Actually there is one other change from what I can see: the simplicity of the drawings ended up being roughly the same, so there weren't amazingly detailed full paintings, while others stayed at stick figure level.
Most of the drawings ARE pretty much the same as normal BPP, but every episode's had a few big, bombastic ones. Especially with Alex. His drawings today mostly have the Alex style but are more minimalist, almost like storyboards. The composition still comes through.
Memorable moments suggestions 5:25-7:40 Outlaw lobster. 12:07-13:30 Honestly not the worst country song that I have heard. 15:02-17:41 I would love for this to be a show on the Cooking Channel. 19:12-20:09 Soviet Finding Nemo. 20:46-22:46 Nightmare on Bird Avenue. 30:30-31:57 Thumb Wizard.
it is truly impressive how the last book had a different marsupial for each page and then dan drew the drawing that he drew and just put the cherry on top
Suggestion: If you hit Submit on a drawing before the timer runs out, the remaining time gets added to your next drawing. That way, if you make some quick drawings in the beginning, you have time to make a more detailed drawing later, but you don't run the risk of spending too much time on the first few drawings and then not having enough left for later drawings. The overall time limit will still be the same.
The problem arises when other people’s drawings or phrases aren’t done by the time you’re done. It’s a good idea, but the main concept of the game kinda forces that idea to not be able to function
@@Block523 How so? There’s a limit to how much time you could build up, and that build-up would only occur if your early drawings were quick. So on average, you shouldn’t be holding up the game much, if at all.
How the game works is everyone has to submit it together, and everyone gets their next prompt to draw, or next drawing to write a prompt for, at the same time. If they did it like how you said it, right when someone submits it, it doesn't work because you would end up with a situation where one person can write a prompt for the same book multiple times. And if the made it so only one person can do one thing per book, they would have to wait anyway for the other people to catch up. Just imagine doing this in person, with a physical book you draw in, and you're all sitting in a circle and passing the book to the right. If you finish first and pass it right away, you still have to wait for the person on the left to give it to you, and the person you passed it to is still drawing. No time would be saved, because you still have to wait for everyone else to finish before you can start drawing your next book.
@@ShallBePurified But that’s true regardless of whether you transfer the extra time or not. If one person finishes quickly, they have to wait for someone else to finish. Also, I’m pretty sure it pairs up whichever book becomes available first, so you wouldn’t have to wait for everyone. It doesn’t wait for everyone to finish before switching to the next page. It passes on available books as soon as it can. In the worst case scenario, where one person is really fast, and the rest use the full time for each drawing, all the slow drawers would end up waiting for fast drawer at the end, but that’s they worst case scenario, and they would only have to wait for whatever amount of extra time the last person saved up. If the drawers try their best at every drawing, they shouldn’t end up with much extra time. They would most likely still use most of the time they have for each drawing and only end up transferring less than a minute at a time.
@@ahlpym Okay. Now how would programming that work? Short answer: It makes it more complicated needlessly. In the end, not much time will be saved, because whoever finishes first still has to wait. Plus, carrying over time from finishing an earlier drawing first defeats the purpose of only having a certain amount of time per picture.
5:47 -- For the record, I'm pretty sure that Emmy was trying to close the fridge on that eldritch horror. Also, I love the fact that a cover of Buoy Base Galaxy was playing during the underwater-butter-churn book and the fish book that followed. Very fitting. Memorable Moments: (3:03-4:09, 30:47-31:40) -- Puppet Gandalf. (11:01-12:19) -- Froggy cross. (21:39-22:50) -- How arms and hands look. (33:53-35:05) -- Kangaroo melting from global warmring.
Australian here: Every Australian says petrol. if you say gas here, you will be looked at funny. We do however say "my" not "me" when talking about something we own. that stereotypical way of talking that americans think we have does not exist.
It's just people who mix British accents and Australian accents together. In some region of Britain My sounds closer to me due to the accent. They aren't actually saying me, just an unstressed my. I assume this is prominent closer to Wales as it's part of the modern stereotypical Pirate speak, which Pirate talk became a thing because of a Welsh actor. But I could be wrong on that front.
The "brown brownies" turned into a pot of chili, and then boiling cherry juice, and then baked beans, and then, after being completely ignored, a nice cup of coffee. Storytelling does things to your food, kids.
I've never wanted something on a shirt as much as I want Dan's wanted lobster drawing ( 6:30 ) on a shirt. I absolutely adore Dan's drawings, they got a vibe about them. Now I don't know what that vibe in particular is, but it does make me happy
honestly i'd like to see a mode where you DONT get to see where in the chain you are. you dont know if youre at the beginning or the end or somewhere in the middle and you just gotta DEAL WITH IT!
Watching this, as funny as it is to be like "whoops, Thomas colorblind strikes again!" I wonder if there would be a way to make a colorblind mode pallate..... ( you know, besides just going monochrome)
Probably implemented because of it as requested by the patrons, not 100% sure. It is kind of direct "competition" to Broken Picturephone so that would probably be why