How the Wyrmwood Modular Gaming Table is Made

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 287

  • @ttmcgee3357
    @ttmcgee3357 Год назад +310

    This was way more PBS-style than I was expecting from Wyrmwood, but I loved watching it! If only Mr. Roger’s could have narrated this

    • @Warhammered
      @Warhammered Год назад +5

      Or Reading Rainbow style LeVar Burton.

    • @sky0kast0
      @sky0kast0 Год назад

      At least this one is possible sigh

    • @NoNameNinjaa
      @NoNameNinjaa Год назад

      I think this is matt doing the VO? fuck ima feel like a dick if im wrong

    • @monkeychicken27
      @monkeychicken27 Год назад

      THAT’S the description I was searching for. Yes.

    • @Tophusification
      @Tophusification Год назад

      I was thinking Norm McDonald from New Yankee Workshop & This Old House!

  • @atomsktpk
    @atomsktpk Год назад +202

    As a fan of How It's made, this is an episode I've wanted from Wyrmwood for the longest time. Awesome look at the process.

    • @andrewcole8498
      @andrewcole8498 Год назад

      and we finally get to see all the new equipment we watched them buy on wyrmlife

  • @olivierlar
    @olivierlar Год назад +178

    Seeing the custom made table leg driller getting used, and the twice damned m&t machine having finished its training arc in this "How it's made" video really shows how long and hard the road has been to get here!

  • @LabTech41
    @LabTech41 Год назад +46

    Damn, this is by a wide margin the most professional-looking video Wyrmwood's done.

    • @dneko-chan3367
      @dneko-chan3367 Год назад

      it's because it's a promotional video made for the MGT updates

  • @davethepak
    @davethepak Год назад +3

    As a gamer and woodworker - I am staggered by the volume of tables made, and the automation to do it.
    That is some serious investment of machinery.
    thanks for sharing the video.

  • @Pelthail
    @Pelthail Год назад +7

    As a woodworker myself, and someone very interested in processes and systems, I found this video incredibly fascinating.

  • @UnknownErrorFilms
    @UnknownErrorFilms Год назад +42

    Anyone remember the TV show "How It's Made"? This felt EXACTLY like that and was very satisfying to watch :D

  • @ScytheNoire
    @ScytheNoire Год назад +33

    Great video on How It's Made. Super high production quality and very information.
    Two issues:
    - Never showed the inset gaming area section being made for the table. Perhaps we need a Part 2?
    - Should the finish sprayers being wearing respirators?

    • @TaikoNoTetsujin
      @TaikoNoTetsujin Год назад +12

      Should the finish sprayers be wearing respirators? Yes. And actual goggles, not just impact=resistant safety glasses. Some of the finishers were complaining that these glasses didn't block the spray from hitting their eyes... These are some of the many violations pointed out in the comments of the Wyrmlife videos where Doug talked about hating safety regulations.

    • @Eyrrll
      @Eyrrll Год назад +1

      @@TaikoNoTetsujin I have found that OSHA regulations are strict in many cases and surprisingly loose in others (it does not always make sense). I don’t know what the specific rules in this case would be… I am just speaking in broad terms from my experience with warehouse and factory work.
      It would be wise to require respirators though, even if it is not a specific rule, to prevent potential lawsuits in the future.
      All that said, we may have been getting a staged performance that did not require anything (to which it would have been wise to say so).

    • @MichaelBabcock
      @MichaelBabcock Год назад +4

      They have a very well ventilated room they use for spraying and I think that gives them a false sense of security. Masking saves lungs.

  • @John-lo2wn
    @John-lo2wn 13 часов назад

    Just got my table. We kept saying how amazingly it all went together. Excellent engineering!

  • @NobleDragonGames
    @NobleDragonGames Год назад +41

    Nice summary of the streamlined build process. It's been a journey watching it all unfold on Wyrm Lyfe. Congrats on finally being able to fully leverage these economies of scale you have invested in. Here's to MGT 2.0!

  • @elliefleming3534
    @elliefleming3534 Год назад +21

    I enjoyed getting to see this different style of Wyrmlyfe video. Awesome to see the whole process through, and how much it has evolved from the early stages.

    • @HonestAuntyElle
      @HonestAuntyElle Год назад +2

      It's not a wyrmlife video. It's promotional material for the Kickstarter.

