The Sandworm Paradox - Dune

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @Beghast-tv
    @Beghast-tv  Год назад +7113

    Hey! It's an honor to be compared by some of you to a professional studio. We are just two friends who decided to start a RUclips channel about 5 or 6 months ago. One of us writes the script and does the voice recording, while the other one is the editor.
    We had originally created another channel with another essay, featuring just a slideshow of pictures and poor audio quality. It did not perform well, so we decided to study!
    We've delved into a lot of content explaining what makes a successful channel, what makes a good thumbnail, title, etc., which we researched beforehand and tried to apply here.
    Three months ago, we had never opened an editing program, so it took us a while to get used to Adobe Premiere and After Effects. Thankfully, there are countless RUclips channels that make learning possible (SonduckFilm, Ben Marriott, Flat Pack FX, etc.). So, we truly feel blessed to receive comments like yours.
    What we never expected was this level of views on our very first video. It's awesome but also a bit frightening at the same time.
    We appreciate all your constructive criticism about the script, the editing style, and the audio. We are aware that this video is far from perfect, and we'll keep studying and learning to hopefully deliver better content with each upload!
    Thanks again for the incredible support in your comments!

    • @datboi8005
      @datboi8005 Год назад +214

      Common small channel W

    • @ghostof1898
      @ghostof1898 Год назад +65

      Keep at it guys. This is good work.

    • @shamwow9889
      @shamwow9889 Год назад +7

      this video is nothing but filler

    • @tymonantosz7013
      @tymonantosz7013 Год назад +20

      It went like a fine story and I liked it a lot. I havent seen the other video but wathever you did it paid off here.

    • @erictread
      @erictread Год назад +3

      Also the could just evolve some spines.

  • @EphemeralTao
    @EphemeralTao Год назад +11955

    One thing to note about the Dune series (Frank Herbert's original series, not Brian Herbert's stuff), is that there a no alien life forms explicitly described anywhere. All life is the result of human colonization, and originated on Earth. The book consistently describes its more bizarre creatures as the result of genetic engineering, especially in the later books where the Tleilaxu become an important faction.
    However, while it's never stated outright, it's very strongly implied in several places throughout the Dune series that Shai Hulud is, in fact, alien; the only alien life form in the Dune universe. Although not confirmed as alien, it _is_ explicitly stated that Shai Hulud did not originate on Arrakis, but was transplanted there from its native planet by early human colonists, though little description of its home-world is given.
    Later in the series, it is transplanted again to a different planet by the Bene Gesserit (their own stronghold world), in order to maintain their supply of the Spice and, more importantly, the Water of Life.

    • @St.Raptor
      @St.Raptor Год назад +725

      That would make sense as to why they don't just make a new creature that isn't so aggressive. If they didn't make it, it would be hard to replicate. Not to mention it's symbiosis with the microbes.

    • @EphemeralTao
      @EphemeralTao Год назад +1

      ​@@St.Raptor As well as the failure to artificially synthesize the Spice. Around *God Emperor of Dune*, the Tleilaxu are reported to be able to create Spice without sandworms, using their genetic engineering techniques (effectively "cloning" it), but of inferior quality to natural Spice (and poisonous to the sandtrout). They are never able to replicate the Water of Life drug which is so critical to the Bene Gesserit.

    • @metaouroboros6324
      @metaouroboros6324 Год назад +147

      I think Leto II is the one who said what you mentioned.

    • @Monochromicornicopia
      @Monochromicornicopia Год назад +1

      That's definitely not true! You must not have even read the books. The worms are an alien life form that originate from another planet.

    • @Thiccness_Is_Delicious
      @Thiccness_Is_Delicious Год назад +64

      So are they integral to the creation of spice?

  • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
    @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Год назад +4877

    02:40 There are actually legends in Mongolia about sandworms. They aren't as said to be as large as Dune, but maybe 5m long and said to eat humans and livestock. It isn't as widely discussed as most other legends, but it is a legend.
    This legend was first told to a Western audience in 1926 by a Western writer who travelled in Mongolia and talked with locals.

    • @goedendag9446
      @goedendag9446 Год назад +2

      The Mongolian Death Worm was more than likely invented by mistranslation. Further research has shown that it is likely that the locals were talking about real snakes in the region.

    • @stargate525
      @stargate525 Год назад +319

      Jörmungandr is also described as a colossal worm. Giant worms were not Herbert's invention.

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Год назад +165

      ​@stargate525 but also known as the world serpent worm is just another name for it

    • @cloudjumper8868
      @cloudjumper8868 Год назад +56

      Ogloi Chorchoi is it called I believe

    • @jaimeXDgo
      @jaimeXDgo Год назад +114

      That's very interesting. Through study and computers, it's possible to reconstruct some of the oldest known words and proto languages in the human history.
      The protoindoeuropean, who seem to have originated around the area of Mongolia, had a word that meant both serpent and worm, and one of the most relevant protoindoeuropean myths speaks of a big serpent that steal cattle from the people, and ends up defeated by a hero after receiving help from a god. Like in dragon tales.

  • @javierjp8549
    @javierjp8549 8 месяцев назад +475

    Me bringing a topic out in a first date

    • @Arbyjar
      @Arbyjar 7 месяцев назад +14

      I would ask for a second date tbh

    • @ElJorro
      @ElJorro 2 месяца назад +2

      Yep.

    • @markanthony1004
      @markanthony1004 Месяц назад

      I mention Dune references and I realize not as many people have read the novels and that sucks

  • @Czarborough
    @Czarborough Год назад +4337

    The writing, the sheer amount of editing, and delivery of this subject is staggering. Congratulations! Only 1 video and you’re going straight to a million views.

    • @milesdevine1161
      @milesdevine1161 Год назад +22

      It's very impressive. But I bet this guy has plenty of past channels and privated videos to get him to this level of quality. no way its his first video.

    • @charm359
      @charm359 Год назад +31

      @@milesdevine1161I don’t think you read the pinned comment lol

    • @UungRia
      @UungRia 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@milesdevine1161confidently incorrect

    • @doctorale84
      @doctorale84 2 месяца назад +1

      3M now

    • @myrusEW
      @myrusEW 25 дней назад

      the SHEER

  • @brickking1017
    @brickking1017 Год назад +2101

    I love how whenever he's beginning to talk about worms, you see all these realistic movie worms, and then in the background there is eater of worlds from Terraria.
    Edit: timestamp is like 3:06

    • @MAG_agent1337
      @MAG_agent1337 Год назад +5

      timestamp?

