaids exist, I would like to think that they do, and that they have cloaca similar to birds. And all develop breast to feed young.
@WretchedRedoran3 ай бұрын
@@afairyonacid Yo, so that means they're like the Selkie of West Skerrie depicted as a statue in Anvil in TES4: Oblivion!
@theapexsurvivor95383 ай бұрын
Cetacean mermaids best mermaids
@samfisher66063 ай бұрын
I thought the living armor being a mollusk was the most inventive thing I've seen when it comes to fantasy biology. It's so good!
@connorgrynol90213 ай бұрын
What finally got me to watch the anime was a clip of that and a clip of Marcelle using dark magic. I initially didn’t want to watch it because I didn’t think the story was going to be anything special. But the world building was just so novel that I had to see what it was about. Maybe it’s a small thing for others, but I think the conservation of mass is an important thing to consider when designing a magic system. Full Metal Alchemist was one of the only shows to acknowledge conservation of mass. If everyone was able to just conjure water from magic, which itself seems to come from seemingly nowhere, then you’ll eventually run into a problem. So I really appreciate the fact that these authors try their best to not break rules of physics while building a world that feels possible. I feel more immersed when they do that.
@maizen13353 ай бұрын
Nightmares being an extremely derived type of dragon is still so funny to me. If I had to guess, the shells are actually modified scales rather than the calcium based shells we're used to seeing in the real world
@tonkinthehanoian18433 ай бұрын
dayum, like, what lava snail produces?
@seaastronaut50533 ай бұрын
If they'd be modified scales, it would probably be made of many many layers of keratin, i think!
@plauge_gal2 ай бұрын
I mentioned to my freind that them being related has the two horrific possibilities of dragon's being invertebrates or nightmares having spines
@thebaseandtriflingcreature1742 ай бұрын
@@plauge_galmust be the latter, because we did see what a dragons skeleton looks like!
@plauge_gal2 ай бұрын
@thebaseandtriflingcreature174 so which is it, are dragons invertebrates or do the clams of have spines...
@Chris-hs7vx3 ай бұрын
I love your last section about Laios and I completely agree with you. His statement about monsters being dangerous really made an impression on me too. That added so much to his character. Not being able to read social cues is one thing, being an asshole is another thing. Too many people nowadays think being an asshole is cool. Luckily Laios is a good character that understands his own shortcomings and genuinely tries, as long as people explicitly tell him and not do the subtle social cues thing, he is very respectful to everyone. He is the perfect lovable dork character.
@asierra863 ай бұрын
For the beginning, the best part of the characters at the beginning is that they break characters tropes. The human fighter is the weird one, the elf is the prissy city person, the dwarf is the environmentalist, the rogue hates violence. It's so good
@mrmetang36422 ай бұрын
The best part for me is that I didn't even pick up on this! I mean, yeah I picked up on the characters' races and personalities, but I never actually noticed that they were all such strong and specific inversions of the usual stereotypes until your comment because it all just felt so organic!!! Like, *of course* Chilchuck isn't a fighter, he's fragile and his vast skillset alone justifies his position in the party! *Of course* Marcille is a prissy city-person, she's from an extremely wealthy and powerful family and has probably only ever known privilege. Et cetera, et cetera.
@sarah-ro2hd2 ай бұрын
The rogue is lawful good lol
@thebaseandtriflingcreature1742 ай бұрын
@@sarah-ro2hdhe wants to come across as true neutral but he genuinely cares.
@ilavainАй бұрын
@@sarah-ro2hdlawful union man
@ilavainАй бұрын
Actually the rogue being a union man is also a great inversion. They're usually the selfish lone wolf types, and this one cares about his craft and wants others to get treated fairly
@TheBaldingPied3 ай бұрын
The nightmares being dragons reminds me of barnacles and how people thought they were mollusks until they realized years later that they were crustaceans, which then lead Darwin to study barnacles to better understand where they might go, which then frustrated him to the point where he declared "I hate a barnacle as no man ever did before." I wonder if any dungeon ecologist cried themselves to sleep next to a tank of nightmares.
