Titanic's Final Plunge - April 15, 1912

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2020
  • One of the most horrific scenes ever witnessed. Version 3 of our animation progress for developing the sinking level of Titanic: Honor and Glory.
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @The88Cheat
    @The88Cheat 4 года назад +3407

    The fact that all of this went down in the middle of the night makes it that much scarier.

    • @fitzcaraldozito
      @fitzcaraldozito 3 года назад +225

      Well it couldn't happen during the day, because they would have seen the iceberg in time otherwise..

    • @jos3ph.d
      @jos3ph.d 3 года назад +93

      @Ron34 No shit...

    • @totally.original_user
      @totally.original_user 3 года назад +55

      @@fitzcaraldozito actually the captain did see it but didn't contact nearby ships
      And correct me if I'm wrong but I read somewhere that he was found in his sleeping quarters I dont know if it's true or not so please dont yell at me 😅

    • @BradyHege
      @BradyHege 3 года назад +27

      "Went down" nice...

    • @gabrielacruzmartinez2119
      @gabrielacruzmartinez2119 3 года назад +6

      Really is was not scarier it was horrible you are scare of the dark or what?

  • @pauldavies5611
    @pauldavies5611 3 года назад +3952

    I read somewhere that one of the survivors years later went to a football game at Wembley Stadium. He said he ran out of there when a goal was scored because the roar of the crowd was exactly the sound he heard of all the people who were still on the ship as she sank.

    • @sleeming88
      @sleeming88 3 года назад +658

      Unless there's someone else who had a similar experience, you might be thinking of Frank Goldsmith who was nine years old and lost his father in the sinking. Later on in life when he lived in Detroit near Navin Field he said that he would be reminded of the sound of people drowning by the crowd roar every time the Tigers hit a home run, which he could hear from his house, and could never bring himself to go to a game for that very reason.

    • @pauldavies5611
      @pauldavies5611 3 года назад +67

      sleeming88 Yes, I wouldn’t be surprised. It was many years ago when I read what I read and seem to remember.

    • @cypressbbq
      @cypressbbq 3 года назад +534

      @@batfacesirbatsalot1999 "Pathetic, Stupid humans" Dude. Try becoming a survivor of a huge ship sinking. Having to hear people scream for their lives would scar you for life. Then being paranoid from it. Then hearing a crowd screaming from excitement. Both screams aren't that far off. People take things into their own consideration. The past will change you as a person. Especially when you're a TITANIC survivor. You making it look like the survivor is just overactive. But it really isn't. PTSD can kick in anytime.

    • @weirdoboy1014
      @weirdoboy1014 3 года назад +191

      @@batfacesirbatsalot1999 whats your problem? If I was i experienced what the survivors saw and heard I probably would have locked myself away from trauma

    • @emilybarber9910
      @emilybarber9910 3 года назад +162

      @@batfacesirbatsalot1999 The past can haunt you. I would be traumatized too.

  • @HarvardUniversity967
    @HarvardUniversity967 Год назад +224

    12:03 was the sound that truly made my skin crawl, it's like the ship is screaming, crying for help, moaning and groaning, and then it stops, knowing that it's done for. Undescribable.

  • @TheDrunkHamster
    @TheDrunkHamster 2 года назад +276

    Just to give you an idea, I had to swim in 32-degree water to understand what it felt like, and the moment that water touches your skin, it begins to hurt. Not even a cold sensation but just pain. Once it hits your diaphragm, your breath leaves you, and you begin to panic a little when treading as your limbs go numb pretty quick and your body starts to superheat itself. Heart rate is jacked, breathing rate shallow and rapid, making swimming and treading near impossible. Disorientation after it hits your head and rapid loss of energy from the moment you start treading.
    The temperature of the water in the titanic sinking was 5 degrees colder than that. I am an above average swimmer and was only in for 5 mins and was struggling while they remained for hours.. Gives you an idea

    • @dickritchie2596
      @dickritchie2596 Год назад +14

      You know when they woke Captain Smith up he was like “Are you f*cking kidding me?!!”

    • @colton_rutan504
      @colton_rutan504 Год назад +6

      That is just terrifying

    • @user-bu7jl6zy5d
      @user-bu7jl6zy5d Год назад +30

      I went to rescue a dog on a frozen pond in Minnesota in the middle of winter and the ice broke through and down I went into freezing water up to my shoulders. It was like being shocked by electricity---I didn't feel any pain---I became numb instantly--I wasn't even thinking for a few minutes---just staring. A friend got both the dog and me out and we recovered, but I don't ever want to experience that again.

    • @El_Gungas
      @El_Gungas Год назад +27

      As i know, the people who drowned on the water actually died in 10-20 minutes

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 11 месяцев назад

      @@user-bu7jl6zy5d ☹

  • @NorthernHandle
    @NorthernHandle 4 года назад +2609

    Those sounds of creaking, metal tapping as the ship goes higher. Stuff of nightmares.

    • @spinlok3943
      @spinlok3943 4 года назад +120

      The sound design in these real time sinking videos is so impressive. The creaks and groans really add to the terror.

    • @JayTheFox99
      @JayTheFox99 4 года назад +93

      @@spinlok3943 Yeah, it's almost like the ship was screaming for help. Truly terrifying.

    • @samuraislugger1488
      @samuraislugger1488 4 года назад +19

      You said it

    • @NorthernHandle
      @NorthernHandle 4 года назад +13

      Louise X it’s wonderful at the same time. Knowing it possibly could be the real way the ship went down.

    • @samuraislugger1488
      @samuraislugger1488 4 года назад +19

      @@NorthernHandle as Titanic fanatic I have to say it is amazing how so much people agree on the same thing that I love

  • @mercqurio
    @mercqurio 4 года назад +5900

    This might sound bizarre, disturbing and batshit crazy but a part of me has always been obsessed with the Titanic and sometimes I wish I could see what exactly happened that night, like being able to travel back to that night and come back safe or by a vision or whatever, but despite the movie, the videos and all that stuff I still have that "emptiness" in my mind about this historical moment.

    • @camoflash7621
      @camoflash7621 4 года назад +464

      I'm from Belfast very close to where she was built and I grew up fascinated by Titanic. A short while ago I'd been wishing for a vivid dream about the sinking. When I actually got what I wished for it was truly horrible! I dreamt I was a coal shoveller who drowned in one of the engine rooms as it quickly filled with water just after the iceberg struck. That's the closest I ever want to be to the night of the sinking.

    • @camoflash7621
      @camoflash7621 4 года назад +234

      Also I would recommend visiting Belfast if you haven't. The Titanic Quarter is my favourite place. Visit where the slip way where it was built, go to the actual dry dock where she was fitted then step onboard Titanic's fully restored tender vessel HMS Nomadic (can't recommend visiting Nomadic enough!!!). It's the closest you'll ever get to Titanic and your imagination will run wild!!!

    • @davehancock2607
      @davehancock2607 4 года назад +87

      I have put myself in all 3 classes and with a dog.

    • @vmolin2162
      @vmolin2162 4 года назад +208

      You don't sound crazy! I too have a morbid fascination with the Titanic...and sinking ships in general.
      There are several RUclips videos of ships being sunk to make barrier reefs and they put cameras inside some of the ships so you can see it going down from the inside and there just are not enough such videos to satisfy that itch to see it happen!

    • @Titanicdork133
      @Titanicdork133 4 года назад +51

      Me too, let’s be friends

  • @WaveCreations10
    @WaveCreations10 2 года назад +948

    I read about the engineers in the ship and apparently they all died when they unselfishly kept the power on until the ship split and they drowned. Very heroic.
    Edit 2023: Thanks so much for 912 likes!!!
    912 ---> 1912... Ehhhh??

    • @nickypoundtown9568
      @nickypoundtown9568 2 года назад +51

      A lot of them would have made peace with the decision they weren't leaving that boat

    • @basicallystupid7080
      @basicallystupid7080 2 года назад +38

      It’s a sad story, at least they kept the lights on until she split.

    • @Adriana-eu6ty
      @Adriana-eu6ty 2 года назад +56

      I cannot imagine people doing that today, in these times.

    • @nickypoundtown9568
      @nickypoundtown9568 2 года назад +6

      @@Adriana-eu6ty it'll be everyone deciding who is saved by how much clout/looks they have then it will be narrowed do to who's more colored/gay/transgender then everyone will have a debate(it'll be live streamed) and in all this the boat goes down killing everyone because we are a generation of procrastinators

    • @maxonite
      @maxonite 2 года назад +7

      @@nickypoundtown9568 go to therapy

  • @TheLowBrassDude
    @TheLowBrassDude 2 года назад +73

    I'm reminded of what Eva Hart said about the sinking "The sound of people drowning is the most dreadful sound. And there's a terrible silence that follows"

    • @Miketheratguy
      @Miketheratguy 2 года назад +10

      Other survivors compared it to the sound of the entire crowd cheering at a ball game - just this massive din of voices making a monstrous wave of noise - and then, of course, it starts to go quiet.

  • @LegoAnimations6370
    @LegoAnimations6370 4 года назад +3032

    The ambient sounds of bending metal and wood combined with the screams really create an terrifying atmosphere.

    • @connorc9537
      @connorc9537 3 года назад +72

      Imagine actually being there.

    • @TheUnavator
      @TheUnavator 3 года назад +11

      You got that right

    • @beastblox.
      @beastblox. 3 года назад +3

      OMG I LOVE UR VIDS!

    • @titanicbigship
      @titanicbigship 3 года назад +2

      Love your videos and yes very true

    • @amoghlaud1025
      @amoghlaud1025 3 года назад +2

      Oh, I just love your videos

  • @kbonh22
    @kbonh22 3 года назад +1789

    The sense of panic once the lights went out must have been indescribable.
    No moon, just a starry night, a pitch black, freezing cold 12,000ft deep ocean beneath you, no one coming to save you and the screams and last breaths of thousands, including your own.