    • @retinazer7652
      @retinazer7652 Год назад +50

      the eater of worlds is a good boss, but I’m better

    • @we-must-live
      @we-must-live 11 месяцев назад

      @@retinazer7652 ooh

    • @alexanderrahsaanjackson-al7382
      @alexanderrahsaanjackson-al7382 11 месяцев назад +8

      I noticed that worm as well. Eater of worlds as one of the first bosses the boys and I faced together.

    • @dragon091327
      @dragon091327 10 месяцев назад +5

      And the work robot from armor core 6

  • @johnpaulcross424
    @johnpaulcross424 Год назад +9736

    What is so interesting to me from a biological perspective is how the larva of the sandworm, the sand trout, thrive in watery conditions and absorb vast amounts before undergoing metamorphosis and becoming intolerant to water. For a carbon-based organism of such enormous size to find water anathema to its existence, let alone with the context of its early life, is so fascinating to think about.

    • @Alex.Holland
      @Alex.Holland Год назад +883

      They may not be carbon based at all. They are alien creatures that have an internal furnace operating at extremely high temperature doing strange chemistry for life.

    • @RipOffProductionsLLC
      @RipOffProductionsLLC Год назад +767

      ​@Alex.Holland there's also the possibility that The Great Sandworms were a product of bioengineering, them being a more or less self contained ecosystem that also terraforms whatever world they are placed on into their optimal habitat, while also producing The Spice as a byproduct... certainly seems a bit too convenient for mere coincidence to create via simple darwinian evolution.

    • @johnpaulcross424
      @johnpaulcross424 Год назад +170

      @@theviewbot silica based life would likely function similarly to plants and have next to no means of locomotion

    • @Dell-ol6hb
      @Dell-ol6hb Год назад +560

      @@RipOffProductionsLLC Someone or something definitely purposefully put the worms on Arrakis, the God Emperor Leto II reveals that the sandworms are not even native to Arrakis, and that the planet used to be a lush green world before the worms were introduced and terraformed the planet. This probably means that some civilization engineered these worms and put them on Arrakis to creat a resource world for Spice but whatever civilization that did so is long gone by the time of the series

    • @alexiachimciuc3199
      @alexiachimciuc3199 Год назад +104

      ​@@Dell-ol6hbis there a possibility for Leto II to penetrare and explore the worm's genetic past the same way he penetrates his own human past??

  • @liftswithback4602
    @liftswithback4602 Год назад +1133

    Frank Herbert worked as a journalist and once wrote an article on the effect planting grass near roads in the desert had in preventing dunes from blowing over and obscuring the roads. He said this was a big inspiration for Dune. The stabilizing effect inspired the quote at 23:55. Additionally, he was able to see the desert from aerial perspectives when researching for the article, and it reminded him of a body of water. Sand is interesting

    • @SupremeGreatGrandmaster
      @SupremeGreatGrandmaster Год назад +108

      I don't like sand. It's coarse and rough and irritating and it gets everywhere.

    • @ha-kx9we
      @ha-kx9we Год назад +5

      An insightful reflexion indeed

    • @Billy420-69
      @Billy420-69 Год назад

      Check on your mum@@SupremeGreatGrandmaster

    • @WinterMadness
      @WinterMadness Год назад +14

      ​@@SupremeGreatGrandmasterBeat me to it.

    • @lucyandecember2843
      @lucyandecember2843 Год назад +15

      Reminds me of the desert from Alabasta in one piece. In one episode you have literal sand pirates, as in pirates with boats sailing throughout the desert as if it was a vast ocean. One of my favorite episodes tbh lol

  • @davidjrb
    @davidjrb Год назад +1671

    In Old Norse and Icelandic, the word "ormr" can mean "serpent," "dragon," or "worm." This term often translates to "worm" in English. The word "worm" in old and middle English didn't just refer to earthworms but was also used for serpentine creatures, including dragons. In the context of Norse mythology, creatures like Jörmungandr, the Midgard Serpent, are often referred to as "worms" in the sense of a dragon or a monstrous serpent. This reflects the broader and more flexible usage of the term in historical languages, where the distinction between what we consider today as "worms" and "serpents" or "dragons"

    • @lutze5086
      @lutze5086 Год назад +54

      Agreed, I think the serpent connection was missed. It's a core mythological archetype

    • @steffenbendel6031
      @steffenbendel6031 Год назад +54

      The Lindwurm (wyvern) is a more worm/snake like dragon. The change to more dinosaur type dragon is probably more modern

    • @nidohime6233
      @nidohime6233 Год назад +38

      I think the most raw definition of worm was "long scary thing", anything that was long and scary is a worm/wyrm.

    • @Old-Mango
      @Old-Mango Год назад +23

      what's interesting here that the way frank herberts sandworms exist and have their own circle of life, independent of other life forms, almost looks like the idea of oroboros, the self consuming serpent. much like how jörmungandr circles the earth and is depicted eating its own tail.

    • @RecklessInternetting
      @RecklessInternetting Год назад +16

      Funnily enough, English is close enough in relation to those languages that "worm" is also an old-timey word for dragon.

  • @Syngraphaeor
    @Syngraphaeor Год назад +866

    If you told me today I'd get a video coming across my recommended that had Dune, scientific breakdowns, xenobiology, a couple Magic the Gathering and D&D references, and incredible writing and editing, and I SOMEHOW wasn't already subscribed to the channel that made the video??? I'd call you crazy.
    Tldr, this was an incredible video, guys! Can't wait to see what you do next!!

  • @Nero_Karel
    @Nero_Karel Год назад +378

    Having spent a lot of this past year studying (Indo-European) snake cults, I'm pretty confident in saying that a large carnivorous worm really is no different from a snake/dragon in any resepct that matters, so it's really cool to see you tie all that together from the other end

    • @monhi64
      @monhi64 Год назад +17

      Apart from the invertebrate thing, but if they’re all mystical creatures what’s the difference. Plus octopus exist

    • @gerasimosst8643
      @gerasimosst8643 Год назад +12

      Where and how do you study snake cults?? Not asking for a friend, but for me!