@verkhvoАй бұрын
A Monster Tales page for that volume actually does show a man who basically drove himself to insanity through his experiments with nightmares! Though in his case it was more due to their direct effect
@submariNervous3 ай бұрын
16:35 - Funny thing is, TONS of depictions of Basilisks/Cockatrices (both historic and modern) simply depict them as a gigantic snake with a rooster's crest instead of a snake-tailed rooster, it's 100% possible Basilisks and Cockatrices are in fact a snake monster species in Dunmeshi! :D 38:30 - As for why the mimic doesn't just bail on the treasure chest, I personally believe the scene with Kabru's party being paralyzed by treasure bug venom was meant to be a hint to readers, namely that treasure bugs could very well have this paralyzing venom from the very moment they hatch and will just instinctively use it on anything unfortunate enough to come into direct contact with them, meaning the mimic actually CAN'T escape. Essentially, it's the parasitoid wasp's game plan but with the twist that it's the kids that do the paralyzing rather than the parents.
@pantherenoire79373 ай бұрын
very small note for the kraken section: lemon sharks also have vertical pupils
@pantherenoire79373 ай бұрын
Also, for the kobalt's resistance to snake venom, im pretty sure in the manga they mention that kobalt's originally come from a desert region. Maybe they interact with venomous snakes more because of that and developed a resistance? It's just a guess.
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
@@pantherenoire7937 They do. I had the same thought too but i don't want to jump to that conclusion because some humans / demi also live there yet they aren't venom resistant.
@fluidthought423 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologist Maybe it's like the Inuit artic gene variant that helps them protect against the effects of a high fat diet, ie a long standing selective pressure on specific native populations in an environment.
@fishyfishyfishy500akabs83 ай бұрын
@@pantherenoire7937may be worth noting that despite not being dogs, meerkats and mongeese are highly resistant to snake venom. Doses that would easily be lethal to a human are just bad wounds with non negligable symptoms, but not outright fatal to a meerkat or mongoose
@tristanschoenhaar99983 ай бұрын
Their resistence could also be a coincidence, mabe something in their biology simply makes them more resistand to this venom, without having evolved for this purpose.
@abbliee54393 ай бұрын
16:12 about the serpentes thing, I remember Laios explaining in the show that the chickens were actually the tails
@Jergling2 ай бұрын
Snakes, which with the addition of magic, grew entire chickens backwards where the lower body grows on other species.
@plaguedoctor28823 ай бұрын
1:03:30 YEAAAAAAAAAA GO OFF KING, LAIOS IS THE GOAT BECAUSE HE DOESN'T DO THE "HUMANS ARE DISEASE BLAH BLAH BLAH" WHILE BEING A MONSTER SNOB!!!! HE TRULY CARESSSSS HE KNOWS WHAT HE IS ABOUT YEAAAAAAAAH By the way while you were discussing the fishmen I called my little sis over to show her the fish with "arm fins" and we talked about the basilisk and the snake with the spider tail, it was really nice, man :] thanks for letting me bond with my little sis in a fun way we both can relate to (as an animal fan AND a dungeon meshi fan)
@AlmeaCulpa3 ай бұрын
I think one major difference with monsters in dungeon meshi is that they likely only need to be viable in their current form. In real life, a creature started off as some single cell organism, and then in it's entire evolution until now, every generation and every mutation needs to have remained viable and competitive to some extent otherwise it couldn't have continued to reproduce and evolve. But in the dungeon, the dungeon master can simply create monsters. As long as they're viable enough to survive and reproduce in the form that's created, then that's fine. Even if it's an odd thing to exist, if it in it's current state is able to survive and reproduce, then it works. A realistic path for evolution might not really be needed in this case. EDIT: Sorry about my terminology, I'm obviously not educated in this area. I'm just thinking in context to how the dungeon works and the little I do know about evolution.
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
No worries, i understand what you mean. I think most would too
@Hanmacx3 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologist SPOILER when the next person became the Dungeon Lord, they designed walking Mushrooms with Flowers growing on them. The Crew instantly recognized that this wouldn't work because the flower would be wilting the Mushroom
@Snowcrab272 ай бұрын
Actually if you thinking about it, then it's same with us and how we breeds our animals and plants that wouldn't really happen in normal environments, what difference is actually just we doing it in same species but the dungeon just used whatever as long as it serves it's purpose and be able to live where it is and procreate itself
@gabriellavedier96503 ай бұрын
The Barometz, in shape and seeming, also comes from a very old legend/rumor from ignorant medieval people called The Vegetable Lamb Of Tartary. People were told cotton came from a plant but had no conception of plants with fibers like hair. So rumors started and were illuminated in natural histories with confident assurance, that cotton came from a sheep that grew like a plant. It's so weirdly niche, and yet Japan just happens to absorb the most wild and obscure stuff. This isn't even the only time a Vegetable Lamb Of Tartary is in a Japanese fantasy. In the PS2 game Odin Sphere one of the items you can use in adventure screens will grow a Vegetable Lamb Of Tartary you can then harvest meat from. It's like how Japan not only absorbed Kobolds, they absorbed specifically than ones in the narrow window of old D&D where the translation of the description could be just slightly off enough to make them dog people, which went into the smash hit franchise Wizardry, and then we get Kuro, the goodest boy.