    • @memyself1176
      @memyself1176 3 года назад +20

      Starry night or SCARY NIGHT????
      It was a full moon that night so they did have have natural light not the synthetic light we humans are use to.

    • @relentlesstitanicoldchanne1060
      @relentlesstitanicoldchanne1060 3 года назад +144

      @@memyself1176 there was no moon in the sky that night

    • @ethansnumbers6188
      @ethansnumbers6188 3 года назад +12

      Actually the ocean is 13000 feet deep

    • @InvalidSamurai
      @InvalidSamurai 3 года назад +34

      @@ethansnumbers6188 No the titanic is exactly 12,600 feet deep it was not 13,000 feet

    • @Jackuves
      @Jackuves 3 года назад +20

      And then all the sudden having your entire body coming down all the sudden because of the ship splitting

  • @DrumFuckerFr
    @DrumFuckerFr 2 года назад +421

    It's terrifying to know that the ship stayed almost still for 2h40 but from the moment it broke in two, it was gone in mere seconds.
    Blood freezing.

    • @hootax8980
      @hootax8980 2 года назад +39

      Designed to stay afloat for as long as physically possible, but when the metal gave way, it really gave way

    • @traindude432
      @traindude432 2 года назад +7

      actually atleast 1 minute

    • @jessicadias5014
      @jessicadias5014 Год назад +31

      Not necessarily. The engineers chose to sacrifice themselves to stay below deck to keep the lights and the pumps working for as long as possible. Without them it was expected that the ship could have sunk up to an hour earlier

    • @randomuser9883
      @randomuser9883 Год назад +12

      The reason the stern dropped so rapidly was probably the sheer weight of the engines pulling the stern down.

    • @nthgth
      @nthgth Год назад +1

      @@randomuser9883 and the big gaping hole the size of the ship's cross-section where it broke in two

  • @billshinas27
    @billshinas27 2 года назад +98

    Being on a lifeboat, seeing it sink minute by minute would forever be scarred in your mind. The ship breaking apart slowly, people screaming, an unimaginable nightmare.

  • @sauronbagginsd8032
    @sauronbagginsd8032 4 года назад +703

    The sounds of the ship groaning as it dies and the screams of the passengers is utterly chilling

    • @corey_the_bird3086
      @corey_the_bird3086 4 года назад +26

      I feel the screams just get really repetitive like that bold one that AHHHHHH AHHWUUUUU AHH

    • @LB-rm4el
      @LB-rm4el 4 года назад +17

      I listened to this with headphones on and I have to say I agree-- especially in the moments just before the break.

    • @jokkergar
      @jokkergar 4 года назад +1

      Not chilling but he did a pretty good job with the sfx

    • @darthmisanthropic2374
      @darthmisanthropic2374 4 года назад +2

      Chilling but realistic.

    • @the_rover1
      @the_rover1 4 года назад +2

      Yeah, indeed, utterly relaxing.
      Wait, what?!

  • @randylahey1232
    @randylahey1232 4 года назад +662

    I love how she kept her lights on for as long as she possibly could😢

    • @TheEmeraldMenOfficial
      @TheEmeraldMenOfficial 4 года назад +232

      Randy Lahey Not one engineer survived the sinking: they all died at their posts ensuring the ship had power as long as possible. Not one chose to leave, even when the captain ordered every man for himself. The only reason it failed entirely was because very little steam remained, and because too many circuits were shorted by seawater.

    • @sirrliv
      @sirrliv 4 года назад +104

      I hope we all remember this bravery, and its parallel to our current world crisis. Particularly those in the healthcare services, but all those whose functions are essential to the continued functioning of our civilization, all following in the footsteps of these brave engineers, never once thinking of themselves, but doing all they can to ensure that others live. Let us know their bravery, and thank them profusely by continuing to give them the respect and admiration they are due, now and forever, even after this crisis has passed. We cannot let things simply "return to normal"; we must be better than that, else their sacrifice will have been for nothing.

    • @hmskinggeorgev7089
      @hmskinggeorgev7089 4 года назад +45

      You can thank some brave members of her crew for that.

    • @charlesdcw1990
      @charlesdcw1990 4 года назад +46

      @@TheEmeraldMenOfficial Well it was the very brave men who did their duty til the very end to keep the lights on.

    • @richieThach
      @richieThach 4 года назад +47

      Very impressive thanks to the valiant efforts of all the engineers and electricians who remained behind to keep the power on. Usually when a ship sinks, electrical systems die quickly but they did a fine job to keep it up for people as long as possible.

  • @BandCritique
    @BandCritique 2 года назад +110

    I'm terrified of the ocean and this is exactly why. It's not forgiving and swallowed the Titanic like nothing. Hearing the screams and the ship breaking is extremely haunting. Knowing once those lights went out you're going to be in freezing waters and in pitch black and watching the ship sink into the abyss. Gives me chills. I am absolutely fascinated with the Titanic story and wish I could go back and see it for myself. See the people how they reacted after the ship finally sank how long did it take for the people in the water to go silent..it's all fascinating to me

    • @1NcognitoXx
      @1NcognitoXx Год назад +5

      It really is to me too. I don't know why. But for some reason it would be in my top 5 destinations if I could time travel and view events safely haha. Maybe I am sick 😅

    • @lisagarletts6361
      @lisagarletts6361 Год назад +1

      Same here! I am absolutely terrified of any deep water and I believe this is one reason why! While I am fascinated by the Titanic and the terrible tragedy, it also terrifies me!

    • @starsandnightvision
      @starsandnightvision 10 месяцев назад +1

      Morbid much?

  • @m.k.m.319
    @m.k.m.319 Год назад +33

    It's in moments like these when you realize just how fragile life can be, and come to feel as part of Humanity as a whole instead of being separated by class.

  • @Darklord666123
    @Darklord666123 3 года назад +1134

    They kept her electrics going right till the very last second of her life....you couldn't have wished for a better team of devoted ship engineers and electricians....God bless them all!

    • @starsadanandam4813
      @starsadanandam4813 2 года назад +41

      can't agree more.. God Bless Them All.

    • @NS_VDL
      @NS_VDL 2 года назад +50

      much respect to them. They sacrificed their lifes for a hopeless ship. R.I.P

    • @RobCLynch
      @RobCLynch 2 года назад +37

      yes, a lot of brave men went down with the ship. Professionalism is not a big enough word.

    • @jacobmassey3897
      @jacobmassey3897 Год назад +18

      @@NS_VDL apparently the engineers included members of the guarantee group which was a White Star tradition where certain ship builders were hand picked by their foreman to travel on their ships first voyage. It only seems fitting that they'd be the ones to keep their ship lit until the very end.

    • @donnamccarron6342
      @donnamccarron6342 Год назад +9

      Those poor souls 🌼🕊️🌼

  • @Ravaloxianthunderbird
    @Ravaloxianthunderbird 3 года назад +1309

    I remember reading a witness account on the night. He said the worst part wasn't when she ship disappeared. It was the slow silence that followed after everyone fell into the water.

    • @oscarrosales4352
      @oscarrosales4352 3 года назад +159

      Just imagine the darkness with thousands of people screaming without lights and the cold getting worse that definitely was terrible as he said

    • @tomcooper6108
      @tomcooper6108 2 года назад +148

      The screams and cries died out within 15 minutes after the ship sank. It didnt take long in that freezing water.

    • @CJODell12
      @CJODell12 2 года назад +101

      @@tomcooper6108 The water was 28 degrees Fahrenheit. Most of the deaths were not caused by drowning but by hypothermia.

    • @bunnyflick4387
      @bunnyflick4387 2 года назад +105

      Imagine being on a lifeboat, and knowing that a loved one (husband, friend, whoever), had stayed on the ship. Maybe there's a part of you that thinks they'll still be ok somehow. Then you hear that silence. I feel heartbroken just thinking about it.

    • @LuigiCotocea
      @LuigiCotocea 2 года назад +2

      @@CJODell12 stage 2

  • @andrewmwells9606
    @andrewmwells9606 2 года назад +98

    I imagine hearing the groans of the ship weren't much better than hearing the pleading cries of the passengers. Imagine how scary it must've been to listen, and hear the biggest ship in the world tearing itself apart!! 😰

    • @musememe1349
      @musememe1349 Год назад +1

      Had to turn headphones down

    • @TheFluffyWendigo
      @TheFluffyWendigo 4 месяца назад

      I'm a machinist, hearing metal shear itself apart is very spine tingling on the rare occasions I've heard it first hand

  • @jonasmania2008
    @jonasmania2008 Год назад +26

    Just imagining being a woman or child in the lifeboats, knowing your husband, father, brother was still on the ship as it goes down. It's heartbreaking to imagine that kind of trauma and terror those survivors lived with afterwards. I can't imagine. No wonder many of them never spoke of it.

  • @youbetcha6880
    @youbetcha6880 4 года назад +961

    I've read accounts from survivors who said that the scariest sound, after the boat sank, was when the sounds from the people in the water stopped. Some of the people would have drowned while others would have passed out and died from hypothermia, which I think in those waters' temperatures, would have taken only a few minutes.

    • @nadyaa.2604
      @nadyaa.2604 4 года назад +58

      About 10 to 15 minuts approximately

    • @justsomeguyx.1645
      @justsomeguyx.1645 4 года назад +185

      I was at a museum that replicated how cold the water in the north atlantic was that fateful night. I stuck my hand in the water and could only last like 10 seconds because of how bitterly cold it was. It really makes you empathize for those poor souls.

    • @FlyinBlaney
      @FlyinBlaney 3 года назад +83

      The ship was so big that it would've sucked many people under with it.

    • @TheStormWithinUsAll
      @TheStormWithinUsAll 3 года назад +64

      Hypothermia is freezing. Hyperthermia is heatstroke.

