@@The-Core-of-Time-and-Space That's what he's doing. The whole reaction he's watching in 1.25x speed. Anyone who's actually seen the original video first would instantly notice lol
I think the reason Regulus came back is because he probably realised he's not getting the statues, since it was too late + he failed and got captured, so he went to restore his pride and become a hero so that the Romans started respecting him again. His ego is what killed him.
@@lamontagna9036 And what Romans disliked more than just losers, it's incompetent losers (proven by the nickname "Asina" given to the consul that f*ed up so badly during the 1st Punic war).
Actually, back then, it is REALLY frowned upon and not taken lightly to break a promise. Since Regulus actually went back and kept his word that he returns to get tortured to death, it shows how committed they are to keeping their promise. That is why they built the statues, because he was a sign of virtue for it.
Yes and no on the "baby bit of water"; the straight of Messina is narrow, yes, but its also probably the most dangerous stretch of water in the entire Mediterranean.
@@enigmagrieshaber5555 The currents. The shape of the coastline creates weird eddies, riptides, and whirlpools at odd times. Also the surrounding shoreline generates oddly angled and powerful winds. And I'm pretty sure the sea-floor is uneven and covered in big rocks, so it's like navigating a reef. There's a reason ancient authors who tried to map myths to the Mediterranean put the monsters Scylla and Charybdis on either side of that straight.
You may call Marcus a moron, I call it a true sigma gigachad. I bet his jawline was so sharp it could be used as a weapon. What an absolute chad he was, he sacrified himself to boost the morale of his people and in the same time he even show to the world how virtuous a roman was supposed to be. No wonder he became an important historical figure despite failing the invasion.
"Name one country that has a completely clean history." The Principality of Sealand? Sure, it's not recognized by the UN due to it literally being an oil rig in the north Atlantic with a population of 5 whole people, but still!
A talent is a unit of weight measurement used in ancient times and is about 62.5lbs. So 2,200 talents of silver would be 68.75 *tons* of the stuff, and 3,200 would be almost 100 tons!!
Yea I will cut you some slack it’s the first time you watch the video and if I where you my mind wouldn’t of even thought of it being slightly faster then it’s ment to be
@@MorePatterrz I was watching this on 2x speed like I always do when I watch yt and I didn't even realize that the original video itself was sped up. So yeah, if it was still extremely ez for me to understand while on 2x speed, it's only natural you wouldn't realize it either on 1.25
Just a correction that Oversimplified made: romans had already fought against elephants early on, when they had to take the south peninsula and the king of it used elephants to defend his country.
True, but I imagine not all soldiers were prepared or even knowledgeable of elephants, only from stories told by veterans. After all, many of those who survived one battle would die in a later one.
One tiny thing that Oversimplified didn't say in his videos, Rome wasn't entirely on the idea to invade Sicily also because the Mamertines stole Messana from their rightful owners. But their desire to get glory through war won in the end.
Oh!...and for Regulus , yes he go back , he was the first general that surrender with this way , and cause of him and how he want to stay loyal to hes words , the romans establish that at the army soldiers and general thats why we today know the famous "strengh and honor"
It's actually believed the "dragon" the Romans encountered was a Nile Crocodile. 🐊 Which must have looked like a dragon to people who had never left Italy.
Most Feared Individuals (from Rome's Perspective) -Hannibal Barca -Vercingetorix -Mithridates of Pontus -Spartacus Hannibal tops this list because even after his defeat and exile in the Second Punic War, Rome hunted him all the way to Asia Minor to ensure his existence was terminated
36:54 It`s less about being resolved Rather it`s because the lifes of their citizens were worth nothing to the senate So as long as there were enough expendable man around, they would easily throw them at the enemy no problem ^
This dynamic of reward being better than punishment is a good reason why decimation died out in roman legions Decimation : a punishment given to cohorts that bring shame to rome every 10 th person is beaten ti death by the other 9tenths
Doing the right thing (keeping a promise) is worth dying. If you do not believe this you are responsible for all of the evils of this world. DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE.
Oh, I get what NordVPN is doing. They’re sponsoring channels that have a lot of reaction videos tied to them so they can get some free advertising on the side.
