Crazy Luigi's Pick: "How to bury my memoirs inside of a mouthful of dreams (5 parts)" by LaVie CestLol
When looking at the past two months of recommended YouTube Poops we did, one thing that stuck out to me was a remark from our own bluespectre about most earrape and brain rape videos. Specifically, there was the notion that no matter how good a video may be with this type of notion, it's going to look the same in terms of quality. After thinking about it long and hard, I do kind of agree with him in a sense that in terms of what we end up doing with them, it usually is pretty much the same things we've come to expect from them at this point. Sure we may have specific names for some settings like Erosion to make them try and sound unique, but even we have to pretty much admit that we're still just raping minds with multiple visual styles in the process. With that said, if I had to select one video that proves to be an exception to that rule, it would have to go to this video right here.
In all actuality, this video is technically considered a five part video, even though normally a video length of 50 or so seconds wouldn't constitute "five part stories" in the first place. However, each part of the video that comes up does bring up some rather interesting ideas in mind that I don't mind talking about each of them as a whole here. The first part, better known in the video as "Blur," gives the viewer a spiral viewpoint under a positive manner before diving into some of the planned chaos of what's to come later on with changed videos and a few fascinating effects to behold in the first place. Our next scene called "Because of my ability to fantasize" brings out a more atmospheric settings where the "ear rape" is considerably calm and nowhere near assaulting to the viewer at all, which is great for people that firmly dislike that kind of thing. Entering our next scene, however, will remind viewers that this isn't your normal, everyday romp through someone's visual stylizations.
For our third scene, which our author titles "I wish i had someone to hug," we start to enter a downward spiral of sorts when sanity starts drifting further away from the creator and the noises in his head start becoming clearer and clearer the longer we go on. This actually continues onward with the next scene called "Soulless, Worthless, and yet again ...," where the insanity climaxes into a very unique visual style that also makes me think he's gotten himself into a prison that he can't get himself out of. Funnily enough, our video ends on a rather simplistic audio dismorphing of that "bleep" sound you've heard when the video started to change scenes through "Indifferent, by Somaticae (Outro)." What I enjoyed throughout the video as a whole was that every part that LaVie CestLol made had something different involved to make what was seen here feel unique, even if it just continued on with something from earlier. Combine that with some ear raping that really isn't as loud as some people might have feared it would have been, and you've got yourself a visual experience you won't want to forget anytime soon!
TheOneManBoxOffice's Pick: "Spyr: the moviE!! DVDRipto 1080p Xvid MPEG" by theadventuretimefan
It begins with Spyro embarking into the world of Avalar (the setting of the second game), and the land is invaded by YouTube Poop, led by the almighty Ripto, who doesn’t know that the real master behind it is the pooper himself. YTP characters are all over the place and explosions galore (Woah! What an explosion!) Ripto’s plan is to obtain a diarrhea instruction book, and the professor is inventing a machine that’ll take Spyro to heaven…where he’ll burn for all eternity (insert MLG sad violin music here). He dies, but instantly comes back to life complaining about the rain and cries about forgetting his umbrella, and then Elora tells Spyro to kill himself. It ends with a credit sequence where Spyro was not voiced by Tom Kenny, but by the god among gods that is Sir Bill O’Reilly, then an image of Spyro pops up with an expression you probably had when watching this video, and with that, you question the littlest bit of sanity you have left.
I've played and beaten all three of the Spyro the Dragon games on the original PlayStation, and I remember when LightningLuigi used the cutscenes from all three of the games, as he was the first to use them as a source. Video game cutscenes, even to this day, in general aren't used that much in YouTube Poop, which is a shame, because there's a lot of them that are exploitative, and I'm not counting any of the CDI games. LightningLuigi, Stuart K. Reilly, and now, theadventuretimefan, have proven the potential of using them in poops. I would love to see more of them like this come to light. Well done, theadventuretimefan. Well done, indeed.