    • @thelegendaryjermo
      @thelegendaryjermo 3 года назад +34

      JustSomeGuy X. I actually live near there (well I’m moving so not no more) and if you put your hand in the water and wiggle your fingers that would be how it felt like swimming in the water. I couldn’t even keep my hand in there for like 5 seconds and when I took it out my hand felt like it was frozen.

  • @aria5614
    @aria5614 3 года назад +998

    Out of all the ship sinkings I've seen, Titanic gives the most impression of doing her best to stay afloat so her passengers can live.

    • @ShadowSkyX
      @ShadowSkyX 3 года назад +28

      Live, or prolong their terror and suffering?

    • @amirhussien7813
      @amirhussien7813 3 года назад +36

      Maybe the Titanic keep holding on for an hour to wait some rescue until it's sink.

    • @iheworld134
      @iheworld134 3 года назад +107

      2 hours is a lot of time to saved many passengers but it was their own mistakes for not having enough boats

    • @tommylbthllr
      @tommylbthllr 3 года назад +8

      @@iheworld134 exactly

    • @bastosbastos5835
      @bastosbastos5835 3 года назад +66

      @@iheworld134 very true because for exemple the RMS Lusitania had enough boats but the ship sinked in only 20 minutes and 1200 died. Considering every mistake, the building of the Titanic saved a lot of people somehow by allowing a 2h40 sink

  • @x.x.uwu.x.x
    @x.x.uwu.x.x Год назад +40

    it’s the screams that makes this 100 times more terrifying

    • @jenna6421
      @jenna6421 Год назад +6

      I think the creaking of the ship is worse

    • @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY
      @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY 7 месяцев назад +2

      And the survivors of the actual Titanic disaster said that the scariest part of it wasn’t so much the screams, but rather the complete silence that quickly came after the screams.

  • @lyndajcox2935
    @lyndajcox2935 2 года назад +52

    That sound around 10:10...as if Titanic herself is letting out one final agonal scream. Raised the hair on the back of my neck.

    • @musememe1349
      @musememe1349 Год назад

      Is this the part where the stern already fell

    • @ThatIsALakeSir
      @ThatIsALakeSir Год назад +1

      @@musememe1349 ehh no that's 2 minutes after 10:10

    • @ANTHONYLASKIOFFICIAL
      @ANTHONYLASKIOFFICIAL Год назад +1

      ​@@musememe1349 you meant stream? And water gets too hot it's

  • @emilybarber9910
    @emilybarber9910 3 года назад +1063

    I can't even touch ice cubes for more than 30 seconds. Imagine your whole body in the freezing Atlantic waters in the middle of the night fighting for your life. geez that is traumatizing

    • @nevaehrm
      @nevaehrm 3 года назад +14

      😢

    • @danieldoo1821
      @danieldoo1821 3 года назад +134

      And then, if you survived that SH*T CHAOS as a male survivor, 2 years later you are forced into World War 1, die in combat..
      My lord...

    • @danieldoo1821
      @danieldoo1821 3 года назад +17

      " I can't even touch ice cubes for more than 30 seconds "
      How do you eat ice cream then? Just touch the wood?

    • @nevaehrm
      @nevaehrm 3 года назад +5

      @B C you're speaking facts

    • @danieldoo1821
      @danieldoo1821 3 года назад +33

      @B C
      The White Star Line is to blame for the insufficient, human killing lack of lifeboats.
      DId you know the Titanic was actually originally supposed to have MORE lifeboats than its maximum capacity of people on board...?
      Days before the maiden voyage began the company decided they want to make the Titanic more aesthetic on the outside, and to achieve this cut the lifeboat capacity to less than half that was required to save the lives of all on board...
      A decision that ended up killing that many people.....may they rest in peace in heaven now.
      What's more unbelievable, the Titanic's marconi telegraph wireless team literally received like freaking 6 ice warnings from nearby ships, one of them being the HEROIC RMS Carpathia ( also known as the ONLY ship that actually came to the rescue, brought the survivors to New York harbor )
      the Titanic's wireless team were rude, telling the ships to SHUT UP WE"RE BUSY HERE THE TITANIC IS THE LARGEST SHIP IN THE WORLD WE HAVE LOTS TO DO .... * and the Titanic remained a high speed of 22 knots I believe ( maximum being 24 knots ) IN AN ICE AREA.....lookouts in the crow's next didn't even have binoculars..
      Arrogance at its most disastrous, I bet they felt so guilty when the ship finally hit an iceberg, the rest is tragic history...

  • @sprognutanimations
    @sprognutanimations 4 года назад +373

    Even in the first 10 seconds of the band playing, it sounds as if the ship is singing herself to sleep for the final time, always seems to get me a little.

    • @vibrantgleam
      @vibrantgleam 3 года назад +14

      Oh my god, I imagine that too..

    • @sockjim9016
      @sockjim9016 3 года назад +15

      Sprognut Animations that is a hauntingly beautiful/sad image you’ve just put in my head, thank you

    • @vibrantgleam
      @vibrantgleam 3 года назад +2

      @@sockjim9016 :*3

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 3 года назад +3

      It was her first voyage

    • @drthrayjaxymaxy8017
      @drthrayjaxymaxy8017 2 года назад +1

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver that's what drills it in even deeper, she didn't get the chance to show the world her tru ability and was struck down by Poseidon's Poseidon's trident.🙂

  • @AlexanderFort
    @AlexanderFort 3 года назад +157

    It’s amazing how long the power stayed on. Those engineers are heroes.

    • @shaylawatson1244
      @shaylawatson1244 10 месяцев назад +1

      They not heroes they died doing a pointless job to me the lights was going to cut off regardless why die trying to keep them on when the ship sinking like for what? To prevent fear everyone was in fear regardless of the lights being on or off

    • @pdhung3012
      @pdhung3012 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@shaylawatson1244the couldn’t load all of lifeboats if the light is off

    • @altar8010
      @altar8010 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@shaylawatson1244you mocked those engineer whom save perhaps hundred of lives just bc they can see something in the dark

  • @silkmantis
    @silkmantis Год назад +36

    Incredibly powerful and haunting simulation. You almost feel like you are there.

    • @lc6067
      @lc6067 10 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly what you said. Just horrific.

  • @samuraislugger1488
    @samuraislugger1488 4 года назад +651

    It's nice to know that there are other people who have such a deep love for Titanic as I do.

    • @laffydaffy5133
      @laffydaffy5133 4 года назад +22

      I was born in 1996. I believe I was shown the movie at a young age that hooked me, and in elementary school I remember always getting excited going to the library and checking out all the Titanic books. I would look at the pictures of how things were and how they looked now. It was like a area at the bottom of the ocean frozen in time with a very grey and brown color. Ken Marshall had artwork in almost every book and it would memorize me. Seeing how the ship tilted and wondering how it would all feel like. The break up and wondering what it must have felt like to be there and to see it. Just wondering how this floating palace of sorts would look like with lights still burning and rooms flooding with water as panic insued while others remained calmn as if nothing would happen unknowing their impending fate. Just the thought of what I would do if I only had 2 hours left to live. A cold moonless night with stars shining bright on a ship with funnels burning like candles against a calm cold Black Sea.
      As an adult the mystery of the grand staircase blows my mind. We will never be able to know how different it looked no matter how advanced technology gets. Since the only pictures of the staircase are of Olympic, I can only wonder how & if any differences exist. I think of the breakup and how it must have looked inside in a flooded grand staircase. The many theories if the breakup make my mind ponder on how it actually looked and how it took place but we can never be 100% sure. The many unexplored rooms on the wreck and what treasures will never be discovered since humans do not have the technology to explore many of the rooms in their current decomposing state. We may never know the secrets of many of the rooms and what was left behind in suitcases and chests that were left behind forever buried in a collapsing shell of rust and worn out beauty. That's my take. I wrote so much! I'm proud of myself lol xD

    • @kendyepic6590
      @kendyepic6590 4 года назад +2

      Ikr

    • @jos3ph.d
      @jos3ph.d 4 года назад +8

      I’m a true Titanic fanatic.

    • @maheralshora7614
      @maheralshora7614 3 года назад +11

      Watching Titanic or getting any information about it is incredibly fascinsting to me. We have something in common.

    • @jos3ph.d
      @jos3ph.d 3 года назад +1

      Maher Alshora Same.

  • @SKF358
    @SKF358 4 года назад +255

    You're missing the scream of the remaining crowd when the stern went under and they all hit the freezing cold water like a knife through their body. They said it sounded like a baseball stadium when the crowd roars over a home run hit.

    • @aiden6354
      @aiden6354 3 года назад +11

      This is still a work in progress as they say, so they might add that.

    • @vileink4733
      @vileink4733 3 года назад +11

      @@aiden6354 There is a real time Titanic sinking animation on RUclips,all the details were exact and it's like 2 hours and 40 minutes
      U have the og version and remastered,in og version they let the lights on so we could see the ship splitting and in the remaster they showed just how scary it really was

    • @aiden6354
      @aiden6354 3 года назад +2

      @@vileink4733 yes I know, I watched it when it first came out...

    • @BenjiYbanez
      @BenjiYbanez 3 года назад +2

      Wouldn’t that be impossible at the first seconds of complete submersion? Because they would all be underwater, they can’t scream with all the water on their face?

    • @ryshed4365
      @ryshed4365 2 года назад

      That's why jack in the movie talks about ice fishing

  • @umarsyedexp
    @umarsyedexp 2 года назад +61

    The 10:12 mark gave me chillls. This is literally what happened. The screams, the horror, the freezing temperature of the dark murky water. This would've been horrendous to experience if you were on one of the lifeboats watching from far. RIP to all.

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 Год назад

      Your RIP is only seeking thumbs ups for u lonely people...