    • @mcdotterson4103
      @mcdotterson4103 Год назад +2

      @@HonestAuntyElle exactly, wyrmlyfe is this video talking to the people doing it and about 100x longer. we saw them pick up the custom leg machine, we laughed at the terrible setup by the m&t setup person, we went to the manufacturing con to do homework on the timesaver, we fixed the conveyor with dale from the rip saw

    • @elliefleming3534
      @elliefleming3534 Год назад

      @@HonestAuntyElle that's just semantics. This is Wyrmwood's YT channel, where they make bi-weekly videos (usually). During which, they regularly show promotional material, just in shorter formats. This even officially released on their normal Friday Wyrmlyfe timeslot. If calling it "not Wyrmlyfe" makes you feel better, then roll with it. I'll not changing my phrasing.

  • @bmw120k
    @bmw120k Год назад +10

    Loved this! I found myself going "Its the thing!" whenever I recognized a machine from a wyrmlife ep.

  • @knupug
    @knupug Год назад +15

    I always imagined people building these by hand. What an eye opener!

    • @mcdotterson4103
      @mcdotterson4103 Год назад +6

      theyd be fulfilling the first kickstarter for a decade lol

    • @armandolee3508
      @armandolee3508 Год назад

      the price would be significantly higher.

    • @Eyrrll
      @Eyrrll Год назад

      In a world where the customer might need a replacement part or want an upgrade, this method is far better.
      Programmable machining SHOULD limit a lot of the variables that would be inevitable in a “by hand” production model (the quality of the machines will matter of course). Limiting those variables makes it a lot easier to get correct-fitting new accessories or replacement parts years after the initial purchase.
      That said, there is still a decent amount of “by hand” processes in the video, so it probably makes for a nice balance in the process.

  • @cogspace
    @cogspace Год назад +8

    Awesome to see your mass production system for the MGT in action. Gives me a lot of confidence that my table will actually arrive on schedule next year. =)

  • @thepeoplesfool
    @thepeoplesfool Год назад +20

    The company sure has come a long way. Great work on the shop and the video!

  • @mallenwho
    @mallenwho Год назад +12

    Dangerous move wyrmwood. We now expect this for your entire catelogue, and every project moving forward!

  • @stormobsession
    @stormobsession Год назад +3

    This is a video I've always wanted to exist, I've been very curious as to how these amazing tables get made. Thank you for this video!!

  • @matt-lang
    @matt-lang Год назад +6

    Love this style of video; How It's Made is one of my favorite shows so this feels nostalgic to watch!

  • @onibachi4807
    @onibachi4807 Год назад +1

    I worked at a company making high grade decorative hardwood plywood. Seeing the wide belt Time Saver sander took me back. I worked on a machine exactly like that for years.

  • @eccentricstudent
    @eccentricstudent Год назад

    Love it! Speaking as a woodworker, and manufacturing engineer for a large office furniture company, this v was captivating.

  • @oakleydoeseverything6438
    @oakleydoeseverything6438 Год назад +2

    Best episode of “How It’s Made” I have seen in a long time.

  • @jazzeejax5816
    @jazzeejax5816 Год назад +2

    This was so good after following the journey of all these machines

  • @buffaloxp
    @buffaloxp Год назад +6

    I knew most of this just from watching Wyrmwood since before MGT 1.0. And yet this was so much fun to watch (and so satisfying!).

    • @HonestAuntyElle
      @HonestAuntyElle Год назад +1

      Living in Australia, and no intentional shipping, I'm one photo of an apron and leg with a ruler away from making my own clone table. This video went a long way towards making my knockoff a reality. Even if I don't have all the fancy machines

    • @mcdotterson4103
      @mcdotterson4103 Год назад

      @@HonestAuntyElle a little bit of time in sketchup to figure out dimensions and you can easily make this at home with a table saw, trim router, drill and hardware. fancy machines just give you accuracy, repeatability, and speed. YOU CAN MAKE THIS TABLE and i think doug/ian/triscuit man would love to see it happen.

    • @Eyrrll
      @Eyrrll Год назад

      @@HonestAuntyElle If you don’t have any machines, you would probably be better served by hiring a local furniture maker to make your knockoff.
      If you just want something that is physically functional and visually acceptable, you might be able to buy or rent some cheap equipment and pull it off (depending on your knowledge of woodworking)… but if you want something approaching the quality of a Wyrmwood product, you will probably want to get a furniture maker involved.
      Either way, good luck… and I hope they can work out a viable means of shipping to you someday.

