My favourite part is the whole buildup to that: "But we can't define what an invisible wall is without first defining what an invisible wall is (???). There are two parts to "invisible wall": invisible and wall (duh). To qualify as invisible, it means you can't see it (DUH)" That whole part felt like a fever dream
honestly the original clip of that one wall that spontaniously kills mario for no reason is way funnier in context. That poor speedrunner just having his day ruined was hilarious
I think from now on if I ever have to use a euphemism like “unalived” or “game ended” instead of died or whatever, I’m just gonna say “entered the state of having no hat”. I don’t even care if it just confuses people, it’s for my own mental health.
After watching his video, I learned the secrets of squish cancelling. Now I can proceed to squish cancel all over my house (it makes for a cool party trick)
Agreed. If the invisible wall never technically starts or has to end, you can't just say it's not an invisible wall even though the wall is clearly being held.
"If you get squished enough to take damage, you stay squished forever." This line nearly made me choke on cereal, came out of nowhere and hit me like a freight train.
I really like that this video gives no context. I see way too many « X but out of context » videos that give the context before the funny/weird thing happens. This actually has no context. Thank you
@@dascandy actually they're often also defined using third degree polynomials, which notably aren't usually parabolas. Also unless you're like in notepad or something the emojis are actually defined using images so if they did it right the rainbow emoji is a pixelated circle, as it should be
@@masela01 Looking at the opentype and truetype font specification right now, and it's always quadratic bezier curves for any kind of glyph defined in its GLYF table, which (iirc) is still the main table. And emojis are defined with an acyclic graph of transformations on glyphs combined in some ways. Or a plain stack of colored glyphs, in old versions. The rainbow emoji is most likely six separate arcs with defined colors, defined as a simple stack.
@@masela01 The new version of the COLR table has gradient specifications. It's what I've been breaking my head on for the past few days - implementing the radial gradients as they're specified. The opentype page on COLR at Microsoft has nice images to show how it should look, but not much math to make it happen.
This is a great love letter to a pretty long video in which I ultimately learned a bunch of things I will never use in my life, but was endlessly entertained by regardless
This is hilarious. I've watched about an hour of the full video, so I can recognize these clips... And I love how some of them are actually 'out of context', but some are YTP-type shit. Too good.
"Being in the state of having no hat" needs to be the next "Really depressing and naive", especially since we can't say that about TJ "Henry" Yoshi anymore.
I love how some of these are edited like "We're going to spend the rest of forever filling it out" but some, like "Mario hit a wall, which happens when Mario hits a wall" are literally just what it says