  • @mratkovich
    @mratkovich 2 года назад +29

    The sheer number of “worst possible scenarios” to have lead to this disaster is staggering. It’s final destination type horror

  • @brycetomecek5065
    @brycetomecek5065 4 года назад +543

    When we ask why *Titanic* still interests us, it’s this.
    We try to imagine living through this.

    • @jogordon1530
      @jogordon1530 4 года назад +23

      Bryce Tomecek Why? Because it was a fucking tragedy! It was a testament that no matter how much money one has, no one escapes death!

    • @aviatornoah4276
      @aviatornoah4276 4 года назад +16

      Jo Gordon because it is unbelievable

    • @Khloe_dancer_model
      @Khloe_dancer_model 4 года назад +11

      Because too many souls died a terrible death.

    • @heatherchandler724
      @heatherchandler724 3 года назад +1

      @@Khloe_dancer_model and yet almost everyone forgot about the Wilhelm Gustloff and 9,000 people died. Over 5,000 were children😔

    • @RaccoonKCD
      @RaccoonKCD 3 года назад +9

      @@heatherchandler724 It's a bad disaster but there was also something going on called a "world war"
      Not saying all those people didn't matter because they definitely did, but there's a difference between thousands of people dying during peacetime and thousands of people dying during wartime

  • @teejay5432
    @teejay5432 3 года назад +794

    The PITCH BLACK water! Imagine thrashing and flailing around in that after your warm lit cabin bed sunk out from beneath your feet. The horror and betrayal

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 3 года назад +33

      Most died in just 2-3 minutes from hypothermia

    • @Jelly-wo3so
      @Jelly-wo3so 3 года назад +60

      @@SQUAREHEADSAM1912 that's still a long 2 or 3 mins of pain and torture and I think it would be longer than that. Imagine you are on a trip of of a life time, or on your way to a better life, only to end up freezing to death and knowing this will happen to you. 😟

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 3 года назад +6

      Sue Dumas yeah, it was tragic,

    • @danieldoo1821
      @danieldoo1821 3 года назад +8

      They wouldn't have had the time to ' thrash and flail around in ' that water.. The hypothermia would've killed them in less than 16 minutes.

    • @jos3ph.d
      @jos3ph.d 3 года назад +8

      @@danieldoo1821 You mean 2-3 minutes.

  • @kmmygurl2003
    @kmmygurl2003 Год назад +36

    I was on a cruise recently, and I would wake up late at night and take walks around the ship. I looked out to the open sea and it was pitch black with no moon. Remembering that feeling, and thinking about what those passengers went through just gives me chills.

    • @noyesnohaha
      @noyesnohaha Год назад

      Where u on MSC Virtuosa

    • @kmmygurl2003
      @kmmygurl2003 Год назад

      @@noyesnohaha No, Royal Caribbean.

    • @noyesnohaha
      @noyesnohaha Год назад

      @@kmmygurl2003 Ot raglqoa. Q

    • @Tylerz_theman
      @Tylerz_theman 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@kmmygurl2003...titanic was on a moonless night.

  • @thereadingg3945
    @thereadingg3945 2 года назад +41

    Hearing those moans and groans from Titanic really make her seem somewhat human in a way. Especially at 10:10. I know that may sound cringey to some people, and I totally get it, but the fact that ships are given names and pronouns in the first place is really what makes crews, and even some passengers, connect with their ship.
    Imagine your body is slowly being filled with freezing-cold water, and, overtime, you’re gradually forced into an awkward position where your back begins to hurt, and the pain slowly grows from there as your back bends further until you feel like your spine is going to shatter and you can’t take it anymore. You’d be 100% forgiven for making sounds of extreme discomfort and excruciating pain.

    • @samuelhaverghast2442
      @samuelhaverghast2442 Год назад +6

      well, the reason ships are all called she, is the people who work on them, see them as a protective mother that shelters the people onboard to cross the sea, or bodies of water in general, which makes sinking all the more tragic, they really are given a personality, even when new, a ship has different quirks then other ships in its class, the people who built these ships, well, a piece of their soul rubs off in the work..

    • @scoutz0rs
      @scoutz0rs Год назад +6

      It sounds like the ship screams.

    • @LadeeHornet93
      @LadeeHornet93 Год назад +1

      Some of the sounds were from sliding furniture

    • @RMSOLei
      @RMSOLei Год назад +6

      Honestly it does not seem cringey, it gives me the chills then thinking out how horrifying it was.

    • @sylvianapalma958
      @sylvianapalma958 Год назад +3

      This. This comment right here sums up to what I was thinking.

  • @potatopants4691
    @potatopants4691 3 года назад +1195

    Real props to the engineers for keeping the lights on even when most of the ship was already submerged. Might have been an even greater tragedy if the lights went out sooner than they did.

    • @anamazingtrumpetplayer
      @anamazingtrumpetplayer 3 года назад +73

      Yeah, sad that they had to stay below decks to manage the lights.

    • @JuliaCV9
      @JuliaCV9 3 года назад +193

      @@anamazingtrumpetplayer the Engineers on the ship chose to stay below decks and keep the power on. they didn't have to do it, they chose to.

    • @thejaytv8162
      @thejaytv8162 3 года назад +23

      That's sad.

    • @robertaviles8451
      @robertaviles8451 3 года назад +75

      In the hopes that CARPATHIA (or any closer ship) would be able to see them! 😭 So sad that CARPATHIA wasn't there in time!

    • @stevennorris7181
      @stevennorris7181 3 года назад +68

      @@robertaviles8451 such a shame that SS Californian didnt respond when they could have gotten there in time.

  • @kitsunemetal
    @kitsunemetal 4 года назад +255

    The sound of the steel twisting and bending struggling to stay afloat for as long as it can being overwelmed by the sea.

    • @lxldny
      @lxldny 4 года назад +11

      Haunting..

    • @MDkid1
      @MDkid1 4 года назад +3

      The ship did her best to help save as many on board.

    • @asura---
      @asura--- 4 года назад

      @@MDkid1 I agree to that. If it's not a well done ship it will not last that long.

    • @jeffkenyon483
      @jeffkenyon483 4 года назад

      The sea swallowed the ship.

    • @notsheepish8304
      @notsheepish8304 4 года назад +1

      @ANTHONY burton every life is important

  • @DS-fk7ed
    @DS-fk7ed 2 года назад +56

    I met Eva Hart one of the last survivors in 1994; she told me about what she remembered from that night. One of the main things was hearing the cries for help in the dark after the ship sank.
    I've always been obsessed with the Titanic; when I was at school the other kids took the piss constantly because I was always talking about it.
    I'm impressed by this but i'm not sure the ship went down so fast after the breakup; survivors commented on it's sticking up in the air for at least 1 minute - probably longer. Secondly I don't think it went down tilted to the port side like this; I think the Titanic went to down more or less perpendicular; just going by the survivor accounts of the last few minutes.

    • @vortexyt8700
      @vortexyt8700 Год назад +3

      When the titanic broke apart it was still connected to the bow and the stern goes down with the bow cause it is still slightly connected

    • @antonellavillar7173
      @antonellavillar7173 Год назад

      @@vortexyt8700 nope the bow was not connected to the stern when he broke apart u probably dont know too much abt titanic

    • @antonellavillar7173
      @antonellavillar7173 Год назад

      @@vortexyt8700 he titanic isnt a banana is A Iron ship

    • @samuelhaverghast2442
      @samuelhaverghast2442 Год назад +5

      you have to keep in mind, that it was much darker then what has been shown, someone on youtube actually took what is considered the most accurate sinking portrayal of Titanic, and made it as dark as it really was that night, and you can see why in that lighting that many survivors thought she sunk whole or broke up, lots of conflicting accounts

    • @monmothma3358
      @monmothma3358 Год назад +4

      Yeah I was also surprised about the speed and the portside tilt, never heard that it tilted like that.

  • @glamdolly30
    @glamdolly30 Год назад +19

    This is so creepy - like a drone was flown around the ship in its last, desperate moments , as it sank deeper and deeper into the ruthless, unrelenting ocean. In the last hour, 1,500 people on board knew all hope was gone, and freezing water and death would imminently claim them.
    I often think about the dramatic mixed emotions of the lucky 706 people who got into a lifeboat and escaped the stricken, soon-to-be tomb. How relieved, unnerved, traumatised and nauseous they must have felt all at once, looking back at the ship they'd fled, full of people all about to die - a fate they'd escaped by a hair's breadth.
    And some on the lifeboats knew they were leaving loved ones behind on that ship to face the unimaginable - husbands, parents, siblings, friends (even some pets), and they would never see them again. How devastated they must have been to be abandoning them to that horrific fate.
    How surreal it must have all felt to everyone on board. Mere hours earlier, many were eating a delicious cooked dinner, seated at silver service tables, choosing French delicacies from posh menus, bathed in electric light, heating and all the comforts of the modern age. Their thoughts were only of their warm bed, and the next day's sailing - the freezing sea that surrounded them didn't worry their minds at all. Now they faced its dark, malicious danger head-on - a hopeless battle most had no hope of winning.
    The Titanic disaster continues to fascinate for so many reasons. One of them is surely that a human life can change in a heart beat. The ship's collision with the iceberg lasted a mere 10 seconds. But once it happened, most lives on board were lost - and even more lives were forever changed by the tragedy.
    The juxtaposition of the luxurious, artificial man-made environment on board the modern 'super steamship', and the bleak, unsurvivable natural ocean that surrounded it, is of course another reason the story intrigues us. The Titanic became a metaphor for the modern man's arrogance in believing he could ever conquer the natural world. An 'unsinkable' ship - what a conceit! No mere man-man vessel can ever be unsinkable, pitted against the incredible might of the sea.

  • @LDDavis911
    @LDDavis911 4 года назад +217

    The stokers, trimmers, and engineering crew kept those lights on to the last minutes. The “black gang” were true heroes that night.