    • @Nero_Karel
      @Nero_Karel Год назад +21

      Just been reading up on it for a Scandinavian studies paper I'm writing - some titles I'd recommend on the topic are:
      - Naga Cults and Traditions in the Western Himalaya by O. C. Handa
      - Der Kult der Hausschlange by Yvonne Luven (this one's about the history of snake cult among the Balts, although it's German language and I doubt there would be a direct translation, but I bet you could find an equally good English language source on the topic)
      - How to Kill a Dragon - Aspects of Indo-European Poetics by Calvert Watkins (this one's focusing more on the primordial battle between the snake and the hero-god rather than snakes as an object of veneration, but it's a pretty great resource for comparative mythology in general)
      - The Mahabharata (not an academic source obviously so interpretation's left up to you, but it contains plenty of interesting stories about snakes and there's a really great English translation by J. A. B. van Buitenen)

    • @gerasimosst8643
      @gerasimosst8643 Год назад +4

      @@Nero_Karel owe you for this- spent last half an hour or so reading what I could find from the ones you suggested and similar ones. Have seen some before, but if you don't organize info properly in your mind you end up seeing it for the first time again every once in a while!
      Good luck on your paper, if you think of more books if it isn't too much trouble please tell me,and know that I'm very interested in reading that Scandinavian studies paper of yours🙂

    • @Nero_Karel
      @Nero_Karel Год назад +3

      @@gerasimosst8643 Glad to hear the info's useful to you! 👍🏻
      My paper will be in German as well, so probably wouldn't be much use in sharing it here when it's done, but I can tell you the main focus of it/that which tethers the whole snake theme to Scandinavian literature more specifically, which is the so-called Niðrstigningar saga (a translation of the Gospel of Nicodemus into Old Icelandic with some very interesting original interpolations, including an echo of Thor's fishing trip in Hymiskviða applied to Jesus Christ.) If that topic interests you, I'd definitely recommend picking up Dario Bullitta's 'Niðrstigningar saga - Sources, Transmission, and Theology of the Old Norse "Descent into Hell"'. Best of luck in pursuit of your own studies and thanks for the kind words!

  • @kamiwriterleonardo6345
    @kamiwriterleonardo6345 Год назад +1274

    Funnily enough, here in Brazil there is a relatively unknown legend of a giant Worm named "Minhocão" (literal translation being "Large Worm") that has two varieties: aquatic worm and sandworm. Both apparently served as legends to explain the relatively rare occurrences of earthquakes and sinkholes, which are very uncommon in Brazil. One lived in large lakes and underground rivers, making the ground cave in, while the other literally swam through dirt and sand. At some point the legend was almost considered a cryptid.

    • @seemysight
      @seemysight Год назад +60

      Brasil mencionado

    • @ALifeOfWine
      @ALifeOfWine Год назад +34

      We have a similar story in the North East of England called the Lambton Worm that came from the river and grew so large it wrapped itself around a hill several times.

    • @ViciousVitiate
      @ViciousVitiate Год назад +11

      This is rad, cool to learn random new things.

    • @mikhailmorphy6284
      @mikhailmorphy6284 Год назад +15

      Nunca ouvi falar disso

    • @elio7610
      @elio7610 Год назад +4

      Any mythological creature is a cryptid, so unless you are saying it is real, it is definitely a cryptid.

  • @isafatcat
    @isafatcat Год назад +517

    that final quote was a fantastic way to end the video, the worms while seeming like a vital part of the ecosystem, are actually what destroyed it. feels like a movie twist that makes me want to watch it all over again!

    • @Gothic7876
      @Gothic7876 Год назад +99

      It is actually implied in Dune that the Sandworms aren’t actually native to Arrakis, but something brought them to Arrakis in the far distant pass.

    • @juliantheassassin
      @juliantheassassin Год назад +9

      I completely agree, I liked the way to end this essay.

    • @diancloete976
      @diancloete976 Год назад +8

      ​@@Gothic7876indeed but presumably the sandworm would have come from a similarly sandy planet and thus that planet is where this theory finds it's merit.

    • @spindash64
      @spindash64 Год назад +26

      Even at the most generous assessment, they cannot be considered a _part_ of the ecosystem if all cycling of nutrients happens within themselves

    • @shimaenaga5656
      @shimaenaga5656 5 месяцев назад +10

      it struck me as an intricated allegory about mankind - how we humans morph our surroundings to better suit our needs, but the better conditions we have, the more we grow in numbers, and the more impact our behaviour makes on the ecosystem globally...

  • @FriedaOberlander
    @FriedaOberlander 10 месяцев назад +24

    that ending monologue paired with the slow zoom out from a tv and haunting classical piano is almost certainly the greatest tribute to the insidious might of Dune's sandworms that I've ever seen. gave me goosebumps, dude. bravo. I cannot wait to see more videos from you!!

  • @coIormebloodred
    @coIormebloodred Год назад +325

    Holy shit, this is phenomenal for a first video. The script, the editing, the voiceover, all professional quality. Love to see new and exciting channels like yours appear on the platform.
    Can't wait to see what you guys do next!

  • @dr.archaeopteryx5512
    @dr.archaeopteryx5512 Год назад +383

    Sandworms are such a fascinating marriage of ancient mythology, horror imagery, modern fantasy monster design philosophies, and scifis science inspired concepts. It's no wonder that Dune so thoroughly entrenched them in the cultural Zeitgeist that they became a staple of fiction.
    It is also pretty funny that the largest real life worms generally thrive in wet and underwater environments. Those may not be sandworms, but they get pretty impressively big, themselves.

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Год назад

      Lineus longissimus, the longest free-living marine worm grows to at least 30 m (possibly 55 m), is carnivorous and covered in toxic mucus.

    • @Monochromicornicopia
      @Monochromicornicopia Год назад +8

      They aren't sand worms. Arakis was originally a water world. The planet was purposefully evaporated to make extraction of spice easier. The worms are only recently adapting to the sand environment

    • @fashionovawigs
      @fashionovawigs Год назад +14

      @@Monochromicornicopiathe sandworms aren’t native to Arakis though

    • @pessien8474
      @pessien8474 4 месяца назад

      Worms are only wet because they need water on their skin to breath, otherwise they'd probably be dry, which strangely implies Sandworms are closer to sharks and tuna, that or the part of their biology that creates spice involves something that produces a lot of energy.

  • @vivaldismurder8779
    @vivaldismurder8779 Год назад +954

    I did not think that this would be your "first" video. Really well made!

    • @Beghast-tv
      @Beghast-tv  Год назад +133

      Thank you! All channels have a first video 🙂

    • @MawGinBoo
      @MawGinBoo Год назад +53

      @@Beghast-tvlmao is this your first channel? This is far better quality than a lot of bigger channels on here

    • @SingingSealRiana
      @SingingSealRiana Год назад +42

      ​@@Beghast-tvyeah, and usually they are disorganised, low audio quality like to be expected if someone starts a craft, this on the other hand appears so be very well practised!