    • @HonestAuntyElle
      @HonestAuntyElle Год назад

      @@Eyrrll I have access to a makerspace locally it's the tenons that look the hardest

    • @Eyrrll
      @Eyrrll Год назад

      @@HonestAuntyElle Mortise and tenons can be pulled off with a table or miter saw with adjustable height, a drill press, and some wood chisels. They can be surprisingly labor intensive and getting a good fit requires some patience.
      If you don’t mind gluing your table frame together permanently, there are a few easier options that are not quite as strong, but should be strong enough.
      Pocket holes are relatively cheap, fast, and easy, but I would not use them if you are putting a lot of heavy stuff on your table (like tons of Dwaven Forge products). For general gameplay, they should be fine. Pocket holes require a pocket hole jig, specialized drill bits (that should come with your jig kit), and special screws.
      Dowels are a bit cheaper but require a bit more work to align than pocket holes (not terribly so)… they use glue and function very similar to a tenon joint, so they are stronger. Dowels will require a jig, dowels, and a normal drill bit.
      And actually, you can even use a combination of both pocket holes and dowels if you want to.

  • @minishmew
    @minishmew Год назад +3

    That's a lot of machinery.. no wonder one machine going down can stop production. Love the video style!

  • @dgnightwing95
    @dgnightwing95 Год назад +9

    Damn fine video. Loved the coverage of the whole process.

  • @kn302
    @kn302 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video! It's so cool to see the scope of your business and the many steps that go into it. One day I hope to get one of these dope tables to be home centerpiece 💜

  • @thesparrow1779
    @thesparrow1779 Год назад +9

    That was amazing to watch, thank you for making it!

  • @pk0a0gundam
    @pk0a0gundam Год назад

    It's so cool to see all the machines that ya'll have picked up over the years on showcase

  • @LordMOwings
    @LordMOwings Год назад +5

    Sounded like Matt (think it was him) has a new career as a V/O artist. Lol. This was fun.

  • @ManOfTrades
    @ManOfTrades Год назад +2

    Been watching Wyrmlife for years now, it is incredible to see what we have all created. So many steps and processes all coming together! Incredible to see.

  • @StockySnail
    @StockySnail 12 дней назад

    Cool to see this. I love my black walnut Wyrmwood table.

  • @p0tat0c0mp
    @p0tat0c0mp Год назад +11

    How It’s Made; Wyrmwood Edition! ❤

  • @tb9187
    @tb9187 Год назад +1

    Now THIS is why a woodworking company should have a media department. Love seeing the incredibly high quality professional content.

  • @TheRich4187
    @TheRich4187 Год назад +2

    How It's Made was that show you could sit back and watch for hours!
    Love that style of production in this video. Great work ppl!

  • @Rebecca-yf9ci
    @Rebecca-yf9ci Год назад +1

    This was a fantastic video! It was like watching a How It’s Made episode, hight production value. I liked the added animations to help explain some parts. And I defiantly learned more about woodworking ❤

  • @raulmonsters6501
    @raulmonsters6501 Год назад +5

    Wow! So much work goes into making a table. It makes me appreciate my table that much more. I love my table, so much I wish I had room for another one.

  • @TaikoNoTetsujin
    @TaikoNoTetsujin Год назад +11

    Remember a few years ago when they did the video where Doug et. al. were complaining about safety regulations? And the guy at the finishing booth was complaining that the safety goggles weren't stopping the spray from hitting his eyes? And so many commenters pointed out that he wasn't wearing safety goggles, he was wearing impact-resistant glasses which do absolutely nothing in regard to spray? I see not much has changed. (He wasn't wearing any kind of respirator either.)

    • @JerryCunningham-lx3lw
      @JerryCunningham-lx3lw Год назад +2

      In an industrial spray booth, respirators or not required or recommended. OSHA requires that the booth fan(s) move at least 100cfm of air per square foot of the filter plenum. They instantly remove any overspray and fumes from the booth. These booths suck out so much air, they actually need specialized HVAC called air make up units to pump fresh air back into the plant. Otherwise the negative pressure would be so great you couldn't open the doors.