On the note of mercenaries having loyalty issues or no connection to the homeland: 1526 AD, Mohács, in the Kingdom of Hungary. After the invading Ottoman Empire utterly annihilated the still medieval-structured Hungarian army, the German mercenaries with their then-modern pike and shot square formations held the battlefield for an hour and half more with no quarter given, and collapsed only once bombarded by cannons. The thing about mercenaries and mercenary contracts is that the employers always tried to prevent them from ditching out midway, and the mercenary companies also were dependant on a good track record, because otherwise nobody would hire them as their reputation fell. Often times payment was also divided so that they only got fully paid AFTER the battle. Thus it became in their interest to stay the whole shtick.
There was no such thing as a nation on earth, that didn’t do slavery, and to be fair to the Roman’s, given the nature of the time, it wasn’t wrong that others would attack them first if they didn’t. It may seem overly aggressive to our modern sensibilities, but back then, like it or not, it was kill or be killed.
It is pretty interesting to me that carthage had a more modern view on war. If the costs heavily outweighed the potential benefits then it is peace time. Normally a good idea, but if you fight a group with an all or nothing mindset, you are in big trouble.
It was just dogs romans had a issue with dogs as one time a gaurd dog didnt wake them up when they got a suprise seige done against them so they began a tradition of punishing dogs for it
Yeah campaigning back then wasn't very simple, but it wasn't all that bad. Some people would campaign continuously until they grew in popularity, others would be sponsored by well known generals and politicians and such, or would already be popular as successful maritime generals and such! Mostly the latter 2, as the consuls were chosen by a set assembly, and being popular with the common folk wasn't as important as it would be later on.
Carthage just happened to have the same borders, the same people, language, and traditions as the Atlantian empire in the same location as the Atlantian empire. Pity we can't find Atlantis. ...in the exact places all the early historians said it was, who's landscapes and founders are all still named for king Atlas to this day. But we can't find it. It didn't go anywhere. The Atlas mountains. The Atlas wastelands. The richot structure "eye of Africa" in the exact place and shape as the capitol city of Atlantis, which also happened to be called the eye of Africa, and who's local nations all name king Atlas as their founder. Such a pity we can't figure out where it was. ...right there. Right where we were told it was where they still straight up tell you used to be Atlantis. ...but we can't find it. Funny how that works.
Afaik rome could take sardinia and corsica because carthage didnt pay its mercenaries stationed there. Those declared independence and rome conquered the new Island realm.
San Marino has a clean history. The only dirty thing nis they became facists that one time but the most noteable thing they did as fascists was build railroads.
Know all about that went the merc route myself after my time in the military. Now I can make the kind of $$ I made in a year doing one single job. Though I tend to be a little bit more loyal to the current employer at the time than they were.
I will do you one better Pat. I can name a continent that didnt have genocide or anything bad happen on it. Antartica. Now I shall pretend that I am smort and funny just like the rest of youtube comments.
Hearing this at 1.25x speed sounds so weird lmao
why would you listen at it in 1.25x in the first place
@@The-Core-of-Time-and-Space That's what he's doing. The whole reaction he's watching in 1.25x speed. Anyone who's actually seen the original video first would instantly notice lol
@@Kuddochan oh that why its kinda weird,
Use 0.75x speed that will fix it
@@The_D.Jllama It actually doesn't because 1.25 x 0.75 = 0.9375, not 1. And you can clearly tell it's slowed down instead if you do that
I think the reason Regulus came back is because he probably realised he's not getting the statues, since it was too late + he failed and got captured, so he went to restore his pride and become a hero so that the Romans started respecting him again. His ego is what killed him.
He would be in sjame for the rest of his life, Romans disrespected losers
@@lamontagna9036 And what Romans disliked more than just losers, it's incompetent losers (proven by the nickname "Asina" given to the consul that f*ed up so badly during the 1st Punic war).
Actually, back then, it is REALLY frowned upon and not taken lightly to break a promise. Since Regulus actually went back and kept his word that he returns to get tortured to death, it shows how committed they are to keeping their promise. That is why they built the statues, because he was a sign of virtue for it.
Yes and no on the "baby bit of water"; the straight of Messina is narrow, yes, but its also probably the most dangerous stretch of water in the entire Mediterranean.
Something to do with current or Carthage putting more forces to patrol the strait?