@BJGvideos2 ай бұрын
Whimsicott from Pokémon is also a vegetable lamb
@fireballfilms3 ай бұрын
i loved the part with the shape shifter so much because it's very on spot with kitsune/nine tailed fox legend where barking dispels their illusions
@rianfelis31563 ай бұрын
I wish they had included the the nutrition breakdown as the ad splash card. Would be perfect for that.
@gavinbrown2163 ай бұрын
Like the stand stats in JoJo
@BJGvideos2 ай бұрын
That would be awesome
@psyc8403 ай бұрын
39:03 I think the answer to this question is more preference than safety. When a cat has caught a mouse (assuming that it intends to eat it at all), it will only eat the entire thing if it is really hungry, and gauges what it eats based on hunger level. Cats often avoid eating internal organs, sometimes only eating the head. Some leave the gizzard, which is strongly acidic. The fact that the kelpie leaves the liver behind is curious because cats do consider that to be very tasty. Perhaps kelpies have a strong aversion to bile?
@nnelg81393 ай бұрын
About evolution... (POSSIBLE SPOILERS) I believe that isn't as much of a concern for monsters in this world. AFAIK each monster species starts off as a magically-altered creature, and although the one doing the altering may have some pride in their craft, true selection pressure only applies once they escape into the wild and must reproduce naturally. (Or as naturally as you can get in an ultimately artificial dungeon environment...) So, something like Dryad could be explained as an artificially created "ornamental plant" that escaped and became somewhat invasive. Oh, also "ambient mana" seems to be a thing that lets the more powerful creatures found on lower floors seemingly ignore more of the laws of biology; I recall Laios talking about how a large dragon wouldn't be able to survive in a human town due to lack of mana. And it isn't just a handwave, it's actually implied to have sources and flows to it, not just from [REDACTED] but being produced by the metabolic processes of weaker monsters in upper floors, like slimes and walking mushrooms.
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
Indeed. That's what I'm talking about in the last part of the basilisk section. It's a spoiler which is why i don't talk about it in the video
@nnelg81393 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologist Hm... Personally, I don't see it as more of a spoiler than all the physical details you've already gone over, as long as you don't go into specific details. But I can see where you're coming from!
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
@@nnelg8139 The actual revelation itself had not happened in season 1 which is why i don't talk about it in the video Thanks for putting the spoiler warning in your comment btw
@KStarPR3 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologist It actually does get explained in the anime with a visual representation. So while an actual demonstration isn't shown until chapter 68, you find out how basilisks are made in chapter 48, or episode 22 of the anime. When Marcille explains how familiars are made, she says that you can modify/fuse plants and animals into monsters (but also that you can alternatively take control of one, implying that there are some naturally made monsters). That being said, I don't think too many picked up on that detail, nor do I think that moment later on will help some of those people understand it better.
@Bizarrejoe3 ай бұрын
If i recall correctly, Dragons are classified that way because they're considered disasters by their sheer presence. the nightmare's ability to completely f-up a group mentally may be the reason it is classified as such.
@thebaseandtriflingcreature1742 ай бұрын
the monster hunter philosophy towards dragons, huh?
@lucifurious19763 ай бұрын
Ain't no way I saw Oberon in your fav character list, now I need to see a series on lostbelt biology.