  • @PJBest
    @PJBest Год назад

    Dude! This was awesome. Sooooo cool to watch. Amazing quality and editing. My kids watched with me and loved it. Thanks!

  • @indywiring
    @indywiring Год назад +4

    That was fantastic. Simply incredible!

  • @yogtheterrible
    @yogtheterrible Год назад +1

    I've been watching these videos for a few years now so I've seen all of this before but never all together in one video...makes it seem daunting! So many steps!

  • @ChrisBigBad
    @ChrisBigBad Год назад

    oh that was awesome. finally, a structured, start to finish .... thing. thanks!

  • @cardboardcartel6517
    @cardboardcartel6517 Год назад

    That was excellent - something I can show kids at school in both Design and Industrial classes. I’d love you to do some sort of interview around the design of certain items as well so we can have kid safe versions of it too.

  • @randallhoskins6446
    @randallhoskins6446 Год назад

    The video I have been wanting for so long! Fantastic episode

  • @TheLordArmonix
    @TheLordArmonix Год назад +3

    While I know not all of your products are so detailed in their creation, I would love to see more videos like this about your other products, pens, desks, accessories, dog beds ;)

  • @iiearlgreyii
    @iiearlgreyii Год назад +1

    Honestly I have been waiting for this video for years. I like the vlog style stuff, but I want more pure woodworking videos.

  • @bryonpope4622
    @bryonpope4622 Год назад

    Very cool video. It gives an insight into the manufacturing process that is well detailed and informative. Nice job.

  • @drewduncan1541
    @drewduncan1541 Год назад +8

    I feel like this could easily get sold to discovery Channel for the how it's made series. Although they would probably need to re dub with crappier music and vo

  • @drewoid138
    @drewoid138 Год назад

    "how it's made" wyrmwood edition.
    I love it! This is great.

  • @jcorsendonk
    @jcorsendonk Год назад +1

    Great Video, exactly what we needed to see. Next make this for Prophecy, then every other product you have...

  • @ericorange2654
    @ericorange2654 Год назад +1

    This was a good video and you successfully made something that appeals to a more mass market.
    This does not have the normal wyrmlife energy.

  • @deathkid113
    @deathkid113 Год назад

    this is such a cool video it gives me mayor how its made vibes

  • @Jovi_97
    @Jovi_97 Год назад +2

    This is beautiful

  • @jeffneely126
    @jeffneely126 Год назад

    That was so fun to watch! And really well done too.

  • @CorneliusFTW
    @CorneliusFTW Год назад +1

    That was fantastic! thanks guys!

  • @dirigoallagash3464
    @dirigoallagash3464 Год назад +4

    The anti-masker in the spray booth. [eye roll]

  • @kalfin4840
    @kalfin4840 Год назад

    Recent change in video direction is very nice

  • @CaelanAegana
    @CaelanAegana Год назад

    Such oldschool Discovery Channel vibes. My happy place!

  • @medge734
    @medge734 Год назад

    Wow, look at the production value. This isnt typical. :P

  • @tank7737
    @tank7737 Год назад +2

    Hell of a video! Wow. Well done. I miss the shenanigans, but this was really well done.

  • @social3ngin33rin
    @social3ngin33rin Год назад +1

    that's a badass ripsaw machine!!!

  • @MelHaynesJr
    @MelHaynesJr Год назад +24

    How the hell do they go from an initial design of a table to this whole process? Figuring out the tooling, the order the machines are run, etc? Seems insanely complex to have to plan this whole thing out. Can't just build a prototype and just say "build it!" Impressive as hell

    • @hiragana78
      @hiragana78 Год назад +3

      Well in the beginning, most of these things were done by hand and jigs.
      Then they expanded after the Kickstarter to buying these machines to fulfill the orders faster.

