HONKAI STAR RAIL | Part 5

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 25

  • @iceeeee
    @iceeeee Год назад +26

    After fighting the level 11 monster chilling in the corner, the doomsday beast suddenly doesn't seem all that impressive 😂

  • @JustGre3d
    @JustGre3d Год назад +15

    Serval is good but Nat is a godly healer if you don’t have Bailu. And trust me you are going to want shielders and healers in this game not too much later on.

    • @peterbabicki8252
      @peterbabicki8252 Год назад +3

      I'm hoping for Bailu, because I don't want to play Natasha. That said, I've made it to Rank 26 so far with just trusty March.

  • @MarishkaVladimirescu
    @MarishkaVladimirescu Год назад +7

    Dan Heng's accent makes sense for the character also because his voice actor is asian (Nicholas Heung).

    • @YuyuHakurei
      @YuyuHakurei Год назад

      I wouldn't say he had an asian voice though. He kinda just sounds like generic American. This is basically what every American sounds like when they don't have a hideous southern accent. This is probably what everyone would sound like if they spoke unaccented English in general. Does match him though without being wildly racist and making every character sound like Steven He. xD

    • @violetiolite
      @violetiolite 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@YuyuHakurei"unaccented English" is not really a thing. Accent is a thing that always exists.
      Saying that, Dan bang's voice actor is doing a very subtle accent that makes whoever first meets the character realise he's a foreigner without it being stereotypical.
      From what I listened the changes are really small and are mostly done to the vowels. The "a" (like in "can") will closer resemble the one in British English instead of the one in "Standard" American English (by this i mean the one usually used kn TV and acting). The "oo" (like in "good") Wil always be pronounced like "ooh" and not like "g-uh-d", like it is a lot of times pronounced (if you pay attention you might notice it). Occasionally, like in "there" he migh not "pronounce" the R completely, again similar to "standard" british English, although it doesn't seem to follow the same rules as the R seems to be pronounced befire consonants.
      Sorry for the ramble 😅
      I just find it an interesting choice of accent. It sort of reminds me of the transatlantic accent in way that it isn't actually an accent from anywhere. It's there only to provide an aesthetic, something that the listener will associate with, and not to be loyal to a place specifically.

    • @YuyuHakurei
      @YuyuHakurei 10 месяцев назад

      @@violetiolite It is and it's mostly an american thing as a majority of them do. It's simply when you don't have any notable accents to tell your location.
      For one you can't tell where these people are from. You can only give broad guesses. Like an entire country. However, Americans tell accents by states or providences. So that is basically a failure to identify one. It's very common here, but it requires very specific conditions that other countries don't fulfill.
      The reason being is in America there are people from other countries with accents. They often seek to eliminate them that have voices very similar to the original subject above. That is why we are more strict about it because there are more diverse dialects here for English than anywhere else.
      Like we have people here with Korean, Chinese, etc accents here that are American. Thick accents are looked down upon too because we often can't tell what you are saying at a tolerable volume. Exceptions are made when they are the norm in an area. Most of the world goes by this to some extent, but it's not the same because most countries don't have every culture on the planet in the same spot.
      Canadians and Americans often sound exactly the same if they didn't develop any local accents though. Most mistake this for an accent because it technically fits the definition for one, but everyone would sound that way if they weren't influenced by British English and learned it as their first language. Of course if you think all Canadians say aboot you likely never been there. xD
      I've likely heard more English than anyone from any country in the world so I know how accents work more than anyone in the world. Every Accent imaginable. There is a difference when someone has an accent or has none. At least for English. Other languages could not work the same way because a lot of other languages have extremely different dialects based on region. Like Spanish has a different dialect for every country and often 3 multiple ones in a single country. If they learned spain only you would see this with them, but that's not the case.
      There is no other country where English is their first language, speaks in American pronunciation, and don't often seek to learn more languages. You do occasionally run into people from other countries that almost sound unaccented. That is due to them being conscious of and eliminating their accent. It takes a few years to do that though. It is also not perfect.
      I think you are just confusing someone who started with an accent and seeks to eliminate it as a specific accent. Which sometimes works if the accent is not curbed enough. In this case he almost completely eliminated it though. Whats left is likely impossible to stop because it comes from syllables from their original language or an accent they had.
      unaccented does exist, but only in countries where a lot of people speak exactly the same language and dialect. British probably have their own unique version of this as well. They have enough people to develop a standard all would talk by without an accent. They also rarely learn other languages unless their work forces them to. The thing is if it's developed in a single country then it wouldn't be recognized as unaccented either because everyone would still tell you are British despite it.
      Americans don't develop accents like other countries though. We either have a regional one, a southern one, or none at all with maybe speech deviation based on area. That last group are often ones that can sound like some Canadians. Canada is weird in general because they speak in American pronounciation, but they use the spelling that the UK does. It's technically a dialect, but it has far too many people in it from different countries to call it a Canadian or American one.
      Also an often overlooked concept when talking about this. People can lie and often do because it's not important enough for people to tell the truth all of the time. Americans do this all of the time because they are aware other countries treat them differently if they tell the truth. So sometimes that can lead to misconceptions about accents due to lies.
      Basically you may be right about it in this case, but you will still be wrong in every instance of an American speaking a different accent than their location depicts. It is more reliable with other countries than it is for them.