@YourWaywardDestiny3 ай бұрын
Why would any organism exhibit mimicry aimed at humanoids? Because developing something that might help avoid destruction is helpful. I imagine they already had a flower that, by happenstance, at some point kind of looked humanoid and the ones that had EXTRA human looking parts were able to reproduce more because they were left alone wile the more vague flowers were destroyed on account of their spores being a massive allergen to humanoid species. Why didn't they develop less irritating pollen if humanoid intervention was such an issue? Some of them did, I'm sure. There's probably a common ancestor between a hyper-human flowerer and some looked-over dudgeon plant species that had a flower that looked like a head, a torso, two arms, and two legs. The amount of intervention from people with that exact set-up must have been absolutely astronomical to alter a plant like that by nature, so cultivation and oddities might have played a part before they got where we can see them in series.
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
That's an interesting idea I like it
@templebeast13243 ай бұрын
My mom always says: people who hates animals also hates humans, plants and themselves. And it's true.
@MalomainfromDOOMEDАй бұрын
erm actualy animals are from animalia and plants are from plantae so they dont hate plants
@templebeast1324Ай бұрын
@@MalomainfromDOOMED it means if you hate one form of life you hate all of life.
@Logan0013 ай бұрын
Though they didn't show it, I assume because the adult mimic bugs have paralytic venom, a clutch of eggs would likely have them as well in some capacity. so if the mimic isn't aware that a clutch has hatched, they may be ambushed and paralyzed, left helpless to the newborn treasure bugs. What comes to mind is parasitic creatures like Wax Moths who invade bee hives and lay their clutch. a healthy and attentive hive will dispatch the wax moth and its eggs, but one that is stressed or unhealthy for some reason will not notice, and when the larvae hatch, cause damage to the colony. Perhaps older Mimic, or those who are unhealthy for whatever reason are more prone to being infested with treasure bug eggs.
@fishyfishyfishy500akabs83 ай бұрын
It is shown as Kabru and his party can attest
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
My brain just jump to the default real life logic and thought "there is no way a small insect can pierce a crustacean exoskeleton" so i didn't jump into that train of thought But reading this makes me rearrange my view because this is not real life after all. They'll find a way So yea i really like this explanation
@fishyfishyfishy500akabs83 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologist small insects need not pierce the exoskeleton. Ants kill crabs by attacking the joints. Using this tactic they can take down even the largest crabs like coconut crabs as the crabs are helpless to stop them. Terrestrial hermit crabs also have mites as a frequent parasite, and they feed off the crab in a similar way, targetting vulnerable areas on the crab's body. A Treasure bug's lifestyle is more along the lines of a phorid fly, some of which are parasitoids which lays their eggs inside a host ant or for some species, bees bigger than they are, even killing the host in some cases like if there alot of phorid fly larvae or if the host is small, like an ant
@benholland11403 ай бұрын
That Mersault jumpscare caught me so off-guard wtf. Also, I'm glad I'm not the only one who was hooked specifically by the monster ecology and biology
@banjo1919Ай бұрын
Im glad i'm not the only one that got jumpscared
@leannetsai91713 ай бұрын
I'm very happy to see a biology video on Dungeon meshi as that was what wrapped it's claws around me when I found out and started the series! 55:24, very specifically, I feel like I've seen a sea creature that looks EXACTLY like the sky fish but looking back, the closest example I think of is the Polychaete worm though I can't remember which specific type.
@T22663 ай бұрын
I thought the Barometz's inspiration was from the misinterpretation of cotton plants.
@KStarPR3 ай бұрын
Without doing much research, I think that's the case. It'd make more sense that the plant got its name from the myth rather than the other way around (at least it makes more sense to me, especially given the actual plant has the "sheep" part at the bottom rather than the top).