@@enigmagrieshaber5555 The currents. The shape of the coastline creates weird eddies, riptides, and whirlpools at odd times. Also the surrounding shoreline generates oddly angled and powerful winds. And I'm pretty sure the sea-floor is uneven and covered in big rocks, so it's like navigating a reef.
There's a reason ancient authors who tried to map myths to the Mediterranean put the monsters Scylla and Charybdis on either side of that straight.
@@owenweatherbie9938 I see that makes sense NGL
Thanks for the information
Oversimplified and pat have such similar senses of humor. I never thought about it, but it is true.
ACE PRIDE
@@andrewwest78 thank you! I appreciate it!
@@asexualidiot1022drumset pride
@@andrewwest78 :D
35:20 No amount of calling him a moron will change the fact he got his naked statues
I swear to fucking god,he looked at this video with 1.25 speed
i did by accident LOL I didn't even realise
@@MorePatterrz Well that explains why it sounded so weird
I realised that as well
Put it at .75 speed it fixes the oversimplified video and just makes pat sound a little bit drunk
@@bathamsteryt thanks for the tip
I love oversimplified very easy to learn one of the best channels
My man Regulus kept his word. What a Chad.
The only way to get a naked statue after a defeat like that.
I never thought I needed this video, but now I feel like my life had been completed
You may call Marcus a moron, I call it a true sigma gigachad. I bet his jawline was so sharp it could be used as a weapon. What an absolute chad he was, he sacrified himself to boost the morale of his people and in the same time he even show to the world how virtuous a roman was supposed to be. No wonder he became an important historical figure despite failing the invasion.
Quick note: Saturn eating his kids was a mythology thing, Saturn was the roman version of Kronos
"Name one country that has a completely clean history."
The Principality of Sealand? Sure, it's not recognized by the UN due to it literally being an oil rig in the north Atlantic with a population of 5 whole people, but still!
Wait, didn't they get an minor incident?
Liechenstein?
Patterrz: “you could use the survivors for making wine and stuff!”
… what do you think slaves are for?
that's what i thought xD
A talent is a unit of weight measurement used in ancient times and is about 62.5lbs. So 2,200 talents of silver would be 68.75 *tons* of the stuff, and 3,200 would be almost 100 tons!!
I’ve watched this video on oversimplified and it’s weird hearing it a little faster because the speed on the video is faster
MY BAD MY BRAIN IS BROKEN I DIDN'T EVEN REALISE
Yea I will cut you some slack it’s the first time you watch the video and if I where you my mind wouldn’t of even thought of it being slightly faster then it’s ment to be
@@MorePatterrz I was watching this on 2x speed like I always do when I watch yt and I didn't even realize that the original video itself was sped up. So yeah, if it was still extremely ez for me to understand while on 2x speed, it's only natural you wouldn't realize it either on 1.25
2:35 I feel targeted cause that is literally how I’m watching this
10:44 I was just about to leave a comment in all caps saying how Hannibal actually won Cannae but you saved yourself... this time 😆
Right? Had me second guessing for a second. I was like wasn’t cannae one of Hannibal greatest victory
@@2010Failbrids
And yet, the Second Punic War:
*Roman Victory*
(despite that annoying puny Hornyball)
Just a correction that Oversimplified made: romans had already fought against elephants early on, when they had to take the south peninsula and the king of it used elephants to defend his country.
True, but I imagine not all soldiers were prepared or even knowledgeable of elephants, only from stories told by veterans. After all, many of those who survived one battle would die in a later one.
Bruh, am I the only one that thinks the Oversimplified video is playing at 1.25 speed or something?
It is lmao
One tiny thing that Oversimplified didn't say in his videos, Rome wasn't entirely on the idea to invade Sicily also because the Mamertines stole Messana from their rightful owners.
But their desire to get glory through war won in the end.
Two of my favorite RUclipsrs who I never thought would come together finally did. Thanks Pat.
Oh!...and for Regulus , yes he go back , he was the first general that surrender with this way , and cause of him and how he want to stay loyal to hes words , the romans establish that at the army soldiers and general thats why we today know the famous "strengh and honor"
Oversimplified is the definition of history version of Technoblade
‘Rip techno’
Shut.