    • @christopherdonahue1066
      @christopherdonahue1066 3 года назад +2

      I dont know how the lights stayed on until the final seconds rather than shorting out.

    • @dropkickmurphy4114
      @dropkickmurphy4114 3 года назад +6

      @@christopherdonahue1066 there's plenty of commentary on RUclips about that; I recommend the Historic Travels channel; he's done/doing an entire series of vignettes on different aspects of Titanic's sinking. I'd post the link here, but I'd lose your post in the process!

    • @jonbonesmahomes7472
      @jonbonesmahomes7472 3 года назад +1

      @@dropkickmurphy4114 Its not
      History traveler..
      Its Historic travels channel.
      Welcome.

    • @Whatatwist2009
      @Whatatwist2009 3 года назад +9

      Not to mention the captain went down with his ship and Andrews decided to share the fate of the ship he designed. True men of honor.

    • @christopherdonahue1066
      @christopherdonahue1066 3 года назад +1

      @@Whatatwist2009 and Ismay told them all to fuck off, the same guy who ordered fewer lifeboats but he still had his

  • @Riley-gi6of
    @Riley-gi6of 3 года назад +210

    The screaming passengers and the sounds of the ship's superstructure being torn apart sure make you think about how terrifying it really was on that cold April night

  • @user-bu7jl6zy5d
    @user-bu7jl6zy5d Год назад +12

    I have read some survivors' statements regarding the RMS Titanic's last moments above the water, and they say that before the ship went down for the final plunge, that it became virtually perpendicular to the ocean's surface, then plunging down quite rapidly until it was out of sight. I didn't see that here. Also this had the ship laying on its port side in the water before the end---did that really occur? Whatever the truth is, this video animation is magnificent---as close as one can be without actually being there. Magnificent. Thank you for sharing it with us.

    • @El_Gungas
      @El_Gungas Год назад

      As I know:
      The water Flooding in the Port side, at the E Deck + one Gangway door open, is the reason why the Titanic lists to Port.
      (Srry for Bad English)

    • @doctorbohr1585
      @doctorbohr1585 5 месяцев назад

      I've heard of a port list, and also the Stern's perpendicular plunge. I think the latter was Ballard's final plunge model (and perhaps Cameron's too). There are various final plunge models posited, which you can see in RUclips.
      As for witness accounts I recall Jack Thayer's as quite vivid, and I think he mentions the vertical plunge. He says, if memory serves, that the stern pivoted around just before, "as if to hide the awful spectacle from us". He was sitting right below it, atop collapsible b.

  • @juliemc8460
    @juliemc8460 2 года назад +14

    Really amazing animation! The thought of all that steel buckling and screeching it’s way down, still being heard fully submerged is so freakin eerie.

  • @DownundaThunda
    @DownundaThunda 4 года назад +492

    Wow... That was intense.. I can only imagine how horrific it was for those people who witnessed it. Not only those on the ship, but even everyone who was lucky enough to get a seat on a lifeboat. Knowing that you were witnessing the end of the lives of hundreds of people. And if you were a married woman, knowing you'd probably never see your husband again.

    • @horrorking6409
      @horrorking6409 4 года назад +37

      Downunda Thunda or worse being a child and never seeing your father again

    • @qwertasdcfghjklmo24z
      @qwertasdcfghjklmo24z 4 года назад +15

      @ Just imagine the horror and realization and screams began to fall silent.

    • @donnix768
      @donnix768 4 года назад +38

      My great grandfather Albert Horswill was a crewman who survived on lifeboat one with the Duff Gordons and nine other crew/first class passengers. The boat was under filled which is awful. My great grandfather already had partial hearing loss from an artillery vessel in the navy but he said the sound of the ship breaking apart was the loudest most horrifying thing he ever heard with the exception of the dead silence after the ship was gone as well as any passengers that were in the sea.

    • @DownundaThunda
      @DownundaThunda 4 года назад +2

      Wow... That's absolutely incredible.

    • @maccheese2327
      @maccheese2327 4 года назад +6

      ANTHONY burton why do you keep coping and pasting this everywhere.

  • @TheCAFProduction
    @TheCAFProduction 4 года назад +352

    "The Titanic was going down very slowly. And these people were standing there -- at the decks--- at the railing--- wishing somebody I suppose would come rescue them. But finally, it did go down. And all the people who were standing at the decks--- at the railing--- jumped. They jumped, and they screamed, and they yelled for help, and of course nobody came to help."
    --- Second-Class Passenger, Ruth Becker. Lifeboat #13

    • @aiden6354
      @aiden6354 4 года назад +9

      ANTHONY burton stop spamming for goodness sake

    • @angrybirdfanatic1
      @angrybirdfanatic1 4 года назад +4

      I heard her story of how she went down to get blankets for her family, her life before titanic, and her being left behind sadly. She was brave and fearless in the moment.

    • @jerkerhernback9558
      @jerkerhernback9558 4 года назад

      @Michael Pegg what do you mean by play him?

    • @roymeadows1708
      @roymeadows1708 4 года назад +1

      I read quotes from some survivors who said they still believed she would stay afloat, even when she was in her death throws. Probably due to White Star describing her as "unsinkable".

    • @jerkerhernback9558
      @jerkerhernback9558 4 года назад +1

      @Michael Pegg can you give me a link or something to the production?

  • @MrDaRiAn21
    @MrDaRiAn21 2 года назад +13

    Knowing how the people felt that night and the horror they must’ve felt is so sad. Hearing the screams was eerie

  • @missgigglebox748
    @missgigglebox748 3 года назад +23

    My heart goes out to those that perished and to those who survived but lost loved ones. What a horrific experience.

  • @BenjiYbanez
    @BenjiYbanez 4 года назад +236

    This is more terrifying than anything i could ever imagine. The fact that this actually happened and the fact that everyone that was screaming and everyone on that ship that was left is dead.

    • @kbonh22
      @kbonh22 3 года назад +8

      Out of the thousands that went into the water. I think between 10 and 20 survived and were rescued by the lifeboats.

    • @brendanfoehr5086
      @brendanfoehr5086 3 года назад +8

      A fair number of people who went into the water as the bow sank got onto the two swamped collapsibles- only one woman actually, Rhoda Abbott, along with people like 2nd Officer Lightoller, Col. Archibald Gracie, radio operator Harold Bride, Jack Thayer, etc.- and passengers Olaus Abelseth, Charles Joughin, and Masabumi Hirono managed to survive the actually sinking of the stern section.

    • @Fr34k1ng0ut
      @Fr34k1ng0ut 3 года назад +6

      @B C the last one, who was a baby then, died in 2009.

    • @melovx3928
      @melovx3928 3 года назад +3

      @B C
      ALL of them are dead now, last one died in 2009

    • @brandonstaples461
      @brandonstaples461 3 года назад +1

      @B C no shit. It happened 108 years ago

  • @chrysler238
    @chrysler238 4 года назад +493

    The Engineers still inside the ship keeping the power on to the very end

    • @KyleOfCanada
      @KyleOfCanada 4 года назад +8

      @Julian Thanks for mentioning that. I'll have to look into watching it.

    • @jamesfracasse8178
      @jamesfracasse8178 4 года назад +21

      Saving the Titanic quite a remarkable documentary about below decks.

    • @hopatease1
      @hopatease1 4 года назад +51

      Yep they where only Engineers , stokers ,oilers just the scum of the ship and from what I have read they stayed at there stations to the very end : ( , they had to know that they where all going to die but they did there duty and no one gave them credit for it .

    • @1985_Honda_CRX_Si
      @1985_Honda_CRX_Si 4 года назад +5

      Rip

    • @apolyeyeng
      @apolyeyeng 4 года назад +4

      HERE HAVE THIS 300 LIKES

  • @ralphsanchico2452
    @ralphsanchico2452 2 года назад +14

    Trust me, your'e in good company. The closest I came to that was listening to one of the survivors give vivid detail of the ships sinking but what was most riveting, was the account of the passengers that were in the water after she sank, she said it sounded like you were in a large auditorium and the screams were almost deafening. That would take away my sleep for life!

    • @mistersharpe4375
      @mistersharpe4375 2 года назад +4

      The reports of the sounds made by the victims in the water are what chills me the most. Been looking through different reproductions to get an inkling as to what they must have been like, since reading the following wikipedia entry.
      - Those in the lifeboats were horrified to hear the sound of what Lawrence Beesley called "every possible emotion of human fear, despair, agony, fierce resentment and blind anger mingled - I am certain of those - with notes of infinite surprise, as though each one were saying, 'How is it possible that this awful thing is happening to me? That I should be caught in this death trap?'" Jack Thayer compared it to the sound of "locusts on a summer night", while George Rheims, who jumped moments before Titanic sank, described it as "a dismal moaning sound which I won't ever forget; it came from those poor people who were floating around, calling for help. It was horrifying, mysterious, supernatural."
      Everything about the final moments of the Titanic comes together to create such a fascinatingly morbid picture.

  • @royroberts749
    @royroberts749 2 года назад +11

    Just can’t imagine being on the lifeboat and watching the Titanic sink in the front of you and listening to the all screams of the passengers still on the Titanic.

  • @TheCAFProduction
    @TheCAFProduction 4 года назад +161

    13:23 "The sounds of people drowning are something that I cannot describe to you and neither can anyone else. It's the most dreadful sound."
    --- Second-Class Passenger, Eva Hart. Lifeboat #14

  • @aeshaalberts7560
    @aeshaalberts7560 4 года назад +423

    This is terrifying. Couldn’t imagine, you captured the scariness and desperation with the sound effects

    • @tslaughter3804
      @tslaughter3804 4 года назад +18

      Just imagine how it would’ve felt going through it not knowing what’ll happen to you

    • @asafaust6774
      @asafaust6774 3 года назад +15

      I hope that the survivors received the proper care for their mental health. Surely, some had survivor's guilt knowing that many rich women and children survived when women and children in steerage were destined to drown. I am fully aware that the rich men opted to allow women and children to board life boats first. My point is this: why did the poor people not matter? This was a shameful display of survival of the richest.

