I LOVE THIS VIDEO BECAUSE IT IS SO INFORMATIVE!! Thanks to this I able to understand more about punkverse. This also helps me making my OCs, how I design them and all. I also watched that one video of yours about lolita outfit, and helps me too!! I'm both fan of lolita outfit and punk themes, so thank for those kind of videos ^^
Blade Runner is not decopunk (the aesthetics are decidedly futurist, neo-modernist and neo-brutalist; not Art Deco. The one non-modernist location is a late Baroque building, cca 1890s, that in universe is representing a condemned building in a sparsely populated dying/dead ghetto), and Bioshock is not cyberpunk (it's biopunk, obviously, digital computers and computer networks don't even exist in that universe, so cybernetic brain-computer interfacing doesn't exist either). There's that new game that is actually decopunk mixed with cyberpunk, Nobody Wants to Die. Now, all the things you've mentioned have neo-noir elements, Blade Runner is one of the cornerstone pieces for neo-Noir as well, which I'm guessing is the conflation here, given that all these things are entangled and that OG Noir is a roaring 20's thing. This video pretty much says the same things. edit: also, Prey would be a a perfect example of all these things blended together.
@@AnEntropyFan I don't know what type of aesthetics that has, well it is basically cyberpunk itself is what I know. Is there other type that might be? Sorry, I was confused, because I watch some cyberpunk movies and gameplays as well.
@@nicoletoledo.7067 The premise is that crazed billionaires who fancy themselves literal gods, basically Elon Musk after an another divorce, rebuilt New York City in a 1920's-30's style, so everything's neo-Art Deco and Streamline Moderne (that would be from what I gather the Deco Punk part) and the plot revolves around a nightmare subscription app of sorts for body transfers if you have the cash or mind storage if you don't (think Altered Carbon, so that would be the cyberpunk element).
Thank you for the video. I like going to the events for the music & I did pick an appropriate outfit for it & I did have a great time. Now however it's not my particular style all the time I'm more of a Trad, Victorian, Corp for work however I just feel more comfortable in just a Band T-shirts
For those of yall with ADHD: Cyberpunk - Sim City: Cities of Tomorrow: Omega buildings Biopunk - pulling a “fine I’ll do it myself” with evolution Steampunk - 1800s (leviathan also has minor bio punk too) Clockpunk - 1500s meets 1800s Dieselpunk - what some people think is Steampunk Atompunk - post war fallout Solarpunk - Sim City: cities of tomorrow Academy buildings Rococopunk - pre revolutionary France. Silkpunk - Asian supremacy Scrappunk - S.T.A.L.K.E.R. - the zone
i think prewar or the fallout setting as a whole fits atompunk much better, post war is a blend of atom, scrap, and a bunch of other things like tribal, tall tales, aliens, raiders and more. While prewar was mostly just a blend of atompunk with light touches of ray gothic and dieselpunk.
Thanks so much for creating this part 2! It was great. 😊 As someone who is a mix of dark academia, art academia, and theatre academia, it's nice to see bits of myself in your descriptions. And I loved that you included Florence Foster Jenkins. That is a great film for the theater academia fan! 💜
I believe that Prince is a part of the Windsor golf because of his fashion choices throughout the 80s throughout the 90s. He was very winter and the movie twitches one and two were very much.
I am a babybat🦇🦇 Thank you so much for the information you do about the goth world!!💗💗 I am so sorry that you have few subscribers, you definitely deserve more!
I’m so glad that you people have a harder time defining emo in ideology and style. Less predictable and stereotypical. Emo embraces a melancholy in life philosophy, the human state etc. It’s more poetic and abstract. IMO. All of those categories not necessary, music, style and ideology. People are dying to either box you in or to fit into. Defies the whole purpose of emo in the first place. Again, IMO. Perhaps I’m describing something entirely different. Whatever.
I'm at 8:26, and I must say... Great info, though not entirely complete. I'd look at the summary of Goth Culture given in "What is Goth" by J.W. Thurston (AKA: Gothistorian), and also on their website. They definitely have an expansive view of Goth Culture that I've found to be quite affirming and refreshing, as a melanated Vampy/Industrial Goth type aesthetically, and subculture participant in both, as I make music and have children who lean more Emo than Goth, specifically. The unfortunate thing is that many popular descriptions of Goth or Emo Culture make no mentions of ANY POC contributors, participants of the subculture, nor our aesthetic. And for clarity, I'm 43, and have been called an Elder Goth by a few I've met. I've been on the Goth scene since the age of 14, and I've yet to see anyone acknowledge Melanated Goths so vocally. WE DO EXIST! I recognize that we only know what we know, until we learn more. I do hope you'll consider an update after viewing Gothistorian's book/website/info. Rock on, pplz! 🤘🏽✨✨
My old band played psychedelic space rock. Besides the doors, Pink Floyd & cream our main influences were, siouxsie and the banshees, the cure, sisters of mercy, the mission uk, joy division, new order, U2, tool, portishead,& depesche mode
14:10 The Vandalic and Burgundian languages were also east germanic ones. They were all extinct, leaving but a few traces of vocabulary (and perhaps phonology) on the romance languages they were in contact with
The only thing that we could probably compare both too with actually in the smallest way possible is that they both came from a music scene and then slowly drifted away from just in styles alone now with subverted music etc. Then again some have tried to bring things back to it's roots mainly.