    • @h-bomb2518
      @h-bomb2518 Год назад +9

      Because it's not his first channel lol

    • @akumaking1
      @akumaking1 Год назад +2

      @@Beghast-tvthis is a great video.
      I think you should review the Graboids of Tremors next since after Dune, they’re a very close second when it comes to the Sand Worm theme

  • @asmodiusjones9563
    @asmodiusjones9563 Год назад +592

    13:58 it’s no coincidence that there are many similarities between whales and Shai-hulud. Frank Herbert is from the Pacific Northwest and studied the indigenous cultures here, including those that hunt and worship whales. The Makkah (for example) relationship with whales has many comparisons to the Fremens’ relationship with the worms and directly influenced Herbert.

    • @hermetischism4671
      @hermetischism4671 Год назад +51

      Also any illusions you can make to whales in literature carries with it the power of Moby Dick and its symbolism for a quest of meaning. Much like whales, the worms in Dune carry a substance to be worshipped. As brutal as it is, modern society wouldn't exist without being built atop the oil economy which whales provided before fossil fuels.

    • @Miss_Trillium
      @Miss_Trillium Год назад +6

      Genuinely had no idea he was from the PNW, nice!

    • @ulugbekm.5683
      @ulugbekm.5683 Год назад

      ​@@hermetischism4671Moby Dick... Muad'Dib... I hear certain assonance in these two names

    • @odun5668
      @odun5668 Год назад +4

      Makkah sounds an awful lot like Maker 🫣

    • @ShankarSivarajan
      @ShankarSivarajan Год назад +16

      @@hermetischism4671 That may overstating the importance of whale oil a little. Its uses were more analogous to modern petrochemical derivatives, lubricants, soaps, and the like: useful, certainly, and valuable, but nowhere near indispensable. The industrial revolution on which modern society is based was driven by _coal mining,_ not whaling.

  • @cheesecakedelicious
    @cheesecakedelicious Год назад +57

    I love how you can tell how amazing the original cinematography of the most recent Dune movie is just from random clips, even when it's distorted or lower resolution

  • @888fluffy
    @888fluffy Год назад +144

    Would you still love me if i was a worm?

    • @ro4eva
      @ro4eva 6 месяцев назад +11

      I can't say for certain, but I suspect a fish would find you irresistible.

    • @Snoobert_true_alien
      @Snoobert_true_alien 6 месяцев назад +2

      No

    • @DevelJones
      @DevelJones 6 месяцев назад +7

      Sir, this is a Wendy's.

    • @Justerofus
      @Justerofus 2 месяца назад +1

      The answer is, “yes”. It is always yes. He/she will never be a worm and you can avoid a fight.

  • @olivierbajet8851
    @olivierbajet8851 Год назад +694

    An interesting parallel I have found between Dinosaurs and Sandworms is their complex ecology. Many paleontologist believe that dinosaur ecology (during the Mesozic) was complex, with therapod adolescents serving a different ecological niche then their fully grown adults, similar to how the Sandworms have different ecological niches based on their age.

    • @GilbertGaylord
      @GilbertGaylord Год назад +5

      Eternal mark

    • @sophiem399
      @sophiem399 Год назад +30

      saying this just as fun fact! and not in the “um actually” sort of way, but a better word for what you’re describing would be that they have a more complex “ontogeny”

    • @lucyandecember2843
      @lucyandecember2843 Год назад +1

      o.o

    • @idle_speculation
      @idle_speculation Год назад +15

      T. rex itself had a really interesting life cycle, with adolescents being slender, long-legged runners before they bulked out and became heavyset, bone-crushing animals which probably couldn’t faster than “speed walk”

  • @Gabriel64468
    @Gabriel64468 Год назад +240

    Beautiful ending, "His Dune" contrasting to Baron Harkonnen claiming "My Dessert. My Arrakis. My Dune." - he might benefit from Dune, he can harvest spice but at the end only the Worm owns it.
    Notablythe desertification actually also happens in the later books of the Dune series (Chapterhouse/Heretics) - Sandworms are introduced to another planet and turn it into a desert. It is done on purpose - after all Melange is still incredibly valueable, but it also comes with an impending feeling of doom as the world is slowly remade, orchards offer a last harvest before maintaining them becomes unfeasible, lakes dry up and people have to relocate to get out of the way of the desert. It has something of a force of nature.

  • @rulerofjotunheim3160
    @rulerofjotunheim3160 Год назад +130

    Fun fact, I’ve got a near crippling phobia of worms, regular normal worms. But I think the hypothetical science of a parasite starting it’s own ecosystem is fascinating, so even if I flinched away from the screen about a dozen times, I loved this video!!

    • @david2869
      @david2869 Год назад +2

      You and Fang. Did you swim in a river of snakes?

    • @mr.doctorcaptain1124
      @mr.doctorcaptain1124 Год назад

      You should work on overcoming that one. It’s hard but i started doing that with snakes and spiders, and im very grateful I did.

    • @manicpepsicola3431
      @manicpepsicola3431 Год назад +3

      ​​@@mr.doctorcaptain1124 I used to breed worms in a bucket when I was a kid and they got surprisingly huge. We sold them to fishermen all the time and made a little bit of money off it.
      I started just randomly collecting them and putting them in there and putting food in the dirt and they just multiplied. It was kind of crazy.

    • @kai_maceration
      @kai_maceration Год назад +5

      i feel like endearing knowledge about creatures helps sooth phobias, so here:
      earthworms are one of the most important detritivores for our environment. that means they eat rotting material and waste, some other detritivores are pillbugs, millipedes, roaches, and earwigs.
      personal experience, but whenever i touch a worm it flinches and digs back down away from me, i know they don't experience suffering but i still find it cute.
      some parasitic annelids can also be cute, there's a species of leech that carries its babies on its belly and hunts for prey to feed them. many leeches actually hunt things like earthworms and don't eat blood, or at least not exclusively.

  • @whorlingwisteria
    @whorlingwisteria Год назад +124

    So happy that not only did you research and put together a video *worthy* of views, but that you were also blessed with the views that you deserve, as unexpected as that may have been. Congrats!

  • @joshuaizly5502
    @joshuaizly5502 Год назад +95

    Oh wow, did we all just witness the birth of a high quality youtube channel ? Keep up the good work

  • @althechicken9597
    @althechicken9597 Год назад +64

    I read dune a few years ago, and just got around to watching the movie the other day, I can't describe how happy I was with the way it handled the sand worms. Seeing them felt like a truly spiritual moment

    • @WingItMan217
      @WingItMan217 Год назад +2

      I can’t wait to see how they’re gonna adapt the capital siege at the end. Might even shed a few tears lmao

    • @althechicken9597
      @althechicken9597 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@WingItMan217 it will absolutely be a sight to behold! Part two grows closer every day!