    • @WWFresh
      @WWFresh 3 года назад

      its a game lol

    • @msidc1238
      @msidc1238 3 года назад +5

      @@WWFresh Wait. Yes Titanic Honor and Glory is a game, but the way your saying it sounds like the Titanic wasn't real. WTF?

    • @WWFresh
      @WWFresh 3 года назад +1

      @@msidc1238 relax reject

  • @runyanpiano
    @runyanpiano 3 года назад +11

    So horrifying. Imagine being there. It’s been so dramatized but to see the ship beneath you slowly being swallowed by the below freezing sea, in the middle of the darkest night (no moon). So scary

  • @marleneg7794
    @marleneg7794 10 месяцев назад +6

    This demonstrates how vast the ocean is.

  • @Trenton2006gaming
    @Trenton2006gaming 3 года назад +1422

    Why am I so fascinated with a damn ship lmao

    • @Nick-xb5nz
      @Nick-xb5nz 3 года назад +166

      Cause its intresting. 115 years later, its still one of the most fascinating stories of our time.

    • @MattII33
      @MattII33 3 года назад +83

      @@Nick-xb5nz It’s been 108 years, but yeah.

    • @kbonh22
      @kbonh22 3 года назад +78

      Because it's a hell of a story. Like something out of a movie except it happened in reality first.

    • @boogphilly8321
      @boogphilly8321 3 года назад +13

      Same here, I think I became more fascinated with it when I found out the date it hit April 14th my birthday

    • @impulse5674
      @impulse5674 3 года назад +5

      you could say the same about anything you're fascinated in

  • @clapxy354
    @clapxy354 4 года назад +86

    Today, 108 years ago. May they all rest in peace 🌹⚓

  • @stevenkopko5943
    @stevenkopko5943 Год назад +9

    What is eerie about this is the night sky was so beautiful filled with bright shining stars and the ocean was as calm as it could ever be. 🙏

  • @Jennica838
    @Jennica838 Год назад +11

    You almost had it all correct. As soon as the Titanic split the bow ended up bobbing there for a few mins completely vertical. Then 2 hours and 40 mins later , Titanic ceased to exist. 😢
    I’m am definitely a believer that I was on that ship in my last life. I remember when I was young hearing about it and being so completely scared that it made me sick. It wasn’t till I was older that I started reading about it and learning as much as I could. I still am very obsessed with the Titanic.
    This is an obsession that won’t go away until I’m gone. I will always believe I was one who lost there life on that cold April night. I wanna visit the grave site in Nova Scotia.

    • @latishatomblin8944
      @latishatomblin8944 11 месяцев назад +3

      I remember reading that in recent years they discovered that the ship did not bob vertically. This depiction shows what the experts believe really happened, which would make what they showed in Cameron's Titanic movie incorrect. Not Cameron's fault though, at the time he made his film the experts believed it happened the way he depicted it.

  • @Darklord666123
    @Darklord666123 4 года назад +259

    This footage is so beautiful but so terrifying at the same time. The screams, the sounds of the ship ripping itself apart under the stress....You can only begin to imagine what it must have been like back in 1912.... RIP to all those who died...

    • @bruh0396
      @bruh0396 2 года назад

      but.....some of them survived.

    • @desspinoraptorexptv878
      @desspinoraptorexptv878 2 года назад +1

      @@bruh0396 to ALL THOSE WHO DIED he never said *everyone died*

    • @bruh0396
      @bruh0396 2 года назад

      @@desspinoraptorexptv878 hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

    • @kenXtripleI
      @kenXtripleI 2 года назад +2

      Really does capture the horror of that night

  • @jamesszumowski6637
    @jamesszumowski6637 4 года назад +648

    The fact we can now see the people, actually see them on the stern, and even JUMPING into the water, is what’s truly terrifying. No matter how hard we try, there is no way any video game, film, or even documentary can even come close to showing the true indescribable horror of that night. The thing that some people seem to forget about Titanic is that she is not an object or topic to be romanticized. She simply is not. She’s a cautionary tale of arrogance, hubris, mortality, and humility. On that night, when 1,496 people lost their lives, it did not matter if you were 1st, 2nd or 3rd class. No amount of status or wealth or anything could save them. They all died equal: just vulnerable, terror-stricken, and freezing human being. May we never forget the events that transpired on the night of April 14, 1912. May we never forget the 1,496 men, women, and children who lost perished. And may we NEVER FORGET the RMS Titanic, and the lessons that she continues to teach us.

    • @ChristinaMagma
      @ChristinaMagma 4 года назад +17

      Well said.

    • @OpheliaNL
      @OpheliaNL 4 года назад +43

      A lot of historic events are romanticized since we don't feel a close connection it. It also seems very surreal, like it never happened in the first place. I'm sure there will be romanticized movies made in the future about events such as 9/11 or the concert 2015 November Paris terrorist attacks.

    • @ChairmanPaulieD
      @ChairmanPaulieD 4 года назад +6

      to make it count

    • @CarlosVardi
      @CarlosVardi 4 года назад +66

      Social class did make a difference of life and death since it was the upper classes that got into the boats on time.

    • @abdallahdiab4951
      @abdallahdiab4951 4 года назад +41

      I agree with the lot of what you said, however financial and social status definitely contributed to the chances of surviving. 1st class passengers were the first to board the lifeboats. I wouldnt say they all died equally unfortunately.

  • @trojans7
    @trojans7 2 года назад +8

    The screaming is haunting. Imagine being on a lifeboat and just hearing the sounds of people screaming.

    • @aka99
      @aka99 Год назад

      Yea, because you know the screaming means people screaming for their life’s. Helpless and powerless waiting their end of life’s

    • @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY
      @DANIELLE_BREANNA_LACY 7 месяцев назад

      And the survivors of the actual Titanic disaster said that the scariest part of it wasn’t so much the screams, but rather the complete silence that quickly came after the screams.

  • @indigoangel339
    @indigoangel339 3 года назад +24

    I imagined me and my family, seeing them crying in panic, calling for God and feel abandoned.... Going to die and there's nothing but sinking ship, minutes which are hell, and cold dark water wherever you look... - that was hell on earth.

    • @musememe1349
      @musememe1349 Год назад

      I feel bad for people stuck in the ship

  • @qtarokujo3694
    @qtarokujo3694 3 года назад +280

    Titanic 1997 would've been horrifying to watch without James Horner's music and the moonlit sky, just darkness and nothing but the screaming filling the atmosphere

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 3 года назад +10

      Would have made not even 10% of the money it made but would have been about 10 times better as a film

    • @Carshtime
      @Carshtime 3 года назад +26

      Nah, it’s better with the soundtrack.

    • @squirleyspitmonkey3926
      @squirleyspitmonkey3926 3 года назад +6

      Apparently you could merely make out her outline against the stars. It was that dark

    • @EzJaye
      @EzJaye 2 года назад +5

      Probably true, aside from Horner's 1-minute of music following the end of 'Nearer My God to Thee' accompanying the massive pan across the entire length of the ship as all the passengers run towards the stern. EPIC!

    • @anthonyhebisen
      @anthonyhebisen 2 года назад +5

      @@EzJaye that pan from bow to stern using the massive ship set and real extras panicking and fleeing back , with that haunting choir- like score is one of the most cinematic masterpieces ever captured on film.

  • @Gabriel87100
    @Gabriel87100 4 года назад +610

    The audio of the crowd screaming is pretty good, but there's like this 1 woman voice screaming in a loop that gets really distracting lol

    • @YourOldUncleNoongah
      @YourOldUncleNoongah 4 года назад +60

      YES!!!!!!!!!! the background din of all the hustle and bustle is just FINE, but that ONE WOMAN SCREAMING (louder than the BG noise), really takes you OUT of the whole thing huh?

    • @elit2175
      @elit2175 4 года назад +30

      OMG seriously!!! Sounds morbid but I couldnt wait for the ship to sink so I wouldnt have to hear that awful screech anymore.

    • @manfredgeorgburggraf533
      @manfredgeorgburggraf533 4 года назад +27

      she must be a justin bieber fan.

    • @lutzderlurch7877
      @lutzderlurch7877 4 года назад +16

      I think the constant same-y-same-y loop of the exact same amount and volume of screaming sounds a bit implausible. From what videos there are of other disasters, the overall panicking-humans-sound is more variable, and particularly has noticeable highs and lows, highs usually right as/after noticeable events happen, i.e. sudden funnel collapse or sudden movements.

    • @rucianapollard4057
      @rucianapollard4057 4 года назад +1

      I noticed that same scream also

  • @thatloserkyle
    @thatloserkyle 2 года назад +8

    The fact that probably half of the death percentage went down underneath the water with the ship and the other half perished from drowning or freezing in the cold icy waters.... Bodies under the water and hundreds of dead frozen corpses floating in silence in the middle of the Atlantic. Straight chills

  • @jakeysucksatlifecuber5777
    @jakeysucksatlifecuber5777 Год назад +5

    The sounds that the titanic is making when it’s sinking makes the titanic hauntingly terrifying

  • @darkred1438
    @darkred1438 3 года назад +419

    i can’t even imagine the fear the kids on the titanic had. especially the ones who survived. the nightmares must’ve been endless.

    • @that90skid72
      @that90skid72 3 года назад +60

      Frankie Goldsmith (who was around 10), and to some extent Eva Hart (around 7) both had PTSD after that night.

    • @healingandgrowth-infp4677
      @healingandgrowth-infp4677 Год назад +7

      Esp as their dads would have been lost on the titanic too

    • @Nobody-dz3gj
      @Nobody-dz3gj Год назад +8

      Same to the others that survived the sinking, but their trauma was too much that even some of them committed suicide.