@Dingobabee3 ай бұрын
Honestly, one thing I love is that even creatures that are more magical, they fill their own ecological niche The changeling mushrooms spread largely by targeting social species that will get left behind by their groups if they look wrong The Shapeshifter is a good example of the sorts of adaptations to feed primarially on humans, since we tend to get smarter with better tools, at least a little faster than a lot of species can adapt, so using that intellegence against us is a great strategy I do agree that the Dryads aee just weird if you start thinking about it though 😂
@vitogunnhilder3 ай бұрын
So, I’m not quite sure why I was recommended this video. Still watched it fully from beginning until end - you’re very entertaining, easy to understand, passionate of the topic, and well-spoken! It wasn’t until near the very end that I saw what the connection was… Am I the first of Project Moon sleeper-agents commenting on this video? I saw that Angela png among your 5th category of characters you like, you can’t hide it from the denizens of The City. The Invitations are sent, the Reception starts soon…
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
Surprisingly i've seen several comments about meursault jumpscare here Could've never seen that coming since PM is kinda niche
@NepNep2020Ай бұрын
*bump*
@GreatDuckKing3 ай бұрын
I only watched the anime so far, (Mainly because I can't get a hold of manga very easily) but when I heard that the entirety of what I saw was just considered to be an appetizer, my mind shut down for a while, and I had to watch the vid a second time to find out what I missed. Edit: I just finished reading the manga, and I only have one thing to say... HOLY SHI-
@rottencandystudios18573 ай бұрын
Man I can’t believe we found the real life Laios
@kdup-hp6zm3 ай бұрын
i thought the skyfish was based on a "cyprid" called rods and i use quotation marks because even most hardcore beliers admit they're BS
@Barakon3 ай бұрын
18:12 they’re clearly either nudibranchs or slugs with hermit crab habits. So if they were to be mollusks they’d be in Gastropoda! Here’s a nudibranch that looks very similar to the living armor! kzbin.info/www/bejne/iqWUgnSEfsmigtEsi=EqGvqK08vTfEnyh4
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
In the manga they are stated to have adductor muscle, so it would not be a nudibranch (at least not our real world nudibranch)
@Barakon3 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologist oh…their eyes stocks do remind me of conches though.
@Barakon3 ай бұрын
40:01 well, cats do it too! From the house cat to the leopards! Cats chatter to get birds & leopards mimic the cries of baby monkeys.
@fishyfishyfishy500akabs83 ай бұрын
There are apparently also reports of tigers mimicking deer calls to attractthem
@browserjunior4707Ай бұрын
@@fishyfishyfishy500akabs8Tigers also do this with cattle. They’ll mimic the mooing of a cow to lure them near.
@gabbrooh91263 ай бұрын
Great Video, I hope you make more videos in different kinds of medias, I kinda hope an indepth look on Monster Classes in Monster Hunter and seeing which kinds are in that classification
@Jergling2 ай бұрын
Almost none of the monsters make sense as something that would evolve through competitive advantage, but even the wacky ones that don't even fit in their kingdom make sense if you think about them as engineered organisms. The monsters didn't come about as a function of nature, they were invented by the imaginations of natural creatures who wanted them for a specific purpose. A successful dungeon lord doesn't just place the monsters, they also have to make the collection of monsters self-sustaining, or the ecosystem will run at a net loss and constantly need to be replenished. Dryad Flowers being human-looking, motile organisms that tempt explorers and then kill them is a ridiculous and wasteful lifecycle, but someone thought it was cool or scary, so now they exist in this world and serve to fix key nutrients that wouldn't be available to their biome otherwise, even though there are better candidates for the niche.
@RekishiRecaps3 ай бұрын
As a biology student I did showed my Zoology professor the manga and the shell part as well the tentacles
@meowhisd45463 ай бұрын
Now THIS is what I needed today. (Positively, looking forward to more of your content already)
@cenzured60043 ай бұрын
since you mentioned your taste, here are some recs for psychological and mystery manga that you'll probably enjoy but might not have heard of because of their demographics: - double - limit - helter skelter - 7 seeds - mystery to iu nakare - mitarai-ke, enjou suru - shigeshoushi
@ceoofluigitime11003 ай бұрын
i’m no expert but maybe the snake part of the basilisk lives longer because the lungs are in the snake part
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
I just assumed its not drawn because it would be to cluttered, but if its deliberate then that is indeed the logical explanation
@gavinbrown2163 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologistthe lungs are actually labeled in the basilisk anatomy cross-section. It’s right next to the snake stomach.
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
@@gavinbrown216 For the chicken part i mean Just like liver is not labeled for the snake part but it is for the chicken part
@pining_tree67883 ай бұрын
(Possible spoiler?) Given where most unicorns are depicted to exist, I do believe that the horns are being sawn off. Whether or not they are capable of regrowing them, given that unicorn horns are used to keep many sources of water purified throughout the dungeon, the horns would likely be sawed off once grown just because having easy access to water filtration is extremely useful.
@patriciusvunkempen1022 ай бұрын
mimmicking humans could actualy work as a kind of scarcrow for some smaller weaker monsters, who might actualy be afraid of humans
@itaykerensm16293 ай бұрын
The incubating snake animation killed me, you earned a sub right there.