  • @ceruleanmemoir
    @ceruleanmemoir Год назад +209

    As someone who got into the dune world, the thumbnail and title caught my eyes as I was scrolling through the feeds. I honestly thought that you were some of those creators like Lemmino, Aperture. Then I checked your subs and number of videos you have, and I must admit I was blown away by the quality and effort you put into this video. Keep the contents coming.

  • @MrMuel1205
    @MrMuel1205 Год назад +1138

    Great little essay! Very evocative and thought-provoking. Loved the quote at the end.
    Fun fact: humans, whales - all mammals, in fact - fish, reptiles, birds, and amphibians belong to the phylum chordata. The phylum arthropoda includes insects, spiders, scorpions, centipedes, millipedes, crabs, lobsters, prawns and a great deal else. The phylum mollusca includes the likes of slugs, snails, octopodes, and squid.
    As you can see, a single phylum can include a wild variety of different creatures. Just these three phyla - chordata, arthropoda, and mollusca - include the vast majority of animals most people are familiar with. Yet these are just 3 of 35 extant phyla. And of the other 32, fourteen - almost half - are worms.
    That's a LOT of worms.

    • @yourfavoriteneighborhoodni1268
      @yourfavoriteneighborhoodni1268 Год назад +39

      that's crazy.

    • @Timmy_No_Toes
      @Timmy_No_Toes Год назад +35

      That is indeed a LOT of worms! lol

    • @acronyx8880
      @acronyx8880 Год назад +86

      reject animals. become worm.

    • @Kimmie6772
      @Kimmie6772 Год назад +32

      Polychaetes are my favorite type of worm. Mostly because most of them are not parasites and they spice up the morphology a little bit.

    • @NickWD
      @NickWD Год назад +8

      Lot of words to just say there are different types of worms.

  • @MashBro
    @MashBro Год назад +163

    I could seriously learn a thing or two about editing from you, man. The grind has been absolutely crazy trying to do it all on my own.

  • @WavyCats
    @WavyCats Год назад +141

    If the sandworm injects air into the ground, it would make the solid sand behave like a very low viscosity fluid.

    • @alexisb3829
      @alexisb3829 8 месяцев назад +3

      I think that’s what it does

    • @tardigrademicro
      @tardigrademicro 6 месяцев назад +5

      it burps and does a little wiggle and a meal is secured

  • @CharliMorganMusic
    @CharliMorganMusic Год назад +45

    Every once in a while, the RUclips algorithm shows me something that I would've never found on my own and I love it. This is one of those times. Please continue making videos. I loved this.

  • @jimmygarza8896
    @jimmygarza8896 Год назад +24

    "[It] does not covet, it simply consumes" is such a raw line. Hollywood wishes it could write something like that

  • @parmflace
    @parmflace Год назад +83

    I just love how you guys gather sources for the script and the footage from all kinds of media; book, comics and manga, movies, documentaries, video game, tabletop games, even tcg (which is very rare in video essays genre). uugh, i love this so much, it just feeds my geeky brain even more. keep up the amazing jobs, pls dont feel pressured to do so. Hope the algo notices you guys so this channel get to grow even more.

  • @lees8359
    @lees8359 Год назад +30

    I love how at the end "His dune" is delivered similarly like Stellan Skarsgård did in Dune 2021 saying "My dune!", intentional or not the delivery it's great. Great video overall, can't believe a 1st video on a channel can be as good as this is, I wish you well on your journey!

  • @TheBaseUK
    @TheBaseUK Год назад +88

    The visual aesthetic alone of this video is of a quality surpassing 90% of all creators on youtube, let alone the narrative content of this video essay. Glad it popped up in my feed! Subbed my dude x

  • @clvrcookie
    @clvrcookie Год назад +242

    16:01 The biggest challenge faced by an earthworm the size of Dune's sandworm wouldn't so much be the weight of its skeleton (as annelids are devoid of one, be it an endo- or exoskeleton). Instead, such a worm would be unable to absorb enough oxygen through its skin to sustain its sheer bulk. The larger the worm, the lower its surface area to volume ratio and the less efficient its respiratory system.

    • @seanmadson8524
      @seanmadson8524 Год назад +38

      If the sandworms started their evolution toward this current physiology deep underground, perhaps they have adapted to create their own method of breathing, or have replaced the need entirely (not the need of their cells, just the need for recognizable respiration).
      For instance, they could gain all necessary sustenance from chemical reactions, creating whatever they need to survive within their own body after ingesting &/or coming into contact with certain minerals or biological materials. Since they are supposedly somewhat plant-like, they could even have unique cell structures that aid in their unique method of/replacement of respiration

    • @clvrcookie
      @clvrcookie Год назад +21

      @@seanmadson8524 I like to assume a few basic concepts when speculating about fictional lifeforms: 1) they're carbon based (the only other element versatile enough to permit significant biodiversification being silicon), 2) they require oxygen in some form for energy production (plants also need oxygen and are capable of cellular respiration btw), 3) they require water or hydrocarbons to operate their cellular machinery.
      Such assumptions limit the scope of my imagination somewhat, but help me elaborate more realistic explanations for a fictional organism's existence and evolutionary history. In my opinion, if Dune is more fantasy than science fiction, then the Sandworm doesn't need a scientifically (using the term loosely here) credible explanation. Go nuts! However, if Dune is more science fiction then fantasy, then the assumptions I laid down ought to be respected. The point of this reply? To make you think I guess

    • @seanmadson8524
      @seanmadson8524 Год назад +34

      @@clvrcookie I would say that Dune is more on the fantasy side. It gets a lot of hype for being more serious sci-fi than a lot of other mainstream examples, but that doesn't make it realistic in physical terms.
      I still appreciate complex logic in fantastic settings, but from the killing words, to the spice, to the worms themselves, Dune is not a great example of explaining high-brow science or biology when compared to books like Omnivore

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Год назад +6

      @@clvrcookie Try understand what Crassulaceae plants are doing here on earth: They collect solar energy during the day, but exchange gases only at night. This minimizes evaporation losses in arid locations. I hope this doesn't conflict with your speculative limits.

    • @clvrcookie
      @clvrcookie Год назад +1

      @@eljanrimsa5843 not at all. CAM photosynthesis is just the kind of adaptation that sparks my creativity when speculating about the alien life that (definitely) lies beyond Earth. Same for fictional lifeforms

  • @MiniEquine
    @MiniEquine Год назад +99

    I was a bit shocked to find this was your only video (so far!). You don't typically see quality like this until years of channel growth. I'm looking forward to seeing what else you have in store!