    • @User_92020
      @User_92020 Год назад

      I'm known to give people nightmares

    • @edwardburnsenhicks7772
      @edwardburnsenhicks7772 Год назад

      Many survivers topped emselves.

  • @vodka2432
    @vodka2432 3 года назад +359

    It sounds like the ship is screaming along with all the passengers....

    • @BrunoGamer-gf2mg
      @BrunoGamer-gf2mg 3 года назад +17

      Yeah! It's horrible

    • @dartharmus3322
      @dartharmus3322 3 года назад +19

      Well,in a way it is.

    • @pimuce
      @pimuce 3 года назад +3

      Titanic made only 15 minutes to the final sink ?

    • @animationdramanation5730
      @animationdramanation5730 2 года назад +8

      @@pimuce
      It took the Titanic 2 hours and 40 minutes to sink.

    • @JamesBond-pb2qy
      @JamesBond-pb2qy 2 года назад +3

      An extra 40 min Thanks to the engineers. And many young at that !

  • @mcds54
    @mcds54 2 года назад +3

    I touched Titanic.... at a San Francisco exhibition displaying the largest piece retrieved so far... I beat the security cameras and placed my hand on her... My mom had lunch with Millvina Dean and we have autographs and personal notes from her. I've lived Titanic ever since I read "A Night To Remember" in 4th grade...I'm 67 now and the fascination lives on....

  • @eagleofalinor0414
    @eagleofalinor0414 2 года назад +4

    For me, the creepiest part of this video is when the camera pans past the aft and stern section. Seeing all those people stand like that and hearing the screaming just shows a different perspective that isn’t seen anywhere else in the video.

  • @aero-ow8lq
    @aero-ow8lq 3 года назад +487

    109 years ago...and the story of Titanic still shocks the world..gone but never forgotten, both the ship herself, and the 1500 poor souls who went down with her

    • @Lilvon92
      @Lilvon92 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/byGpQYKACdw/видео.html

    • @apomtaylor8054
      @apomtaylor8054 2 года назад +3

      Damn this is my first time really *submerging* myself in info about sinking ships and holy shi, I did not realise so many died. I watch the korean and Italian one and thought they were bad but holy shi bruh

    • @rafiqstarline
      @rafiqstarline 2 года назад +1

      The people that died was 1 496 people

    • @ryans413
      @ryans413 2 года назад +7

      AJ: how much time.
      Andrews: an hour two at most.
      AJ: and how many aboard Mr Murdock
      Murdock: two thousand two hundred souls on board sir.
      AJ: well I believe you may get your headlines Mr Ismay.
      That scene gives me chills you see fear in everyone.

    • @umberct
      @umberct 2 года назад +2

      MV Wilhelm Gustloff lost over 9,000 in 1945

  • @nostalgia6915
    @nostalgia6915 3 года назад +141

    the metal noises are almost like she's crying for help.

    • @apomtaylor8054
      @apomtaylor8054 2 года назад +1

      Stfu, it's a ship. It was a good ship and it tried it's best to stay afloat but gtfooh with that crying bs

    • @drthrayjaxymaxy8017
      @drthrayjaxymaxy8017 2 года назад +1

      Jeez, what did nostalgia do to deserve this.

    • @AntonsAstronomy
      @AntonsAstronomy 2 года назад

      @@apomtaylor8054 ok?

    • @apomtaylor8054
      @apomtaylor8054 2 года назад

      @@AntonsAstronomy He aha tō whakaaro e tama? Kai tonu au tō māmā tara e te poaka

  • @deslynnsporne8684
    @deslynnsporne8684 3 года назад +3

    It gets even more terrifying when the lights start to get dimmer and dimmer and finally go out.🛳😱

  • @kmuhammadshah7839
    @kmuhammadshah7839 Год назад +6

    Salute to those engineers who kept the lights on until the end. RIP heroes 😭😭😭

  • @trainstorm1225
    @trainstorm1225 4 года назад +170

    I can’t imagine being there that night. R.I.P all 1,496 victims. May you never be forgotten.

    • @trainstorm1225
      @trainstorm1225 4 года назад +8

      ANTHONY burton of course. I understand that. But I think no life should be forgotten. Even if it was 108 years ago.

    • @bazza3k
      @bazza3k 4 года назад +3

      Same for the innocent victims of 9/11. Our modern Titanic. Before that , WW1, Spanish flu, Russian revolution, Chinese cultural revolution, WW2, Korea, Vietnam etc. Latest is the covid/common cold "pandemic". We are being harvested & will not believe how bad the covid after times will be . Already New Yorkers have been volunteered as guinea pigs for a killer vaccine.

    • @stephanihartman4369
      @stephanihartman4369 4 года назад +1

      Good job I could not have gotten that exact

    • @ChairmanPaulieD
      @ChairmanPaulieD 4 года назад

      1,496 souls loss on April 14, 1912? I don't think we'll ever know EXACTLY how many lives were lost that night sadly! But my guess it was MORE THAN 1,496

    • @trainstorm1225
      @trainstorm1225 4 года назад

      Paulie Duguay yep. 1,496. According to records and lists of passengers.

  • @mesner5x
    @mesner5x 4 года назад +303

    I can't believe how far this project has come. I first found out about Honor and Glory four years ago and have been following the journey ever since!

    • @aiden6354
      @aiden6354 4 года назад +7

      Mesner096 dude same

    • @danieldmyers
      @danieldmyers 4 года назад +1

      See I’m kinda wondering how it’s *only* come this far..

    • @MisoElEven
      @MisoElEven 4 года назад +3

      @@danieldmyers Well this is not the in-game animation, this is a 2007 model of Titanic from Kyle Hudak but edited a little bit...it was just a commemoration to the tragedy 4 years ago, managed to even get some publicity out of it and theyre reusing the animation because its good enough and pretty much serves as a talking point in the livestream that they do every year as far as Im aware.. If you listened then you would know that 80% of the ship is done, some characters are pretty much done. Theyre in the phase of looking for investors so that they can fund programmers to code the actual game itself.

    • @testdrivegarage2656
      @testdrivegarage2656 4 года назад +3

      I do praise them however they keep getting more and more inaccurate

    • @ksp-crafter5907
      @ksp-crafter5907 4 года назад +10

      @@testdrivegarage2656 What is the inaccuracy in this video?

  • @RandikaMendis97
    @RandikaMendis97 11 месяцев назад +5

    As always, the cameraman survived!

  • @kshitijsrivastava6440
    @kshitijsrivastava6440 10 месяцев назад +3

    The sound design in this video is amazing!
    Great work

  • @DLAbaoaqu
    @DLAbaoaqu 4 года назад +396

    (From A NIGHT TO REMEMBER, 1958)
    Lightoller: “There are quite a lot of ‘ifs’ about it, aren’t there, Colonel…? If we’d been steaming a few knots slower, or if we’d sighted that berg a few seconds earlier, we might not even have struck. If we’d been carrying enough lifeboats for the size of the ship instead of just enough to meet the regulations, things would have been different again, wouldn’t they?“
    Gracie: “Maybe. But you have nothing to reproach yourself with. You’ve done all any man could and more. You’re not... I was about to say, you’re not God, Mr. Lightoller.”
    Lightoller: “No seaman ever thinks he is. I’ve been at sea since I was a boy. I’ve been in sail. I’ve even been shipwrecked before. I know what the sea can do. But, this is different.”
    Gracie: “Because we hit an iceberg?”
    Lightoller: “No. Because we were so sure. Because even though it’s happened, it’s still unbelievable! I don’t think I’ll ever feel sure again, about anything.”

    • @perrysaker1526
      @perrysaker1526 4 года назад +5

      If only if only...it's a Greek tragedy!!

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 4 года назад +10

      if only Titanic had collided with a Venezuelan navy ship rather than an iceberg.

    • @mickmick2500
      @mickmick2500 4 года назад +3

      If Rose made space for Jack, he would survived

    • @IanThaddiam
      @IanThaddiam 4 года назад

      If only Astor, Guggenheim and Strauss hadn't been on-board then J.P. Morgan wouldn't have had to sink it and we might not have had a Federal Reserve and a century of unthinkable wars.

    • @Ledboi420
      @Ledboi420 4 года назад +1

      I Think The Night To Remember Must Be The Same Movie But Different Characters And A Different Scene(But They Are The Same Movie But Different Title)

  • @sh0xzz_942
    @sh0xzz_942 3 года назад +601

    Just imagine the people on the stern were feeling, like holy crap we’re about to be in that water as soon as this part of the ship goes under. I mean truly terrifying!

    • @emily7pop
      @emily7pop 3 года назад +51

      I imagine some had at least a bit of hope that somehow, by some luck part of the ship would stay afloat :(

    • @zerochrome85
      @zerochrome85 3 года назад +16

      @@emily7pop An then it breaks up and sinks in seconds taking you with it.

    • @jordanjohnson7285
      @jordanjohnson7285 3 года назад +14

      The cook that survived rode the end of the stern all the way down. He said he didn’t even get his hair wet but I don’t see how.

    • @THEDOORIZCLOSED
      @THEDOORIZCLOSED 3 года назад +9

      The ppl on the higher end were somewhat fortunate they had enough time to jump. A small few jumped at the last minute then swam to the life boats smh

    • @THEDOORIZCLOSED
      @THEDOORIZCLOSED 3 года назад +12

      anyone read any facts and know if ppl were still INSIDE? Or did everyone make it outside by the time it sank? I read where some did stay inside bc they didnt think it was sinkable...

  • @jasonhowell9723
    @jasonhowell9723 2 года назад +4

    To quote Marlon Brandon..'"The horror..the horror." Terrifying and horrible.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 2 года назад +3

    The only consolation is that when hypothermia takes over people feel euphoric and then get sleepy until finally, lights out. The screaming was probably the initial shock of 28 degree water, panicking and floundering about....but then as death approaches they at least felt happy momentarily and an utter peacefulness of dreamy sleep fell over them as the last thing they noticed was probably the calm sea and brilliant starlit sky. Travel on peacefully soul....travel on.