Thebluespectre's choice: "Arale Feeds General Blue Pink Poop" by MrThissucks
I was in college when I played Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3 for the first time. This was not that long ago; I owned a Nintendo Wii of my own, but if a friend had a giant pile of PS2 games, why wouldn't I go back a generation to check them out? Like many anime fighting games, DBZB3 is hilariously imbalanced on purpose. The developers openly admitted that the main protagonists and antagonists were grossly more powerful than any secondary character, actually offering a point-buy system for assembling teams in multiplayer. Season 1 Goku was 5 out of 10 points; The Super Sayan Goku from season 2 was 7 Points; and you don't want to know what would cost 9 points.
And then there was Arale. Arale is not a Dragon Ball character. She's not even from a particularly violent cartoon. Before Akira Toryama wrote the original Dragon Ball, he was behind a goofy comedy called Doctor Slump, the story of a dweeby professor who built a super-powered robot girl just to prove he could. Arale combines amazing strength with extreme nearsightedness and the mind of a small child to make incredibly weird and silly things happen. And then she became a playable character in a fighting game.
This girl does not follow the same template that other "good" player characters do. For instance, she has no projectile, instead throwing a giant right hook when you press the Ki Blast button. This tiny punch just happens to flinch the opponent and turn them around, opening them up to even more hits. In a series where most conflicts are resolved by laser shove matches, Arale doesn't understand the point and simply hits you in the face before you start. Arale has three special moves, all of which are variants of "Run into your opponent face-first". One of them happens to be a very hard-to-aim but unblockable tackle, a move usually only seen on very slow and/or fragile characters, except that Arale is fast and has a decent life bar. Despite being utterly ridiculous, Arale is rated 5 out of ten points for a team battle and can toss even the straight to DVD villains around with ease.
So when I saw this YouTube Poop with no memory of ever watching Doctor Slump, I was glad to know that the manga got a proper cartoon. Also, The editing is pretty damn clever.
We hope you enjoy our recommended videos for this month. If you have any favorites from March that you feel we should have looked into, give us a comment about it and we'll see what we think there. Either way, we hope to see you again next month as we tackle a whole new month of videos for your enjoyment.
When looking at the past two months of recommended YouTube Poops we did, one thing that stuck out to me was a remark from our own bluespectre about most earrape and brain rape videos. Specifically, there was the notion that no matter how good a video may be with this type of notion, it's going to look the same in terms of quality. After thinking about it long and hard, I do kind of agree with him in a sense that in terms of what we end up doing with them, it usually is pretty much the same things we've come to expect from them at this point. Sure we may have specific names for some settings like Erosion to make them try and sound unique, but even we have to pretty much admit that we're still just raping minds with multiple visual styles in the process. With that said, if I had to select one video that proves to be an exception to that rule, it would have to go to this video right here.
In all actuality, this video is technically considered a five part video, even though normally a video length of 50 or so seconds wouldn't constitute "five part stories" in the first place. However, each part of the video that comes up does bring up some rather interesting ideas in mind that I don't mind talking about each of them as a whole here. The first part, better known in the video as "Blur," gives the viewer a spiral viewpoint under a positive manner before diving into some of the planned chaos of what's to come later on with changed videos and a few fascinating effects to behold in the first place. Our next scene called "Because of my ability to fantasize" brings out a more atmospheric settings where the "ear rape" is considerably calm and nowhere near assaulting to the viewer at all, which is great for people that firmly dislike that kind of thing. Entering our next scene, however, will remind viewers that this isn't your normal, everyday romp through someone's visual stylizations.
For our third scene, which our author titles "I wish i had someone to hug," we start to enter a downward spiral of sorts when sanity starts drifting further away from the creator and the noises in his head start becoming clearer and clearer the longer we go on. This actually continues onward with the next scene called "Soulless, Worthless, and yet again ...," where the insanity climaxes into a very unique visual style that also makes me think he's gotten himself into a prison that he can't get himself out of. Funnily enough, our video ends on a rather simplistic audio dismorphing of that "bleep" sound you've heard when the video started to change scenes through "Indifferent, by Somaticae (Outro)." What I enjoyed throughout the video as a whole was that every part that LaVie CestLol made had something different involved to make what was seen here feel unique, even if it just continued on with something from earlier. Combine that with some ear raping that really isn't as loud as some people might have feared it would have been, and you've got yourself a visual experience you won't want to forget anytime soon!