  • @jgobroho
    @jgobroho Год назад +215

    I'm not sure how you managed to get this onto my feed but bravo dude. I'm subscribed now. Hopefully to see more stuff from you.

    • @somewhereupthere785
      @somewhereupthere785 Год назад +12

      I subbed less than half way through. God I hope he makes more.

    • @Beghast-tv
      @Beghast-tv  Год назад +31

      Thanks!! We are already working on our next video!

  • @ramos4461
    @ramos4461 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have never been so impressed by a documentary, but the way you cut and animated and edited this video is insane man. Astounding work, you have my respect

  • @crunchy_piano
    @crunchy_piano 11 месяцев назад +4

    This entire video is literally so amazing. Every single aspect, the writing, the editing, the quality, the execution. The end hit me like a f***ing truck, honestly. Thank you so much for diving into every topic to be able to explain what the sandworm is, was supposed to be, and can be.

  • @brandenrodriguez7381
    @brandenrodriguez7381 Год назад +97

    3:09 I like how you put The Eater of Worlds with the more "realistic" worms

  • @I_ExistIG
    @I_ExistIG Год назад +30

    Another comment already said basically the same thing but this is an incredibly well made video and it’s honestly staggering that this is the channel first video. Very well written, very well edited, and overall a well thought out and well executed project from start to finish. Genuinely excited to see where this channel goes. Keep up the good work

  • @ErinKocka-u8e
    @ErinKocka-u8e Год назад +20

    I can't believe this is your first video!! The production quality is better than a lot of long time channels and you did such a deep dive in an interesting way! Looking forward to more videos!!

  • @harshsingh8956
    @harshsingh8956 Месяц назад +17

    0:14 elephant. I thought of elephant.

  • @DDR131
    @DDR131 5 месяцев назад +1

    This video feels like a great short film. One of things I loved about this video is it stayed in the same rhythm, and not trying to be more upbeat or excessive entertaining. It felt like a masterpiece of a video.

  • @duffman18
    @duffman18 Год назад +28

    You got yourself a sub, man. It's like you've been making videos for years, I don't think I've ever seen a first video by someone be of such high quality as this, it's pretty damn amazing.

  • @dangersnail5839
    @dangersnail5839 Год назад +50

    Great job dude, you’re making content I would’ve expect from a channel with hundreds of thousands of subscribers.
    You clearly know what you’re doing, you deserve far more than what you have.

  • @Murci3l4go
    @Murci3l4go Год назад +24

    Multi-million subscriber level of editing and I can’t wait to see more from this channel

  • @serpentious
    @serpentious 8 месяцев назад +2

    I got chills at the end. The idea and concept spoken about here could lead to a great parallel to Leto II. I am become worm destroyer and sustainer of life.

  • @Nkwenkl18
    @Nkwenkl18 Год назад +9

    What a well formulated and extensive analysis of Dune’s exobiology and general framework. I very much look forward to watching more of y’all’s work come to fruition on this channel.

  • @nateleavy5189
    @nateleavy5189 Год назад +8

    Three editing on this video is genuinely outstanding. Excellent job. I don’t have sufficient positive adjectives to describe how impressive this is.

  • @the7569
    @the7569 Год назад +5

    The fact that this is your first RUclips video is crazy lol, really glad that this guy picked up by the algorithm. Really excited to see what else you make

  • @somewhereupthere785
    @somewhereupthere785 Год назад +6

    I absolutely love the style of this video. Subbed, love it.

  • @fishdish9835
    @fishdish9835 Год назад +41

    What a great way of describing of sand worms. I applaud you. Instant subscription!

  • @martefala
    @martefala 9 месяцев назад +1

    Are you a biologist by any chance? I am a student of biology and the way you speak shows that you either are one or that you have WAAAAY too good of an understanding of zoology, ecology and evolution. Not missing a word, giving plausible arguments, everything. This would be a dream come true to my professor if i ever wrote a research paper this eloquently lol. Amazing video, I'm truly at awe.

  • @FaunoAtelie
    @FaunoAtelie Год назад +16

    Great video! To Herbert's credit, it is mentioned by leto II in god emperor of dune that the sandworms were somehow introduced to Arrakis in the past, so they quite possibly aren't an entirely natural denizen of the planet. It's also possible that they were from a similar one, or created specifically to adapt in that environment

    • @JorntWagenaar
      @JorntWagenaar Год назад +5

      I forgot that. You're right. I was thinking how they could have possibly been transplanted as pre - spice creating creatures when without the spice there is no faster than light space travel.

    • @airking2883
      @airking2883 Год назад +8

      @@JorntWagenaar well that is not true at at all in dune, FTL existed before the spice was found by the spacing guild since thinking machine did the work of guild navigator before .It is only after the Butlerian jihad and ousting of all thinking machine that spice became a necessity for FTL.

    • @JorntWagenaar
      @JorntWagenaar Год назад +1

      @@airking2883 So spice would have been a known substance at the time of the Butlerian Jihad, then?

    • @airking2883
      @airking2883 Год назад +5

      @@JorntWagenaar no it was after the Butlerian jihad that spice was discovered,spice itself is not a requirement for FTL travel and between the time period of the jihad and spice ,space travel was incredibly dangerous but possible

    • @FaunoAtelie
      @FaunoAtelie Год назад +1

      @@JorntWagenaar It's possible, the implication of Leto's quote was that something, or someone introduced the worms to Arrakis, perhaps something from before the imperium

  • @kapitankapital6580
    @kapitankapital6580 Год назад +29

    On the topic of the legendary status of worms, I think it is worth remembering that until relatively recently worms were actually considered a type of snake. So technically I think we would consider dragons, sea serpents and so on as types of legendary worm-monsters.

    • @sergeantsharkseant
      @sergeantsharkseant 11 месяцев назад

      worm and Wyrm have the same Germanic name origin in German Wyrms are called Lindwurm, Wuem being the word for Wurm, it stems from the Crawling locomotions many all small earth dwelling crawling Animals are still often called "Gewürm" Snakes less in that matter but as you said the word for Snake/serpent: Schlange also stems from the slithering movement. Nowadays people often focus on Monophylistic groups dependend on DNA etc. but back in the Day Morphology was the most important factor and on first sight snakes are just Big Worms, the whole idea of Evolution or their completely different body plans didnt exist, later whith more advanced studies, microscopes and of course evolution snakes and worms were seperated for the firsst time, though we still have many polyphylistic names such as Worm as there are many worms and not all of them are related, not all what we call mushrooms are mushrooms vegetables and fruits are completely useless definitions in a Biological sense etc.
      but for all that actually matters, Snakes are Worms and Worms are Snakes

  • @cavemandanwilder5597
    @cavemandanwilder5597 Год назад +4

    This is your first video?! Very impressive. I’m excited to get in on the ground floor with this channel. Can’t wait to see what’s next!