  • @Sarah-wf2bl
    @Sarah-wf2bl 3 года назад +230

    How terrifying it must have been when the ship split in half and the lights finally went out. Now you’re in the pitch darkness in the middle of the icy Atlantic, surrounded by the screams of your fellow passengers, knowing that any moment the rest of the ship is going down too. For some reason this disaster just gets to me. All those people dying in such a horrific way, most of them on their way to America for the first time to start a new life. It just really gets to me.

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 Год назад

      It Wasn't PITCH Black Karen... you people are SO desperate for online affirmation...

    • @somestuff7228
      @somestuff7228 Год назад +10

      @@billhosko7723 Is this a joke?

    • @never2late454
      @never2late454 Год назад

      According to the survivor's account it didn't break in half. It sank intact. After it was completely submerged they herd multiple explosions when the water hit the boiler's.

    • @lolloblue9646
      @lolloblue9646 Год назад +9

      ​@@never2late454 according to more survivors' account, it did.
      It was so dark it was near impossihle to see.
      Her wreck proves that she did break.

    • @SuckasNeverPlayMe
      @SuckasNeverPlayMe 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@never2late454 it broke in half coz Rose and Jack held onto the back of it and went down with it, straight down it went.... Then they swam up 👆

  • @deborahpablo786
    @deborahpablo786 3 года назад +122

    The most horrifying thing is the sound of the orchestra not playing anymore where you can only hear the waves clashing, the creaking of the metal, and the horrific screams that get louder and louder..and then..disappear

  • @actionman9451
    @actionman9451 2 года назад +17

    Can you imagine how terrifying it must of been.
    You have just come out of the Grand Staircase onto the Boat Deck realising you have few options left.
    You can either:
    1. Make your way to the submerging Bow and try to get into one of the Collapsible Lifeboats which are desperately trying to be launched.
    2. Wait until the water reaches the Boat Deck before jumping overboard and hope you can swim to a lifeboat or find some floating debris you can climb onto.
    3. Make your way to the rising Stern and hope and pray you can survive.
    4. Accept your fate.
    As you try to plan your next move your surrounded by the screaming of panicked passengers and people who are trapped within the ship along with officers trying to keep what little control they have left as the ship superstructure groans, bangs and creaks as she submits to the sea.

  • @mrjoemarc
    @mrjoemarc Год назад +6

    I can't imagine being there at that horrific night. Rip to all people who died on the titanic. 😭

  • @poe_the_hoe873
    @poe_the_hoe873 4 года назад +92

    The sound of the metal and wood creaking deforming and breaking sounds as if the titanic actually groaning and moaning in pain its so chilling

  • @Ismarmlp
    @Ismarmlp 4 года назад +81

    The sound of metal as the ship sinks is astonishingly terrifying. Good job!

  • @Chris2745100
    @Chris2745100 11 месяцев назад +3

    R.I.P to the Titan and her crew. Now resting about 1600 feet from the Titanic's bow.

  • @kdognicholson24
    @kdognicholson24 2 года назад +2

    Me waiting for the split: come on, any second now......
    Starts splitting:
    Gets an AD

  • @neighborhoodstudiosyt6106
    @neighborhoodstudiosyt6106 3 года назад +133

    The sound of the terrorized people screaming as the ship sinks underwater with cracking metal and shattering wood underneath the ocean surface... This was a truly horrific night.

  • @geowynleda4641
    @geowynleda4641 4 года назад +86

    She hung on as long as she could, bless her.

    • @that90skid72
      @that90skid72 3 года назад +8

      She did hold on much longer that her arch-enemy RMS Lusitania. Which didn't even last 20 min before disappearing in the ocean.

    • @niniyb8505
      @niniyb8505 3 года назад +7

      And she stayed upright.

    • @dress4villaiins
      @dress4villaiins 3 года назад +12

      literally, she stayed afloat as long as she could. 2 hours 40 minutes.

    • @stbcrist8520
      @stbcrist8520 3 года назад +5

      Actually
      The sinking was too slow but when the water reached the boat deck she went down in 10 minutes

    • @tanban6263
      @tanban6263 3 года назад +2

      The Wilhelm Gustolf went down in 1 hour, and they didn’t have time to lower all lifeboats. 9000 people died.

  • @danielgatchell871
    @danielgatchell871 3 года назад +17

    That is horrible. I am looking out my window and though there are a few houses nearby and light is permeating from them, it is pitch dark out there. Imagine how horrible it was to be on a ginormous ocean liner plunging into sub-zero freezing temperature water with the sounds of people screaming all around you, the shuddering feeling coursing through your bones as the floor below you sinks into miles deep, black ocean.

    • @oscarrosales4352
      @oscarrosales4352 3 года назад +4

      Definitely terrible even worse for 3rd class passengers who were trapped on 3rd class's decks it wasn't human and fair at all just because being poor or not to have money to travel in second class

  • @DC25_MALLETS
    @DC25_MALLETS 2 года назад +5

    So a few innacuracies:
    - The First and second funnel fell to starboard, because of the ease of port list during the final plunge.
    - Multiple survivors account the stern going vertical after the breakup
    - The Final plunge began at 2:15 AM, so the final plunge was actually 5 minutes and not 14.
    - There was no Forward or aft tower collapse in this animation, i mean this model probably doesn't have them seperated so im not fully mad bout this one
    - Account Of George symon's For Example, the ship began to break at around a 15-17 degree angle then commenced a top-cant. In this animation no top cant is shown, but a clean break is shown instead.
    - At 10:11 it is shown that the propeller behind the rudder has 4 blades. In reality, it only had 3 because of images during it's construction showing that.
    Besides that, great animation.

    • @DC25_MALLETS
      @DC25_MALLETS 2 года назад +1

      @Wojciech Bączyński the second funnel collapsing to port is wrong, because of survivor testimony and basic physics it collapsed to starboard. also Thayer was on the starboard side, not the port side. And Boiler Room 2 didnt have an explosion as it would most likely tear the ship apart (ik it did break in half, but a boiler explosion is not why), the actual cause of the sparks is unknown. Also, you're saying that the ship on a 3 degree starboard list (or listing to the right side as you say)
      the funnel, also on an angle that it's slanted towards the starboard side, is gonna collapse to the other side where its not even slanted towards? mate, that breaks the laws of physics. It would collapse to the starboard side because of the starboard list making that funnel slant to the starboard side, not flip over to port. lesson learned: do physics research before an argument.

  • @ciara.eason13
    @ciara.eason13 3 года назад +351

    10:11 is the most disturbing sound to me that I have ever heard. It kinda unnerves me so much that I want to cry. The reason why it makes me want to cry is unexplainable...

    • @haleyelaine4518
      @haleyelaine4518 3 года назад +35

      i skipped ahead thinking it wouldn’t be that bad, but you’re absolutely right it is utterly horrifying

    • @ciara.eason13
      @ciara.eason13 3 года назад +8

      @@mrsponkman it's still terrifying

    • @toothless7849
      @toothless7849 3 года назад +12

      @@mrsponkman what??? You have absolutely no idea wtf you are talking about lmfao

    • @imagaybanana2004
      @imagaybanana2004 3 года назад +27

      @@mrsponkman I’m pretty sure that’s not what it was. The dome is well underwater at this point, and evidently according to Colonel Gracie (sorry I don’t know how to spell his last name), the dome caved in almost as soon as it went underwater. I think it would make more sense for it to be the sound of the water entering the engine room. In the Britannic Real time sinking live stream from a few years ago, Britannic made a very similar sound during her final moments, and Matthew stated that it was water entering the engine room.

    • @tomemeornottomeme1864
      @tomemeornottomeme1864 3 года назад +28

      @@imagaybanana2004 To me it sounds like a major break in the hull, like the superstructure's bending and something just gave out. It's like a really high pitched metallic grinding sound, and we know the breakup was occurring internally long before the visible snap.

  • @dress4villaiins
    @dress4villaiins 3 года назад +188

    Anyone else became obsessed with these ocean liners over the past few months like me?

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 3 года назад +8

      I've been obsessed with them since the mid-1990s, when I found a decade-old National Geographic from 1985 about the discovery of Titanic's wreck. Back then, it was a much harder obsession to feed, since the internet was brand new and there was nothing like RUclips. I checked out so many library books about lost ocean liners back in the day...

    • @dress4villaiins
      @dress4villaiins 3 года назад +1

      @@DamonNomad82 wow! that’s so cool! you’ve been an ocean liner fan since so long, I’m glad to know you!

    • @mjmorriplymouth
      @mjmorriplymouth 2 года назад

      A good book to read is “The Only Way to Cross” by John Maxtone-Graham. Read it over and over as a kid.

    • @KittyKat94
      @KittyKat94 2 года назад

      Same here.
      I used be in high school and here I am curious again.

    • @Yakkymania
      @Yakkymania Год назад

      i’ve been obsessed since around the third grade, i even thought i knew everything about the disaster at one point when i clearly didn’t

  • @xavierbeurre8064
    @xavierbeurre8064 2 года назад +6

    A big thumbs up to the developers. If you compare this version to the first you can see how much work and improvement have been put into it.
    Hoping the game will be ready within the next few years. Anxious to play!

  • @ElrikofM84
    @ElrikofM84 3 года назад +2

    Loud screams in the air and metal bending and vibrating throughout the ocean. An ocean that’s probably a few degrees above freezing. Loud noises and signs of life only a few minutes later to be completely snuffed out like a candle leaving the survivors to the deafening silence as they watch the dark consume what was unsinkable. Left to imagine the enormous boat bringing down 1,500 with it helplessly 13,000 feet into the abyss.