It would funny to have and edit with your stats bar on the lower corner, go to the lake, take a plastic bottle and play the sounds from the actual game haha. Nice video.
hey man this is great. I plan on visiting this place next week. Do you mind telling me from which village you startet the walk and where the whole in the wall was? this would be amazuing
At 3:15 I think you are wrong. Povrly are Elektrozavodsk in-game and thus behind the hill - Kozí vrch( or Pik Kozlova). The neighborhood down in front of the hill is Mojžíř(Prigorodky in-game). Apparently one of the worst neighborhoods in Ústí n. L.
0:53 winter? Waf? Sorry, but this is not look like winter, wery sorry... Reality from my working: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mYih0xU08Hs.htmlsi=02ab0IqHR9jEvQhv
Ooooh! Hi, Ick! (I is Alex from Russia 🙂) This video inspires us to film something similar here in Kalinovka (Калиновка), so that we can compare it with the DayZ game between the Czech Republic, Ireland, and Russia (Камышово). I studied to become an architect in 1985, and therefore have a particularly keen eye for the architecture of buildings. When I shoot a video at home on the way to a metropolis in the private sector, then it is clear what the differences are in the construction and renovation of buildings between the UK and Russia. Even ordinary people would notice these differences. (At least it seems so to me).
Chernarus is the most boring empty map ive ever played dayz on. Always felt cherno was too designed like a video game. Towns and houses just dont feel Authentic. And now i know its real, and i understand a bit better why that part of the world is so depressed.
Probably Milovice/Boží Dar or something of similar origin. Soviet union built bases to "protect" the rest of warsaw pact (and make them pay for it) these bases were the size of towns, the total number of inhabitants unknown, ofen times the figures are estimated to four times of the official figures. These bases were abandoned with the fall of soviet union when russians realised tey don't have enough cohesion to hold onto the occupied states. These bases have been numerous and used as a deterrent & staging grounds for cold war, some have even been housing WMDs (contrary to what was said)
@@whyproblemmake Sort of, don't know if "inherited" was the correct word. Huge part of why these bases were built was due to a lot of Warsaw Pact countries diverting from communism and out of the soviet sphere of influence. So what they did was roll in with military to suppress these tendencies, and then make a permanent residency, to keep the countries in check. Whilst also making contracts of "protection" where the hosting country had to pay the soviets for all their units and presence. In the cases I know there also wasn't such a thing as rotation, these stationed troops have been moved in with their families, have been built entire cities for, that were often times very isolated (and the ones that were not isolated, the local population was treated badly, so the relationship was very hostile - for one noone wanted them here in the first place, and in addition to that athe local populace was treated as lowlife peasants by the soviets). So once they were actually told to leave, there were huge problems because the soviets never expected them to come back "home", there was no accommodation ready. So they tore apart & took what they could. And what was left after them was taken by the opportunists over the years.