I don't understand how you got it when you weren't walking around on two legs almost ever. This games confusing to me. Why would you get leg skills by not using legs.
I keep training when I walk on land I don’t get neuronal energy but I’ve been walking for about 30 minutes in water and nothing just neuronal energy any tips? (Sorry for being late)
Man i tried this game this week it's amazing how i really felt i returned to monkey with the fear of our ancestor and the joy of their accomplishment 10/10
Já faz um tempo que eu to jogando e por algum motivo a evolução de ficar em duas pernas por curto período não aparece, ando pelos rios, pulo de galho em galho, faço item, desvio e mato animal e não aparece, alguma dica?
I reset my run until the conditions were fishing and flipping the rock. There is another condition which is poking a hole in the ground (located across from where the meteroite hits). I'm assuming that's the only neuron you're having trouble unlocking. If you're doing this casually, then advance up the river and poke a hole. That should fix your issue. If you're attempting the run, then the only option is to reset your run and hope for good RNG.
I cant unlock orthostasis and sense. I've walked in shallow water for 15 minutes, I've identified everything around my base while standing up, I've stood up, walked and stood back up about 100 times. But it still hasn't unlocked I've gotten handling stuff instead. How did you get orthosasis and sense, and equilibrium so fast?
When I am standing up at about 5:30, I am using all my senses first (I smell, then I stand. listen, then stand. I use intelligence, then stand). As far as getting equilibrium so fast, I've purposefully reset my runs until my two contexts are fishing and flipping the rock. The last context of the three is using the stick inside of a hole, and the closest one is near the first meteor that crashes, so I just reset instead if I don't get both neuron maturations by the time I return to the nest.
When you accomplish specific tasks associated with those mutations, you unlock them for purchase. I might add captions to better explain to people why I'm swinging from a vine, or why I'm standing and using my senses. Thank you for the feedback!
Biggest tip i can give, once you gain the ability to Walk on two legs for a short while, just Jump in the river and Waddle back and forth in it since it Keeps you on two legs, and you can power through Bipedial since you never stop being on two legs as you have to move through the water
I swung from the branch that I grabbed onto when jumping from the vine. Swinging, picking sticks off of dead trees, and (If I remember correctly) jumping are all the potential checks for unlocking the first motricity neuron. I do all three to ensure that both conditions are met (they're set at random, and you need to do 2 of the 3 movements to unlock).
Hold the A button or X on playstation, i don't know for PC and if you see Leaves you can grab them and swing from them, practice and you can become a mad man and speed the jungle
I don't know what's happening with some of the comments being deleted. Sтeνeи承 - I have a full roster of children. That's how I have 5 reinforcement points.
There aren't any special requirements for it. The reason I perk exclusively motricity is so that it forces motricity mutations to exclusively appear in your infants. If you're deep into the game and can't get it, then all I can suggest is start looking for meteorites and hope you get lucky, or just continue to breed until it shows up. Otherwise, there's no special way.
@@feebleknievel Hey , thanks for quick response.. i was playing this when it was out and i forgot everything and i started playing again and i watched your tutorials and alot more about mutations and i got lower body mutation .. i was just waiting and mating to get motricity mutation and i got it ! I can finnaly walk on 2 legs :)
fun fact you can get Bipedalism stupid Fast if you get lucky and your babies get Motricity, use the meteors and try to force it, you can have bipedalism in like 3rd Evolution or in 5 if you are lucky
Nicely done! When looking at the title I thought you meant 28 hours and I was like "I'm 20h into the game and just unlocked bipedalism", but turns out it's 28 minutes xD The worse part really is the RNG with the required mutations, and I found 4 meteorites as well (I'm on my 6th evolution), so there were lots of chances for the mutations to appear... If I did a speedrun with my current luck I'd reset long ago, heh.
@@feebleknievel Good day, i have a question. Can i, as a baby monkey, fck a older monkey? I tried it but i dont think it works. Maybe i need to wait for puberty or smth i dk
@@CyoulaterB Allow me to elaborate further. You are right in that, based on our current undestanding, the evolution of obligate terrestrial bipedalism is a relatively late innovation. The first hominini for which we can assert with confidence a fully bipedal terrestrial stance is Ardipithecus and that was still a very arboreal adapted species, as the presence of a grasping big toe confirms, and the level of bipedal adaptations seen in modern humans only really arises in our genus (and maybe Paranthropus). Note however, that I said "based on our *current* undestanding", because it all hinges on the status of the very fragmentary remains of Late Miocene taxa from Africa, Europe and Asia. As long as we can't answer with certainty how the anatomy or phylogenetic placement of such genera such as Sahelanthropus, Orrorin, Graecopithecus or Anadoluvius were, we are going to still be on the dark on when exactly bipedalism evolve. Taxa such as Danuvius may hint at how ancient some adaptations to bipedal locomation might be, but until we found more taxa to fill in the gaps it will remain an open question. Looking at the modern world, it might be interesting to point out that among all modern primates, the most adept to move bipedally besides us (excluding the bounding motion of bushbabies and sifakas) are gibbons. Granted this might be more related to their considerably smaller size compared to great apes, but the fact is that gibbons, in spite of having extremelly long arms, still often opt for bipedal locomotion when on the ground. Then you can make an argument that Orangutans spend more time upright than gorillas, chimps or bonobos, on account of the fact they spend a lot of time standing a top of branches while suspended by one or both arms, in contrast to the more terrestrial great apes. Finally consider the fact that all modern great apes appear to have developed quadrupedal locomotion independently (orangutan walk on their fists, gorillas knuckle walk with their hands tightly curled up, chimps knuckle walk with their wrists extended) which further muddles any effort to pinpoint how early Hominids locomoted on the ground.
Sort of! I select those specific neuron advancements to force the mutations I want to appear in the next generation. If I only unlock up the neuronal pathway to bipedalism, only those related motricity mutations will appear. The deciding factors are whether or not I screw up with movements, getting neuronal energy (not running around like an idiot looking for bones), and menu management. It's a lot of fun; You should give it a shot!
@@LoganJeansonne You've got it! I believe walking in water is one of the motricity neuron's contexts to unlock (I always did it because it's easier than having to repeatedly tap the upright button). You can rinse/repeat with other skill trees. Part from stray mutations, the only ones that will unlock are the ones associated with whatever tree you're advancing.
I watched for 10 minutes than decided to skip forward thinking you would have gone through all the evolutionary stages of human life. But to my dismay it appears that you play as a monkey banging other monkeys the entire game