TheOneManBoxOffice's Pick: "Spyr: the moviE!! DVDRipto 1080p Xvid MPEG" by theadventuretimefan
It begins with Spyro embarking into the world of Avalar (the setting of the second game), and the land is invaded by YouTube Poop, led by the almighty Ripto, who doesn’t know that the real master behind it is the pooper himself. YTP characters are all over the place and explosions galore (Woah! What an explosion!) Ripto’s plan is to obtain a diarrhea instruction book, and the professor is inventing a machine that’ll take Spyro to heaven…where he’ll burn for all eternity (insert MLG sad violin music here). He dies, but instantly comes back to life complaining about the rain and cries about forgetting his umbrella, and then Elora tells Spyro to kill himself. It ends with a credit sequence where Spyro was not voiced by Tom Kenny, but by the god among gods that is Sir Bill O’Reilly, then an image of Spyro pops up with an expression you probably had when watching this video, and with that, you question the littlest bit of sanity you have left.
I've played and beaten all three of the Spyro the Dragon games on the original PlayStation, and I remember when LightningLuigi used the cutscenes from all three of the games, as he was the first to use them as a source. Video game cutscenes, even to this day, in general aren't used that much in YouTube Poop, which is a shame, because there's a lot of them that are exploitative, and I'm not counting any of the CDI games. LightningLuigi, Stuart K. Reilly, and now, theadventuretimefan, have proven the potential of using them in poops. I would love to see more of them like this come to light. Well done, theadventuretimefan. Well done, indeed.
Thebluespectre's choice: "Arale Feeds General Blue Pink Poop" by MrThissucks
I was in college when I played Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3 for the first time. This was not that long ago; I owned a Nintendo Wii of my own, but if a friend had a giant pile of PS2 games, why wouldn't I go back a generation to check them out? Like many anime fighting games, DBZB3 is hilariously imbalanced on purpose. The developers openly admitted that the main protagonists and antagonists were grossly more powerful than any secondary character, actually offering a point-buy system for assembling teams in multiplayer. Season 1 Goku was 5 out of 10 points; The Super Sayan Goku from season 2 was 7 Points; and you don't want to know what would cost 9 points.
And then there was Arale. Arale is not a Dragon Ball character. She's not even from a particularly violent cartoon. Before Akira Toryama wrote the original Dragon Ball, he was behind a goofy comedy called Doctor Slump, the story of a dweeby professor who built a super-powered robot girl just to prove he could. Arale combines amazing strength with extreme nearsightedness and the mind of a small child to make incredibly weird and silly things happen. And then she became a playable character in a fighting game.
This girl does not follow the same template that other "good" player characters do. For instance, she has no projectile, instead throwing a giant right hook when you press the Ki Blast button. This tiny punch just happens to flinch the opponent and turn them around, opening them up to even more hits. In a series where most conflicts are resolved by laser shove matches, Arale doesn't understand the point and simply hits you in the face before you start. Arale has three special moves, all of which are variants of "Run into your opponent face-first". One of them happens to be a very hard-to-aim but unblockable tackle, a move usually only seen on very slow and/or fragile characters, except that Arale is fast and has a decent life bar. Despite being utterly ridiculous, Arale is rated 5 out of ten points for a team battle and can toss even the straight to DVD villains around with ease.
So when I saw this YouTube Poop with no memory of ever watching Doctor Slump, I was glad to know that the manga got a proper cartoon. Also, The editing is pretty damn clever.
We hope you enjoy our recommended videos for this month. If you have any favorites from March that you feel we should have looked into, give us a comment about it and we'll see what we think there. Either way, we hope to see you again next month as we tackle a whole new month of videos for your enjoyment.