    • @Wartooth91
      @Wartooth91 Год назад +2

      testing, process engineering, more testing, adjust process, test again...repeat as necessary

    • @katiegrayx3637
      @katiegrayx3637 Год назад +3

      if you watch all of wrymlife (as far back as it goes) you can see a lot of their processes including how they went from figuring out "here's what we want to make" to "here's what we need to buy/do to make it"

    • @TheRaptorJezuz
      @TheRaptorJezuz Год назад +6

      Industrial engineering my dude! Usually you start with listing out the processes used to make the prototype, and assign an estimate of how long each process takes and what things can be done in what order. Then, by making a Gantt chart, you visually see where your time sinks are and can start making decisions on what processes can be improved with different machines, and if it makes sense for the volume of work. A lot of the machine decisions are based on your design and could end up changing that very design to accommodate machine limitations, but lots of iterations and planning. And money.... Lots of money lol

  • @adamhaskin193
    @adamhaskin193 Год назад +5

    Can you make a video like this for every product you make? I like it a lot

  • @TomKwonDo
    @TomKwonDo Год назад +11

    Loving the new direction of the channel! Lots of glossing over of things here, can't imagine why. Can't seem to find the last video you posted though...

    • @unepommeverte17
      @unepommeverte17 Год назад +1

      i had to scroll so far to find this or any mention of it, i thought i was going crazy. i saw mention of it a few days ago elsewhere online but only just now got around to watching some youtube and i guess i missed it :/

  • @NickMiethe
    @NickMiethe Год назад

    Awesome video! Certainly a different style, but that doesn't make it any less great!

  • @lightmonarch1
    @lightmonarch1 Год назад

    Great video. I'm using it to try to convince my parents to get a table

  • @Ty_the_Druid
    @Ty_the_Druid Год назад +4

    We need more Matt how its made videos

  • @ad_maru
    @ad_maru Год назад

    It's like those videos that resume an entire movie saga or tv show

  • @jarredrainey1244
    @jarredrainey1244 Год назад

    This was pleasing to my eyes!

  • @volatilesky
    @volatilesky Год назад +5

    It's hilarious to me that the waste produced from the ripper, are all pieces I'd be hoovering up like a kid in a candy store. On the downside, the drive to mass from bc is a little over 3000miles.

    • @mcdotterson4103
      @mcdotterson4103 Год назад +1

      cost more for them to repurpose than the material is worth lol

    • @volatilesky
      @volatilesky Год назад

      @@mcdotterson4103 from a mass production standpoint, 100%. From a hobbyist woodshop out of my garage - those cutoffs from the ripper are perfect for laminating and using for small projects.

  • @tazmon122
    @tazmon122 Год назад +4

    this right here. this is why i fell in love with Wyrm Lyfe back in the day. this is a great video, the editing is flawless....but it's souless and corporate. this exact style, editing, and quality is exactly what i expect when i look at literally every professional company's youtube page. from guitar makers, to construction, to cars, and everything in the between. it's B. O. R. I. N. G. then came along Wyrm Lyfe. this absolutely weird and candid vlog that brakes all the conventions and does something interesting. i absolutely LOVE the weird tangent stories (the club drinking montage AND apology, the story of Doug taking the silverware to gift Ed, telling Crazy Ed to stress test the tables turning into him literally blowing up a Liliput, and the Frankenput build and reveal.....hell the fact that there has been close to 5yr old joke of making fun of the CEO of a professional woodworking company because his wallet is made out of duct tape...all of that stuff).
    this is the video i expect from a professional woodworking company. Wyrmwood has built up a report through Wyrm Lyfe that i've grown to expect the ORIGINAL "how the MGT gets made, start to finish" video being a vlog style video of Ian walking through the workshop and the camera person practically tripping over stacks of parts in the process, having moments of bad audio. it's fun. it's exciting. it's different. it's weird.
    this is a great video. i hope there are plenty of videos like this one that get uploaded to Wyrmwood in the future....just so long as Wyrm Lyfe doesn't get cut out.

    • @dneko-chan3367
      @dneko-chan3367 Год назад +1

      It's just a Kicsktarter update video they posted here as well

    • @tazmon122
      @tazmon122 Год назад

      @@dneko-chan3367 so was the original one with Ian.

  • @PhillipSoWorthy
    @PhillipSoWorthy Год назад +3

    Ayyy dats me at 3:07

  • @drunkramen
    @drunkramen Год назад

    Always loved How it's Made. This was great!

  • @MKWoodworking
    @MKWoodworking Год назад

    That was a really nice and new type of video. I really appreciate it.

  • @douwis125
    @douwis125 Год назад

    I feel like the voiceover needs some cred - you have the perfect knack for a chill how it's made video 👍🏼

  • @leonsoboleski2969
    @leonsoboleski2969 6 месяцев назад

    Looks like maple wood, nice!

