unforgettable luncheonj CHECK OUT MY NEW GAME: • Early Unnamed Rhythm G... This has gotten a lot more popular than I expected so here is the revised code responsible for this: pastebin.com/Kcaczswd
@@big-wade naw, don't sell yourself short mate, that's pretty solid code! also, I've been writing python for over a decade now, teaching it for the past 3 years and i never knew you can do the kind of nested tuple unpacking like you're doing around line 30, that is SO cool!
Sometimes you forget that human speech is basically a wind instrument modulated by slapping wet meat together and then something like this comes along and reminds you
Fun fact: all your memories are stored in such a non-sequential manner and only appear sequential to us during recollection. This video is the closest you get to a pure memory, detached from the event of having to recollect it.
Nah this is still in a certain sequential order. Perceiving time all at once would be like “Steamed hams but every frame is played at the same time continuously”
Chalmers face becoming progressively disgruntled until he's shouting as the flames send skinner into a hysterical flailing frenzy. A truly magnificent luncheon 10/10 will steam again
halfway through I started feeling physically ill as my mind struggled to process what I was watching, but that soon gave way to a slight tinge of fear as the disembodied screams of Agnes Skinner were stitched together with years of shitposting
I love how, despite the fact that the frames are felt at the same speed, it just *feels* like its getting faster, theres something about the louder chaos just feeling faster than the quieter chaos.
I think it's the higher contrast in the types of sounds. All quiet sounds are pretty similar in that they're pretty close to silence. Loud sounds can be more different from one another. Basically, quieter sounds change less because they're more similar, so it sounds like they change less often. Whereas louder sounds are more audibly distinct, so you can really feel the change in audio every frame.
I love that you can slowly hear Agnes's screams for help mounting and becoming more and more shrill until they're completely taken over by Chalmers' cries of anger
For anyone wondering, (because, as I noticed listening to the soundtrack, Valve tended to put multiple set pieces sounds on the soundtracks for those levels in Portal 2), Its on track 7 of Portal's OST ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1g2cGQirOr4.html
I was genuinely hypnotized for some reason I was just staring at the epilepsy fuel while silently listening to the chaotic noises… I could sleep to this
I like how you can visibly notice how scenes gradually come ago, like the part where he runs to krusty burgers is around the start, The skinner and superintendent song is towards the middle, and skinners mom screaming the house is on fire appears for about half of the last frames
Dude imagine if this is what it’s like when your life flashes before your eyes. Every single memory you’ve ever experienced smashed and jumbled together into one chaotic nightmare
Trust me, it doesn't. Edit: I don't have auras with my seizures so I tend to just find myself in different places, usually on the floor. Once however I was semi-conscious during a seizure. It felt like I was bound head to toe in ropes and spun around and around, faster and faster, the intervals between the changes in the direction of spin getting shorter and shorter until I was begging for death. Finally, it began to slow down and I properly came to on the floor of my bedroom.
Seizure survivor here. This kind of feels like how I felt in the 15 seconds or so _before_ my seizure. I had gotten very little sleep and was staring at a computer screen, a lot of mental noise. Then you just kind of pass out and wake up in a hospital in immense pain
Watching the facial expressions and body language increase dramatically, as someone who has never seen the original, was spectacular. This is my first viewing of any steamed hams content, anywhere
If you play this out loud and move away from your phone a little, you can almost vaguely hallucinate that they’re saying semi-coherent sentences in the middle third of the video
Simple “hallucinations” are actually a very normal part of our perception-check out Oliver Sacks’ book on them, or his TED Talk ;) So it’s very natural for us to be able to do things like that. But “am I ok?” That’s a different topic entirely! 😀 (I am, incidentally, doing alright today)
Chalmers musters what little strength he has left to curse out the fool who localized a temporal rift entirely within his kitchen, causing reality as they all know it to collapse.