    • @violetiolite
      @violetiolite 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@YuyuHakurei I am a bit confused about what point you're trying to make.
      First of all; a standard dialect exists in more countries than you think. Spain has 4 official languages. Not dialects; _languages_. As such they do as well have a standard Spanish that is spoken in TV and media. There are people in Catalunya that will try to change their accent to the standard accent to not get a label, even unintentionally. On Latin America there are literally Latin American Spanish dubs. They are for the whole Spanish speaking population of Latin America.
      If you speak that Spanish you might also be difficult to pinpoint.
      It's most certainly not an unique North American thing.
      However, it is an accent. A _standard_ one, but it *is* one. There is no pure English. Even the standard English has influences from an English from somewhere. It wasn't born in a vacuum.
      The transatlantic accent was created with British English as a base. The standard American English of now is based on the "English of the non-coastal Northeastern United States in the early 20th century" (in quotes because I took this sentence from Wikipedia).
      Please do take this comment lightly. I am trying to not be confrontational and simply having a discussion but I'm afraid the tone doesn't translate well into written form. ^^💧
      I hope you're having a lovely Monday.

  • @AccessTrinity
    @AccessTrinity Год назад +3

    Dan Heng is voiced by an American-Asian voice actor named Nicholas Leung. His surname sounds Asian, so pretty sure he has ancestry from East Asia.

  • @HertaThe83thGenius
    @HertaThe83thGenius Год назад +1

    20:03 Assaulted? Ma'am, that's your mother. She gave you a birthday present 🎁 don't be ungrateful

  • @Ticklicious
    @Ticklicious Год назад +6

    Please use your skill points! Many times you are capped at 5 skill points and not using your E skill, which is wasting skill points basically. Anyways love your commentary and personality. Subscribed

    • @mishkarae
      @mishkarae  Год назад +2

      Yes, but I don't always have skills that are applicable, ie I have 5 skills points and it's Herta's turn, but there's only one enemy. I don't really need to use her skill AOE if there's only one enemy. Plus...the game isn't exactly hard. I'm sure I'll continue to survive using the skill points frugally 😂 (or is it March I'm thinking of? I don't remember, haven't played in a while...)

    • @Ticklicious
      @Ticklicious Год назад +5

      @@mishkarae I understand what you mean but using characters skills either do more damage or have extra effects even with Herta's skill. Letting you finish fights faster and to take less damage 🙂 Difficulty will increase when you least expect it!

    • @YuyuHakurei
      @YuyuHakurei Год назад +2

      Basically Skills always do more damage. Even AoE skills because the basic attack scaling maxes at 100%, but Skill damage starts at 150% minimum. With proper Skill point management you probably would have beat the lvl 11 enemy more comfortably. I don't think I even had anyone past half when I fought him because I shielded all of his damage. I did get a little lucky though because I accidentally put march in a meta spot and shielded her first which made her take all of the hits.

    • @alphaaries666
      @alphaaries666 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yea she could have used Dan Hengs skill sooo many times (it does more damage)

  • @awokawok8453
    @awokawok8453 Год назад +3

    16:35 asian accent? i'm an asian and i can't tell where's the accent. maybe he just speaks with a calm voice?

    • @sourfar
      @sourfar Год назад +1

      No, I get where she’s coming from. Dan heng doesn’t pronunciate some letters and words like the other characters, probably because he’s asian (judging from his name) and because his voice actor is asian

    • @YuyuHakurei
      @YuyuHakurei Год назад

      @@sourfar We don't either in New England. Often the same ones, but that doesn't make our voice asian. It's generic American English. Pretty much unaccented. If you don't have a prominent accent this is probably what you will sound like. One unique factor is I don't think this type of English is possible if English isn't your first language. It focuses so much on shortcuts and ease of speaking that you won't learn it without experience and you often won't even know you are doing it.
      Rednecks don't ever speak this way, but what those people do to grammar is criminal so I don't care. xD

  • @peterbabicki8252
    @peterbabicki8252 Год назад +1

    Welt with the _boop!_

  • @countryspud6936
    @countryspud6936 Год назад +5

    I hate how wasteful she is with the skill points XD

  • @FaiadAbdullah78
    @FaiadAbdullah78 Год назад +1

    20:20 what a liar...

  • @areuPlayer
    @areuPlayer Год назад

    Hey mish, you can use numbers in your keyboard to use their ultimate...

    • @mishkarae
      @mishkarae  Год назад +1

      Oh, really?!~

    • @nguyenducminh4966
      @nguyenducminh4966 Год назад

      @@mishkarae And you can even queue the ultimate, or skills, etc