This man is an absolute chad. • has no fear of a tornado • walks casually as tree branches pierce his walls • looks outside his windows to have it break into a million pieces, not one goes into his eye to blind him • he survives.
@@KingStr0ng Edit: I know "Weather Report" is already the name of a stand user in part 6, but here would be my take on it: User: Wade R. Report Standname: Birdland An aura stand that resonates with the rhythm of meteorological events around it. It alerts the user to oncoming objects with a dynamic chirp, allowing the user to easily evade environmental dangers. It's special ability, Manhattan Transfer, gives the user a quick burst of speed, and allows them to gather any potential damage they would have received from an attack and rebound it in a shout.
As a German, I'm puzzled why their walls aren't made from ston like ours. We have double stone walls on the outsides, actually. Funny, we don' t have tornadoes, yet we'd survive them much easier
@@hah-vj7hcyeah im sure you would survive your brick ceiling falling down on you sitting smugly in your living room. Meanwhile i can sit fine in my basement and do similar or the same repairs on my home for cheaper.
@@rory9088 Sometimes you have to be careful so you don't a hole in your wall. I've literally put a small hole in my drywall because I bumped into it with the corner of a full laundry basket.
First sex 2 cancellation, now this.. Broken mechanics ruin this game. At least graphics and animations are on point, but fuck.. The story sucks fat fard
I've been begging my dad for years to not go into the garage during a tornado or hurricane (& making my mom and their dog go, too). He's the type to hear something in one context and forget logic, or mishear and never question because the source seemed good. He's almost gotten them killed by sitting in the car in the garage, windows up (car off at least) but in the heat of Florida. How can I convince him to take shelter somewhere better?
Don't beg! TELL! Be deadly serious! Do not make even the slightest joke about it! Shame him by telling him he's a horrible husband for not protecting his wife. My dad was contrary like that, and this was the only way to get him to wake up sometimes. Don't chicken out! It's a matter of life and death!
Protip, stop making houses from paper, thin plywood and drywall. Brick houses would be indestructible for a tornado. Best it could do is rip off the roof.
@@itz.ur.ocean_ insulation for winter maybe, but most likely its because those homemakers use wood since its cheaper and affordable than using concrete for the whole building. And easier to destroy and renovate when another person buys it.
0:35 I mean that depends on the house, if the wall was made out of stone it would hold up better. But then again we never have natural disasters over here though global warming might change that.
yeah those who use their smartphone or camera to got a tornado in action think there are smart and untouchable, WRONG! sure those a succeed to do it, is by be safe away but those are too close , their life's in danger and if survive from it , i am 100% sure he or she will never do it again, of course some are stupid to do it again, but those is part their job, them know how to do it in the right way and not in stupid way!
I wonder how many people watched advice like this and instead of driving away from a storm's way, went inside the house and the whole house got obliterated by the wind. If the house is built out of sticks it will not give much resistance to the tornado.
Most houses here in America outside of tornado alley are lumber, brick or sometimes concrete with the only exclusion of trailers (me and my parents live in one and I hate it) or stupid tin houses that would float like a butterfly in 10mph wind also hear me out. 1. Why tf would you live there just to rebuild your house every year 2. Why live in a house of cards in such a dangerous area 3. Why haven't 70% of Americans woken up and migrated from this shithole
Finland: No hurricanes, earthquakes or tornadoes. Houses made of concrete and other strong materials. America: Hurricanes, earthquakes and tornadoes. Houses made of paper.
i never understood why schools don't have basements, why underground electrical wires aren't mandatory, and why most people don't choose to build dome homes, which are half underground and half above ground,and work very well in extreme conditions, including high winds, heat, and cold. people who live in these areas are curious creatures indeed. they'll hide in their holes when the sirens sound, pop up, clear the rubble and the bodies, mourn, and then repeat without batting an eye as to how ridiculous the situation is.
I've sometimes wondered why people living in places with a lot of tornadoes don't build stronger houses. You could build the house half underground, dig a deep pit so the sides of the house are protected by earth. Or just make the whole house underground with windows in the ceiling that can be shut when there is a tornado warning. I guess it's too expensive and even people that live in these tornado "zones" think it won't happen to them.
Man this guy predicted just about everything that happened in this video. Almost like he was a wizard or something I'm super impressed. He didn't flinch once.. I'm glad you made it through your video safely weather guy.
@@Veldaren Are you stupid? That's not possible obviously. You must have not went to school or you have brain damage. Obviously it was a recompensed thespian.
I'm glad to see Saitama is doing well and enjoying himself in his new job at The Weather Channel. Ironically, it has a better salary than having a hero license.
even better, that room makes you grow proportionally to the house so by the time he stays in there like 10 seconds he's already like a quarter of the size of the whole house!
I live in a mountain valley, too! No rockfalls, landslides, or avalanches, the flooding never went past like 6 inches, but here at least we get hit by regular droughts. But, since I'm in a city, we don't feel it. The farmers not too far away from the city do, though.
@@Laerei floods is the only thing on that list. Any residential/inhabited places are gonna be NOWHERE near a place that a landslide could happen, Haha. Also I myself live on the right side of USA and if you look at a map of earthquakes, they don't happen on the right side of USA... there's no major faults. So no earthquakes happen. and as far as floods go you only get floods if you live RIGHT BESIDE a BIG river. Which where I live no one does for like 200 miles, but even that river isn't known to flood very bad!