@duykhangtran44063 ай бұрын
I love your insight and thought process about a lot of the monster featured in the manga. I only know somewhat about mythology and fantasy monster so most of the time I didn't really think much of how they work and why they evolve in such a way because "that's just how they do in the myth" Edited because I accidentally pressed enter too early
@thecarrotclarinet3 ай бұрын
3:25 Mersault jumpscare
@insh0re3 ай бұрын
Excellent video! It's exactly the kind of Dungeon Meshi analysis I was hoping to find.
@mycology52423 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this video and your breakdown. Perhaps another video covering the second half of the series in the future?
@steel82313 ай бұрын
Fun fact of a Dire Wolf, they weren't actually the "Wolf but Big" Fantasy usually shows, they were more like "Wolf but Pitbull" and went extinct because the prey they were specialized to hunt died out.
@BJGvideos2 ай бұрын
What prey was that?
@steel82312 ай бұрын
@BJGvideos I'd assume something that also went extinct in the ice age. I'm not a paleo-biologyst or whatever the term is. I'm sure a Natural History museum somewhere mentions Dire Wolves.
@Blue_Lunacy3 ай бұрын
The Barometz was definitely inspired by the The Vegetable Lamb of Tartary myth.
@BJGvideos2 ай бұрын
It's funny to think that the pokémon Whimsicott also is
@bleu_ace12002 ай бұрын
I just stumbled upon your video today and I greatly enjoyed sitting through your explanations. I have a BA in Biology and a minor in Conservation Ecology and your addressing of the monsters felt like I was back in my vertebrate Biology course (it's been 10 years!). It all tickled a very giddy part of my brain there, thank you so much for sharing this with us!
@Creticus3 ай бұрын
I don't remember the clam monster. However, if I had to guess, it's probably classified as a dragon because there's a clam monster called a shen that may or may not be a dragon in disguise. It's notable for having illusion powers. Edit: I should've watched the entire video before commenting. Lol.
@jeagerzbomb99243 ай бұрын
Interestingly, there are other snail-dragons of mythology that the clam monster may also be based on. There's the japanese Shussebora and the european paintings of knights fighting giant snails.
@AeyakS26 күн бұрын
Maybe the distinctive trait is related to the scale or shell that Dragons grow? Maybe what distinguishes Dragon from other arthropods is the use of a keratin shell rather than chitin or something?
@ramsescampollo25063 ай бұрын
How did i miss the video i suggested, also, great video there
@Hanmacx3 ай бұрын
Dungeon meshi not only cares about how "realistic" the animals could be, But Also how they would interact with each other in an ecosystem
@williamashton74203 ай бұрын
THIS IS AN INCREDIBLE VIDEO !!!! CANNOT WAIT FOR THE NEXT ONE :3
@glyfleball3 ай бұрын
The Meursault jumpscare gave me psychic damage
@MrMementoOri3 ай бұрын
Hot water is usually a good way to stop the stings as it disables the shooting muscles and denatures the venom.
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
Are you completely sure in your statement that hot water disables the shooting muscles?
@stevendorries3 ай бұрын
@@OutofPlaceZoologisthe didn’t say HOW hot that water is🙃
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
@@stevendorries That's fair i guess smileyface
@brokenmirror39113 ай бұрын
@@stevendorries I mean the stingers won't get you if you get boiled.
@chrisc.59113 ай бұрын
I like to think that a slime would have a brain so it could avoid trying to eat fire (which occurs in the dungeon both naturally and due to adventurers) without needing to get close enough to get hurt.
@esobelsamarita23073 ай бұрын
The Cockatrice ang Basilisk being Serpents is cool. Despite what we actually see, we may think the bird is the main body but the snake "tail" is the actual body. Technically its a snake with a mutated tail that became the Cockatrice and the Basilisk
@V3LV3L4Ай бұрын
I was only expecting some really cool Dungeon Meshi content, which I got, but also suddenly 3:25 Meursault Jumpscare
@marianac966324 күн бұрын
This was a very entertaining video and I learned a lot! Thank you!
