honestly im just impressed with the amount of effort that must have went into this short little video. the animation of the characters, motion tracking the drawings so they stay in place, and most of all the fact that they had to completely 3d model their entire room so the gummy bears would interact with everything properly and then the amount of time it must take to render all of the gummy bears.
@@RiggyBall he modeled the room in blender, made the digital room invisible, ran the simulation and then put the bear animation over the real footage using motion tracking
In case anyone is curious: To figure out how much room 1 million gummy bears would need, we treated each gummy bear as a tiny box (about 2.2 cm by 1.2 cm by 0.8 cm) to make the math simpler. Multiplying the volume of one gummy bear box by 1 million gave us a total of 2.112 cubic meters. That’s roughly the same amount of space as filling 13 bathtubs to the brim with squishy, colorful gummy bears! It’s a fun way to visualize just how many gummy bears a million really is.
@@amirabasgamer9504 well it’s rough. The maths is thinking of the bears as perfect little cubes without the bear shape and as if they are all stacked perfectly.
@@Rojmeister even if its that thats still not even close though, if u consider the perfect cube shape aswell it would be more than 30 for sure, u got me questioning my whole life man lol
Even with a magnet a perpetual motion machine is impossible as Isaac Newton said that energy cannot be created we would have to power it with energy aka electricity
@@blaksaber2143 it takes more than a second to say "three hundred seventy six million four hundred eighty three thousand two hundred forty six", which is 90% of the numbers.
@@MainAwesome11_YTI'm gonna be real with you, if you think the comment deserved a reply it would've been better to make a reply that actually adds to the comment instead of just going "___ likes and 0 replies? I'll fix that". That comment doesn't really add anything to the comment.