  • @spasjt
    @spasjt 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have to say, I'm two-thirds into this video and it is most excellent in its presentation, narration, and facts. Very well done!

  • @asmodewa
    @asmodewa Год назад +2

    I watched the video thinking it's from a well established channel and my surprise was immense. I can't believe this is your first video. Great job!

  • @christiandnl
    @christiandnl Год назад +4

    This is such an excellent video. Best of luck. 28th subscriber, but definitely one of many to come.

  • @brendanharris3997
    @brendanharris3997 Год назад +4

    Jeez, the production on this is amazing. Cant wait to see more form you!

  • @con_boy
    @con_boy Год назад +12

    I'd always assumed that the Worm occupied all the nieches of the entire eco system on Arrakis - that of both prey and predator - depending on the stage of its development, and that the spice was actually just a prelarval sporulated stage of the worms development, a sort of fungus as it were, that also served as food

  • @kristynclare7453
    @kristynclare7453 8 месяцев назад +1

    This was so thought provoking and artfully created! Really good job keep making content!!!

  • @andyhaochizhang
    @andyhaochizhang 11 месяцев назад +259

    Where's the paradox? I watched the whole video to make sure I didn't miss anything but it's just descriptions and surface level discussions about fictional worm like creatures. What is paradoxical about sandworms? The argument that sandworms (or giant worms in general) can't be part of the ecosystem isn't convincingly presented, and the scenario the ending quotes where sandworms didn't participate in an earth like ecosystem (let's ignore how implausible this setting is) but later became a fundamental part of a new ecosystem does not present a paradox.

    • @DoctorPhilGud
      @DoctorPhilGud 9 месяцев назад +24

      Could be an ai written script? I dont know either

    • @Weed.eater_
      @Weed.eater_ 9 месяцев назад +67

      I think u gotta accept its jus a bad title

    • @kazukid8027
      @kazukid8027 9 месяцев назад +83

      Think it’s about how sand worms themselves can only survive off of other younger sandworms. Paradoxically making them the top and bottom of the food chain.

    • @DoctorPhilGud
      @DoctorPhilGud 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@Weed.eater_ this is also very plausable

    • @diogofs25
      @diogofs25 9 месяцев назад +27

      It's called bait... worm bait

  • @thechickenwizard8172
    @thechickenwizard8172 Год назад +4

    23:33 That last section left me in chills, can't believe nobody else here's talking about it

  • @thedabblingwarlock
    @thedabblingwarlock Год назад +11

    You may want to look into the Mongolian Death Worm. If memory serves, it was one of the things that inspired the Purple Worm in D&D.

  • @mosslingwilkin4134
    @mosslingwilkin4134 Год назад +14

    I was starting to annoyed by being recommended vids with low view counts, but every now and then, there is a diamond in the rough. This video is a diamond, its given me alot to think about when writing creatures and our own fictional history involving worms as a whole. Thank you sir, you have made something wonderful here.

    • @bigdaddydons6241
      @bigdaddydons6241 Год назад +5

      Nah, low view counts can give you someone who REALLY cares about their content. Not the numbers. Not always but it's worth checking for

    • @mosslingwilkin4134
      @mosslingwilkin4134 Год назад

      @@bigdaddydons6241 Alot of the more recent ones ive been getting are random 20s clips of games but its worth those if vids like this show up every now and then.

  • @flaco196
    @flaco196 Год назад +2

    Fantastic to see this video hit at least a million. Have shown it to many people, and am greatly looking forward to your future work

  • @123890antonioj
    @123890antonioj 8 месяцев назад

    I love how the cherry on top of this masterful essay is the lesson that, even at the grandest of scales, something can still be 'both'.

  • @levizinck3139
    @levizinck3139 Год назад +29

    I believe there was a myth in Mongolia about some kind of death worm. Also, fantastic video. The Dune saga very quickly became my favorite series and I hold a lot of love for all of what Herbert created.

    • @erickarnell
      @erickarnell Год назад +2

      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_death_worm

  • @rexrivers226
    @rexrivers226 Год назад +4

    Finally a channel that has the wherewithal to make exclusively worm content

  • @raylordofkhalah28
    @raylordofkhalah28 Год назад +6

    This video was beautiful. Gorgeous. Stunning. I adored every moment and you kept my attention the entire time, on top of making me ponder and think even as you spoke. I loved this, and I cannot wait for more. As a fan of dnd, mtg, and star wars, with a father who was such a huge fan of Dune that I picked it up through simple generational osmosis, thank you.

  • @alanrosete3855
    @alanrosete3855 Год назад +2

    I thought the magic gathering bit was an ad then realized this is the first video of the channel lol it's too fxcking good

  • @nikodominiko
    @nikodominiko Год назад +2

    Videos like yours, it's the reason RUclips is my favorite platform for entertainment and learning

  • @SHENRAR
    @SHENRAR Год назад +32

    wonderful video! Reading the first book of the series, as a biologist, is an amazing experience, all the thought and ingenuity Herbert put into Arrakis as an ecosystem is breathtaking. Of course it has its limitations being a fictional world, but the ecological point of view of Liet-Kynes is fascinating. Sadly, it was hard for me to enjoy the rest of the series as much... but the first one... what a masterpiece of literature.

    • @angrymurloc7626
      @angrymurloc7626 Год назад +3

      I think it's one of the weaknesses of scifi audiences, to always overestimate the necessity and value of continuations. Herbert would not have needed to write another book after the first

    • @gwfranklin1
      @gwfranklin1 Год назад

      Agreed. The first book was so amazing. Started the 2nd and...well, I couldnt finish it

    • @SHENRAR
      @SHENRAR Год назад +5

      @@gwfranklin1 I did finish the whole saga, but I wouldn't recommend them to anyone, I would say to read the first one and stop there unless you are very invested. But the first one is just so good, I still daydream about the book.

    • @abelhapedras
      @abelhapedras Год назад +2

      ditto! the first one is the best by far. after that things start to degenerate into a crazy mess of questionable choices and questionable characters with questionable morals, and a huge gigantic focus on (spoilers but not really) Duncan being a massive sex icon. BORING!

    • @SHENRAR
      @SHENRAR Год назад +2

      @@abelhapedras I find that he had great ideas on world building (Letto, the golden path, the gholas, the focus on bene Gesserit, etc) but the stories surrounding these, were not good enough.