@allenquadras94613 күн бұрын
I believe in anime when cockatrice was introduced, while Marcille was handling its eggs she asks why the eggs reassemble that of a snake. That is when Laios or Senshi say that the snake part is not the tail of the cockatrice but actually its head, and the remaining is actually the tail. That is why I think they were classified under Serpentes
@rynblissАй бұрын
57:25 iirc kobolds like kuro come from desert regions, so it couldve been advantageous for them to develop venom resistance
@A11V1R153 ай бұрын
5:07 Funny thing is that I was seeing cut shorts from the anime for a while and not getting me interested, but then there was a short of episode 3 and I immediately got to go know what was it to watch it
@bakh5543213 ай бұрын
I'm confused why they didn't go with Dungeon Dining for the English title. I feel it would've worked better.
@stephen01kingАй бұрын
Because the author wanted it to sound like D&D. D in D, get it?
@williansnobre3 ай бұрын
This is all cool but remember, the dungeon is made so in this case you can excuse any nonsense literally as *A Wizard did it*
@rottencandystudios18573 ай бұрын
If you do a subnautica video my life is yours! It’s one of my favorites games, I’m ocean obsessed and desperately want more scientific and biologic focused videos about it!
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
The only reason i'm against the thought is i believe there are lots of such videos already (from marine biologists even) that my insights would be redundant
@miiko89242 ай бұрын
Actual Meursault Jumpscare
@chottabeamm3 ай бұрын
artificial insemination for minotaurs definitely gonna be craaaaazy. I got a flashback about the first time I see a picture of artificial insemination on cows on my highschool textbook. like, oh my god that farmer's hand went so deep 😭
@Anomalocringe3 ай бұрын
quickest 1 hour of my life omg
@ratoh17103 ай бұрын
18:12 Also they were only just discovered so maybe you could make the argument it simply hasn't been possible to classify it yet
@henriquemedranosilva7142Ай бұрын
2:00 Ok, so like, have you ever played Lisa the painful? Feels like it would fit right in with those
@OutofPlaceZoologistАй бұрын
Didn't know that game exist I'll check it out
@theppotato16673 ай бұрын
31:40 my theory about the Basilisk is that the snake lives longer because it has the lings, and maybe in difficult situations it has other structures to pump blood as the heart would. I'm not a biologist but I think it may be more difficult to oxygenate blood than pump it for backup mechanisms despite our societies focus on the heart.
@refindoazhar1507Ай бұрын
Both are equally important, which is why we perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation
@relicking9207Ай бұрын
An idea I had for why Dryads might mimic humans is to get something that eats them to carry their seeds elsewhere like how some plants do with birds.
@Rayanaminge3 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this content! I wish you didn’t have the put your disclaimer at the beginning about your option… I understand why, and that’s what’s disappointing. As for ideas for similar content. I would love to see your take on Monster Hunter. It “feels” realistic with its ecology and such, but I’m curious on your take and opinions!
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
I actually made a video talking about monster hunter, although specifically about the species concept and classification. I find it redundant to talk about the previous games because there are a whole series of books on zoologists thought on them and there are lots of dedicated channels (kinda) that talk about the actual in universe ecology I do plan on reviewing stuffs on MH wild when its released since it'll be "fresh" insights
@CrowXIII3 ай бұрын
I think the reason the Snake lives longer is that the lungs are in the snake part.
@AlliePaints3 ай бұрын
herpetologists are my fave zoologists
@geoshark123 ай бұрын
18:52 i think the reason they are categorized together is specifically because what it takes to over come , that large amount of magical power they possess and them not being intelligent Nightmare fore you to face inner demons and has a similar mental strain as you would trying to physically overcome a dragon
@Kris_not_Chris3 ай бұрын
I believe the "skyfish" familiar shape was inspired by the "flying rod" cryptids
@shrimpyalfredo3933Ай бұрын
I hope you've seen the extra content that explains how they managed to make the raised land usable
@zetlemb485717 күн бұрын
Kinda a different genre but if you like the ecological stuff and the way it flows together, you should check out Scavengers Reign. It’s a little less fleshed out but so alien and interconnected it’s insane. And the tempo swaps between a sort of peaceful awe and then a primal danger. Very good, like this show. In a different way
@wrenross5315Ай бұрын
41:06 - there are fish with blades! Surgeonfish have extendable spines near their tails which can slice attackers. Some species are also venomous I think. Some of them are common aquarium fish so you'd never think they could cut your hand open, but they can, even the blue tang/Dory of Finding Nemo fame.