I love Hannibal making cute baby noises at the end.
unlike people of today, regulus had a little something called honor. he keeps his promises, something a lot of people could take notes on.
It's actually believed the "dragon" the Romans encountered was a Nile Crocodile. 🐊 Which must have looked like a dragon to people who had never left Italy.
Regulus is not a moron, he is a pure Chad. He came back for his honor
Patterz:"Name a country that didnt commit bad things"
Me:Maybe Switzerland
35:22 Sorry, I think you actually meant ABSOLUTE GIGACHAD.
FINALLY IT IS TIME FOR OVERSIMPLIFIED REACTIONS
Most Feared Individuals (from Rome's Perspective)
-Hannibal Barca
-Vercingetorix
-Mithridates of Pontus
-Spartacus
Hannibal tops this list because even after his defeat and exile in the Second Punic War, Rome hunted him all the way to Asia Minor to ensure his existence was terminated
"what's this?"
"Oh, just patterz reacting to oversimplified"
"Holy shot, 1 years ago!? Still no new video!?"
-literally me
Greece has a clean history. Until 1995 everyone thought that before the Greek empire they were only barbaric civilizations
LMAO
36:54
It`s less about being resolved
Rather it`s because the lifes of their citizens were worth nothing to the senate
So as long as there were enough expendable man around, they would easily throw them at the enemy no problem ^
This dynamic of reward being better than punishment is a good reason why decimation died out in roman legions
Decimation : a punishment given to cohorts that bring shame to rome every 10 th person is beaten ti death by the other 9tenths
Pat not knowing about the first Punic war: *you better believe that’s a crucifixion*
OOP
Doing the right thing (keeping a promise) is worth dying.
If you do not believe this you are responsible for all of the evils of this world. DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE.
20:04 why did he just turn into a christmas tree for a second
The part about kidnapping women actually is a very long for 5 minutes song in seven brides for seven Brothers called sobbin women
Let’s hope he sees the second one
Oh, I get what NordVPN is doing. They’re sponsoring channels that have a lot of reaction videos tied to them so they can get some free advertising on the side.
Big brain
On the note of mercenaries having loyalty issues or no connection to the homeland: 1526 AD, Mohács, in the Kingdom of Hungary. After the invading Ottoman Empire utterly annihilated the still medieval-structured Hungarian army, the German mercenaries with their then-modern pike and shot square formations held the battlefield for an hour and half more with no quarter given, and collapsed only once bombarded by cannons.
The thing about mercenaries and mercenary contracts is that the employers always tried to prevent them from ditching out midway, and the mercenary companies also were dependant on a good track record, because otherwise nobody would hire them as their reputation fell. Often times payment was also divided so that they only got fully paid AFTER the battle. Thus it became in their interest to stay the whole shtick.
Well the spartans didn't really do that much propaganda since they weren't writing stuff about themselves but everyone else did
There was no such thing as a nation on earth, that didn’t do slavery, and to be fair to the Roman’s, given the nature of the time, it wasn’t wrong that others would attack them first if they didn’t. It may seem overly aggressive to our modern sensibilities, but back then, like it or not, it was kill or be killed.
13:00 that’s like doing more damage in a street fight but getting dragged in the video
I’m glad I’m not the only one that likes history
It is pretty interesting to me that carthage had a more modern view on war. If the costs heavily outweighed the potential benefits then it is peace time.
Normally a good idea, but if you fight a group with an all or nothing mindset, you are in big trouble.
2200 x 40,000,000= 88 BILLION DOLLARS; 3200 X 40,000,000= 128 BILLION DOLLARS
EVEN IN MODERN TIMES, THAT'S ABSURDLY HIGH!
The reparations of the Treaty of Versailles were equivalent to 269 billion dollars in today's money, so yeah it's comparable.
45:15 hey its drew durnil
ye👍
I love watching oversimplified videos
Pat's cam at around 20:00 looked like my capture card lately
You came out with this video 2 weeks before i watched it at school. Perfect timing
The amount of memes patters could have spawned during the ad
As an italian everything is true about our grandmothers.
You didn’t eat all the sphaget?!
@@TheEmpiresStrongest Well I do sometimes.
11:28 Bro, Italy's switching sides back on the Roman times lol.