  • @chad74012
    @chad74012 Год назад +1

    This reminds me of old school Wyrmlyfe where we saw Doug sharpen a chisel. Love your stuff.

  • @Matweaver7
    @Matweaver7 Год назад +7

    This was AWESOME!!!! You’ve fully convinced me to just buy it and not try build it myself.

  • @SavageArtificer
    @SavageArtificer 5 месяцев назад +1

    Fascinating to watch. I'm disappointed that these tables are so expensive with the automation and mass production that should reduce the cost. I've seen tables out there of much better quality that cost less and are each handmade. It is really cool the way they are made, though. I was hoping to see some inspiration for my own handmade table, but that process is way different than what I would do at home.

    • @JCintheBCC
      @JCintheBCC 2 месяца назад

      I’m genuinely curious where you e seen that? I’m a hobbyist woodworker, and even with power tools, this table in cherry would be at least a 30 hour project solo. If I’m paying myself $20/hr, that $600 in labor. Add the 120 board-feet (and 20% waste) at about $550 and that leaves $850 for hardware, finishing, and inventory. I’ve been impressed by their systems, so if you know a better shop that’s cheaper, I’d love to buy from them.

    • @SavageArtificer
      @SavageArtificer 2 месяца назад +1

      @@JCintheBCC Like I said, their product is way different than I would do at home. If you are looking for a 1-to-1 conversion, there is nobody that does it the same way as this. What kind of table are you looking for? I'll see if I can find one that gets you close.

  • @Ropya
    @Ropya 9 месяцев назад +1

    Cool video.
    I have to ask though, why are the seal and final coat sprayers not wearing some sort of respirator?

  • @s_deb
    @s_deb Год назад +2

    Totally awesome.

  • @darthbek
    @darthbek Год назад +5

    Who the heck is the narrator?! Great job!

  • @SamundraDarion
    @SamundraDarion Год назад

    OH WOW!
    This is AWESOME!

  • @freitach13
    @freitach13 Год назад

    Wish i could like it twice

  • @earle0024
    @earle0024 Год назад

    This was phenomenal

  • @JoeFleck
    @JoeFleck Год назад +2

    Fascinating- nice work!

  • @gmhchaos
    @gmhchaos Год назад +2

    Such a fun video

  • @TheWoWMagician
    @TheWoWMagician Год назад +1

    This is so well done!

  • @psych77777
    @psych77777 Год назад +2

    this was awesome to watch!

  • @Arjac1312
    @Arjac1312 Год назад

    Dang i dint realize your second facility was in Myerstown. That's like an hr away. Keep on being a rad bunch and making awesome products

  • @pizzahat
    @pizzahat 6 месяцев назад

    I am looking forward to buying it in Japan!

  • @jamesjepsen1871
    @jamesjepsen1871 Год назад +16

    I'm surprised I didn't see anyone wearing a mask while sanding or during seal coating... any idea why? Seems like that'd be important to employee health.

    • @nateperkins9860
      @nateperkins9860 Год назад +3

      Uncomfortable and choose not to? Removed them for shooting? Any number of reasons

  • @jarrettupton57
    @jarrettupton57 8 месяцев назад

    Great video! I'm curious if the process is the same still. I'm very excited to get my table. I just wish I didn't have to wait 8 months to get it delivered...

  • @ThornWolf0609
    @ThornWolf0609 Год назад +2

    What a fun video thanks guys

  • @lk2821
    @lk2821 Год назад +2

    Loved this!

  • @Alysuis
    @Alysuis Год назад +3

    Now let's see one built with hand tools Jason

  • @nicholasbennett7463
    @nicholasbennett7463 Год назад

    Damn I was high while watching this and it was absolutely riveting. I'm gonna go watch How Its Made.

  • @srm20320
    @srm20320 Год назад +1

    Congratulations, on of your best videos I've ever seen. Lots of production and polish. Definitely not your norm, and not something we need all the time, but very nice. Very very nice work. Kuddos to your video editor.

  • @luckeeiam
    @luckeeiam Год назад +1

    Fantastic!

  • @GuildHallLearning
    @GuildHallLearning Год назад

    Thank you for concisely putting all of the tools I want with their functions in a sexy format, now off to plead to my wife, this time with visuals!

  • @Mavrick7410
    @Mavrick7410 Год назад +4

    1:43 RIP sensor