  • @fd_god4533
    @fd_god4533 Год назад +7

    This is amazing, 26 minutes flew like a second 😂

  • @nicholasmorgani570
    @nicholasmorgani570 Год назад +9

    Depending on the density of sand and how similarly it functions to fluid as well as if the worms are less dense, the sand could actually act with the same buoyancy properties as water. This could in theory decreases the relative weight (the same way water does for whales) of the worms, allowing it to grow to much larger sizes.

  • @theemeraldespeon8984
    @theemeraldespeon8984 9 месяцев назад +1

    No way this guy just casually dropped the hardest intro i've ever seen.

  • @aburlingham0915
    @aburlingham0915 9 месяцев назад +1

    The editing is really fantastic. Engaging and creative while not being distracting. I've watched your other two vidoes already and they were great, as well. I subscribed and am looking forward to seeing more!

  • @michaelf7093
    @michaelf7093 9 месяцев назад +4

    "Far, far below the deepest delving of the Dwarves, the world is gnawed by nameless things. Even Sauron knows them not. They are older than he. Now I have walked there, but I will bring no report to darken the light of day." -Gandalf

  • @tim..indeed
    @tim..indeed Год назад +8

    The relationship with the Fremen is not symbiotic, more parasitic. The animals do clearly not want to be ridden.

  • @SingingSealRiana
    @SingingSealRiana Год назад +5

    This is an amazing analysis!!!
    Thanks a lot for sharing this with us, it was a great pleasure to listen to your thoughts on this topic!

  • @Max-pi7ri
    @Max-pi7ri 10 месяцев назад +1

    This channel randomly got recommended to me and I was not expecting it to be this good!

  • @seannewell397
    @seannewell397 9 месяцев назад +1

    "Over here sand blows, over there sand blows. Over there a rich man waits, over here I wait."
    ―The Voice of Shai-Hulud, from the Oral History

  • @DisisSid001
    @DisisSid001 Год назад +6

    Well the best gifts really do come in small packagings! Great video man, I really appreciate this level of content that too for such a small channel. You have my support ❤

  • @KingShado69
    @KingShado69 Год назад +43

    0:04 wrong, the largest animal I can think of is your mother.

    • @nonbinaryjimin
      @nonbinaryjimin 4 месяца назад +2

      unnecessary comma ruining the comedic affect of ur comment

    • @KingShado69
      @KingShado69 4 месяца назад

      @@nonbinaryjimin there u go fam.

    • @nonbinaryjimin
      @nonbinaryjimin 4 месяца назад

      @@KingShado69 thanks bro

    • @KingShado69
      @KingShado69 4 месяца назад

      @@nonbinaryjimin yw!

  • @SuperMrHiggins
    @SuperMrHiggins Год назад +6

    There was an episode of Goosebumps, the TV show. Probably based on one of the books but I never read that one. About this kid who loved worms and wound up disappearing at the end after finding a giant worm underground. It was the only episode or book of that series that actually freaked me out.

  • @velmee
    @velmee 8 месяцев назад

    This is one of the most mesmerizing and well-made videos I have ever witnessed on RUclips! Thank you for your great work!

  • @void.2.0.1
    @void.2.0.1 Год назад

    my dudes casually posted a cinematic piece. i liked the narration style a lot, chills me out. fascinating work.

  • @noahtodras
    @noahtodras Год назад +6

    Well done. This belongs in the big leagues.

  • @connorlake1439
    @connorlake1439 Год назад +8

    the worms are not only key to the environment of arrakis, they are the reason arrakis is the way it is.

    • @Worldbuilder
      @Worldbuilder Год назад

      Indeed, that’s one of the very points of Chapterhouse Dune.

  • @kasperhauser4748
    @kasperhauser4748 Год назад +27

    The thing is, while lifting a kilogramm of water and lifting a kilogramm of sand is physically comparable, you cant compare swimming in water vs "swimming" in sand. The amount of force/energy needeed for a sandworm of dune to move as fast as it does would be insane.

    • @khora3845
      @khora3845 10 месяцев назад +6

      Not necessarily, as the production of oxygen by the sandworm would increase the viscosity of the sand, reducing the force needed

    • @buttersticks7877
      @buttersticks7877 9 месяцев назад +9

      i believe the way that the movie had the worms work is that they emit an extremely low-frequency sound at a very high volume, which vibrates the sand around their body. this, in combination with the oxygen they emit from their bodies, essentially turns the sand into a fluid around them.

    • @99baking
      @99baking 7 месяцев назад +3

      Aerated/vibrating sand actually shares a lot of physical properties with liquid water

  • @althechicken9597
    @althechicken9597 11 месяцев назад +1

    These guys know how to make an incredibly cinematic video.
    Ive watched this twice now and im sure ill be back again. im fascinated with stories that have monsters and mega-fauna as a core part of the world/story, like Dune, The Stormlight Archive, Jaws, and Jurassic Park, and like to really figure out what makes them tick.
    This video does a wonderful job of really getting into what does it for Dunes makers, and they are one of the best.

  • @simraftw3372
    @simraftw3372 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so MUCH for this amazing video! I got into Dune a few months back and I'm on the 4th book now.
    This video captivated me from beginning to end as I find the whole work of Dune fascinating so far.
    It scratched an itch in my brain that's only getting larger.

  • @Ramonerdna
    @Ramonerdna Год назад +13

    Thought you'd compare them to the Bobbit Worm, which live in sand, grow large (10 feet long) and are sometimes just as terrifying as the sand worms of Dune

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy 9 месяцев назад

      10 feet isn't nearly as terrifying as something 400 meters to a kilometer long. Have you been smoking the Spice again?

  • @FiReOaNdDeMoS2121
    @FiReOaNdDeMoS2121 Год назад +5

    Kudos to you sir, got me watching this an hour before my last exam 😂

  • @ravenm.4301
    @ravenm.4301 Год назад +7

    How do you like a video twice??? Script, production, editing, subject, pacing, all so incredibly fluid that it feels like an art documentary or a large funded channel. Stellar work; cant wait to see this blow up.

  • @xephy3170
    @xephy3170 Год назад +2

    Both your skills are excellent. The editing was superb and the pacing of your dialogue and tone are magnificent. Easily comparable to other such channels. I believe I speak for many here that we are honored to be at the beginning of what appears to be an excellent source of such commentary.

  • @chronosanity
    @chronosanity 9 месяцев назад

    Incredible video! Building the narrative about the sandworms of Dune in contrast to their interpretation in the rest of culture and storytelling, and then subverting it at the end with the Pardot Kynes quote was fantastic. I came expecting an encylopedic description of sandworms and instead watched a masterclass in creative storytelling!