Hannibal…was Rome’s greatest enemy, that’s like what he’s known for
Antarctica has a cold clean history
Their son shall destroy Rome with a nice bottle of Chianti.
It was just dogs romans had a issue with dogs as one time a gaurd dog didnt wake them up when they got a suprise seige done against them so they began a tradition of punishing dogs for it
1:52 Lets go Finland
The one country I can think of with a clean history is San Marino
Even that is not completely clean
What about Sealand? And if we count UN members only, I'd prob say Monaco
Yeah campaigning back then wasn't very simple, but it wasn't all that bad. Some people would campaign continuously until they grew in popularity, others would be sponsored by well known generals and politicians and such, or would already be popular as successful maritime generals and such! Mostly the latter 2, as the consuls were chosen by a set assembly, and being popular with the common folk wasn't as important as it would be later on.
I can't believe you watched this and also he uploaded that awesome vedio
“Name one country that has a completely clean history”
Switzerland
Nazi gold
Hmm, I wonder what Switzerland was doing with all those child slaves and nazi gold 🤔
Except, you know, the part where they helped hold Nazi Germany's money for them.
1:50 Germany standing in a corner and being like hallo
Carthage just happened to have the same borders, the same people, language, and traditions as the Atlantian empire in the same location as the Atlantian empire.
Pity we can't find Atlantis. ...in the exact places all the early historians said it was, who's landscapes and founders are all still named for king Atlas to this day.
But we can't find it. It didn't go anywhere. The Atlas mountains. The Atlas wastelands. The richot structure "eye of Africa" in the exact place and shape as the capitol city of Atlantis, which also happened to be called the eye of Africa, and who's local nations all name king Atlas as their founder.
Such a pity we can't figure out where it was. ...right there. Right where we were told it was where they still straight up tell you used to be Atlantis. ...but we can't find it.
Funny how that works.
OVERSIMPLIFIED REMEMBERED HIS PASSWORD
"Say one nation with clean history" San Marino.
11:25 you better believe that’s a cruxifiction
Who else watched this video so you have something to brag about your next history lesson
How channels expect us to react to sponsors:
I never realized how much me and you had in common
1:54 Switzerland has a clean history
If Hannibal is going to be vengeance, a dark knight, if you will, does that mean we'll be getting BatHannibal?
Aspis was a city with greek roots and take the name from the greek word Ασπίς wich means shield
You see, during the second Punic war, the romans only won 1 great battle.
The final one.
They also won several battles in Spain, Sicily, Sardinia and numedia
.basically Romans were winning everywhere apart from Italy
2:34 I’m actually watching this video on my iPad whilst sitting in my room
Hannibal was eventually defeated at the Battle of Zama ending the second punic war in Roman victory
Hey that sound fimilier
SAN MARINO checkmate Patterz.
Partterrz reacting to oversimplified dude… very cool
Death and torture are nothing if you got yourself a big naked statue
Yay thank u for this video
my grandpa killed adolf h1tler 🤣
My man didn't realize that his video is 1.25x speed
36:14 It's called honor.
Wait, what happened at 20:04?
Demons
5:00 It is ironic that somebody from UK has something to say about it))
Afaik rome could take sardinia and corsica because carthage didnt pay its mercenaries stationed there. Those declared independence and rome conquered the new Island realm.
Is Regulus really a moron if his goal was to be remembered forever and we still use his name as a by word (Regulation/Regular) for maintaining a code?
I want Barca DNA. That whole family is just one maasive Chad.
Romans have the adaptability of xenomorphs
San Marino has a clean history. The only dirty thing nis they became facists that one time but the most noteable thing they did as fascists was build railroads.
I really love this reaction video so that's great
So excited for advertisement 😃
13:51 Let's get Badlands Chugs!
Know all about that went the merc route myself after my time in the military. Now I can make the kind of $$ I made in a year doing one single job. Though I tend to be a little bit more loyal to the current employer at the time than they were.
Challenge excepted: Country with a clean history - Republic of San Marino
I will do you one better Pat. I can name a continent that didnt have genocide or anything bad happen on it. Antartica. Now I shall pretend that I am smort and funny just like the rest of youtube comments.
The sexiest war in history
nah man regulus was just built diffrent