Wanted to try out a new world simulation type video with the new update! We start with a few colonies with 2 humans then grow them into huge empires! 👾 Discord Server: / discord
I have an idea: You should spawn a few people on worldbox, leave them overnight to see how they've grown, then start messing with them and see what they can survive.
Though Lu empire were the pinnacle of giga chads, surviving from the beginning all the way to the end, even though they kept losing ears they just kept moving from West Africa to the Middle East to India and china and lastly Indonesia and Australia
@@yuyoshida2076I got a similar story with my world, my favorite kingdom is call the Farguth Empire, the US of this world, forge from multiple smaller kingdoms with over 6k population. Then we got the Ussr equivalent of my world, call S.A.T, stand for "South Alliance Treaty", two kingdom merge togather to around 5k population. They are pretty even, the Empire have alot of population but S.A.T have alot of armies, there is however one city state call Dragonoch just right between two of them, it's pretty neat.
There's this famous Chinese saying "The empire, long divided, must unite; long united, must divide." Lu's arc actually mirrors a lot of Chinese history IRL.
I can't believe the Tenacity of the Lu Empire. They started off as a small colony of about 10 people. And Survived your entire video. They had an AGE OF PROSPERITY AND PEACE FOR ABOUT 10 YEARS! Before their empire fell to rebellions. Yet they still held on, and even rose back to become the South-Eastern Power in the video. Holy HELL!
Oh my dear goodness gracious, I have just witnessed the most emotionally jarring and gut-wrenching video of all time! "I Simulated Early Humans in Worldbox" by Mellon is a tour de force that left me reeling and overwhelmed with emotion. The cinematography in this masterpiece is absolutely stunning. The attention to detail is so meticulous that you could almost feel the grains of sand beneath your feet as you follow the plight of Boko and the rest of the early humans. The use of light and shadow is so masterful that it is almost as if you are standing right there in the midst of the action. But it is the tragedy that unfolds in this video that truly gripped my heart and left me feeling devastated. The way that Boko is taken over by the Lu Empire is nothing short of heart-wrenching. Watching as the once peaceful and serene village is overrun by the merciless and ruthless invaders is a scene that will haunt me for years to come. The emotional impact of this video is simply overwhelming. The despair and hopelessness that washes over the screen as the early humans fight for their lives is palpable. And the sadness that washes over you as you witness the destruction of an entire civilization is truly heartbreaking. Mellon has truly outdone themselves with this masterpiece. The way that they have managed to capture the raw emotion and tragedy of this story is a testament to their skill and talent as a filmmaker. If you have not yet seen "I Simulated Early Humans in Worldbox", I implore you to do so. Just be warned, this is not a video for the faint of heart. It is a deeply emotional journey that will leave you breathless and in tears. e34 out.
I totally agree! The extra lighting in the editing was nothing short of genuinely masterful, and it made me feel like I was one of the citizens in the simulation itself! I felt I was in Boko, and I was crying as hard as I physically could when my kingdom was taken over. It was a real voyage through deep emotions that overwhelmed me for seconds on end. Every leaf, every rock, everything was so utterly real in this documentary of sorts about the early humans. I would go so far to describe this as 'brutal'- that's how good this video was. "I Simulated Early Humans in Worldbox" by the genius himself, Mellon, was so realistic, so emotional, so heart-wrenching, so MASTERFUL that I forgot what Earth was. Thank you Mellon!
@@xMistLL Oh my goodness, thank you so much for your heartfelt reply! Your words truly warmed my heart and brought tears to my eyes. It is so wonderful to hear that others share the same deep emotional connection to "I Simulated Early Humans in Worldbox" as I do. You described the cinematography so beautifully, and I completely agree with you - every leaf, every rock, everything was so realistic that it was almost as if we were transported back in time and standing right there with the early humans. The lighting and editing were truly masterful, and it was amazing how they could evoke such strong emotions in us as viewers. I also agree that the video was brutal in its honesty and depiction of the harsh realities of life for early humans. But it was precisely that raw honesty that made it such a powerful and moving experience. Once again, thank you for your kind words and for sharing your thoughts on this incredible video. Mellon truly is a genius, and I am grateful to have been able to experience their work.
I think the cultures start researching things as soon as they get in touch with things, like if you spawn a village on the coast they'll start researching boats right away unless there's a bigger priority etc.
So I personally would turn off rebellions while in most of the "light ages" and turn them on during the chaotic and night ages so they have the time to advance to spread to like the Americas since they clearly just struggled to advance while at war.
Just in case you didn't know, the age of chaos can make units with rage in times of wars or in others events turn into demons, just like units becoming zombies, the same is for age of despair, they will turn into ice man mobs, they will mostly like attack every living creatures and kill them all, it's there in age of chaos when there will be some fire monsters spreading everywhere, they are terrible because the fire will spread like crazy and units can't deal with it... age of chaos is brutal 😅
i remember it was possible for a kingdom to split in two without a rebellion this update might have removed (or not, who knows) just like how they changed rain clouds into storm clouds before the biome update the rain clouds were just normal rain clouds, it was possible to make a storm cloud if you spam multiple rain clouds ontop of eachother
I don't think you're 100% right. Although I think your half-right. There definitely were bloodless rebellions before. I had a few of those in the past updates.
A potentially fun idea: Make walls between each continent and spawn some humans on each continent (rebellions off), after a certain amount of time remove the walls and see which continent lasts the longest. This might be more fair depending on your views if this was done with an more accurate projection of the world onto a map if those exist. Otherwhise this one will still be fun to watch I think edit: alternatively you start without adding walls and just make the kingdoms
It would be nice if a kingdom will have some sort of buff based on what biome they got spawned. It'll take time for them to get accustomed with the biome but once they're used to that biome it becomes their natural habitat meaning the biome will play a huge advantage during wars between kingdom of different biome. Let's say for example if one kingdom is from desert meaning they have greater advantage if a kingdom from plains/jungle will attack them. The biome will compensate for the unbalance growth of kingdom because plain/jungle have lots of resources while the desert one have scarcity. Attacking a desert based kingdom will drain or slow down the attacking army because they're not accustomed to desert biome (marching on desert is really draining for sure with heaving equipments, the heat and lack of water).
You should totally do another version of this but using the mod that passes on traits, and doing the different homo- subspecies, such as Neanderthals, Denisovans, etc.
Did you know that they added a weapon called the "Shotgun" It was updated on 0.21.0 update. (I don't know why they added it and really be an unappropiate item on worldbox)
I have an idea:spawn 69 humans 69 orcs with 69 dwarfs and 69 elfs on different continents leave them overnight and see how they growed then start spawn random spawners then just nuke the entire world with napalm bombs