@Exquailibur20 күн бұрын
I think a lot of the inconsistencies in classification can be explained by this being a medieval world so sometimes they are just wrong, unrelated species have often been classified together in our world
@Luzzul283 ай бұрын
Lios is like an animal rights activist but he know not all needs to be save. For example invasive species.
@hijiriyukari3 ай бұрын
You get a follow seeing your taste at 2:02
@f_yuАй бұрын
regarding living armor, in my ignorance, i may propose that fhey just adapted to whatever they found in the dungeon since the beginning and ornamental armor might have been efficient both because humans would scram as soon as they started moving (at first, at least) and both because if someone attacked back they actually had the means to defend themselves. this is my kinda evolutionary reading of it, i don't think it's that far off that it just coincidentally happened but i may very well just be naïve.
@joshsmith9503 ай бұрын
31:30 Could've also just been cause the lungs were on the snake side
@OutofPlaceZoologist3 ай бұрын
I just assumed its not drawn because it would be to cluttered, but if its deliberate then that is indeed the logical explanation
@tylerwhorff71433 ай бұрын
I also finished the whole manga between episode 3 and 4 dropping 😂
@User_Unknown863 ай бұрын
Did he find the Mangaka's blog? She's still adding stuff.
@pekvanc53543 ай бұрын
Reading the manga i felt like the creatures in the dungeon are made b, magic, but the creatures are the most efficient if they take the natural path. Like, they can't really work, without bei g a part of an ecosystem or a greater context.
@JUESTION3 ай бұрын
There's something that I really think you'd enjoy! It's a game called Rain World, it's a survival game where you play as a little animal in an abandoned world. I can't really say much more because anything I could mention I consider kind of a spoiler, despite there not being a super accessible story unless you figure out the mechanism in which you get the lore. I'll just say that you should definitely try it!
@JonathanGhost423 ай бұрын
This was a fascinating video.
@BJGvideos2 ай бұрын
Have you ever checked out Heaven's Design Team? It's a cute anime that explores evolutionary biology...albeit through depicting the animals all being created by a team of angels. It's very silly and yet manages to have a lot of real science despite the setting, including why dragons and unicorns can't really work despite the best efforts of the creators, and how frickin wild so many animal societies are if they're depicted as humans (one episode takes us through a humanized colony of a mystery animal and the realization of what it is is somewhat shocking!) With the basilisk being able to survive the chicken head being cut off, my thoughts wandered to Mike The Headless Chicken, a real chicken who survived with just a small fraction of his brainstem left. He had to be fed with a dropper and survived for a year and a half.
@lydia-is-bored28162 ай бұрын
Meursalt jumpscare
@DungeonMarcio3 ай бұрын
31:40 maybe the snake lives more because the lungs are in the "snake side"? If they somehow dont bleed out before it...
@catofdoom34583 ай бұрын
29:34 the snake part has the lungs without the snake the chicken suffocates cutting the snake off from the rooster cuts through its stomach so it starves to death even if it’s healed
@howdyimhowdy3 ай бұрын
meursault cameo
@Ugo_Goglu2 ай бұрын
42:52 Many shark species have vertical slit eyes but they are often too dilated to tell. I think they are especially prominent on ground sharks like catsharks, blacknose shark, and tiger sharks.
@alex_zetsuАй бұрын
Normally anime does "spontaneous generation" with monsters like Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls In a Dungeon where magic creates monsters. In that setting adventurers are like coal miners, killing monsters to get the magic stones. To be honest 7/8 times anime _doesn't_ go with spontaneous generation and tries to create an ecosystem, it fails even with its own internal logic with unanswered questions like "at these harvesting rates, why weren't the easiest monsters hunted to extinction?" A lot of series that try to explain it end up contradicting their own exposition. Delicious in Dungeon is one of the few exceptions that do it well. However for writers that aren't up to the ask, spontaneous generation by magic isn't bad writing by any means as long as things are consistent with the established facts.
@l.o.v.edrive34663 ай бұрын
Unrelated but I love your deer icon ❤
@ghosty_waaa3 ай бұрын
Your friend is really a queen for recomending and insisting that its good, because then you watched before spoilers. You wouldve probably come across some spoiler of episode 10 and it wouldve ruined the surprise. This anime is really good, and i want to read the manga aswell
@OrrinSalton3 ай бұрын
Great vid, was very riveting!
@ellyruaya64453 ай бұрын
Marcille is best anime elf to date! Can't wait for Season2 she'll become darker 😂