Humans are Weird - Injuries
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- This was one of the first Humans are Weird/Space Orcs/HFY stories I wrote. I played softball and getting hit in the face a time or two may have inspired this.
Am I super proud of the animation quality and blocking on this one? Not really. What I am proud of is finally getting it done after over 2 years of it being in my Work in Progress collection! (Lot of creative blocks, a pregnancy, and being tired from chasing around a very rambunctious baby waffle, but I did it!)
Ah yes, "humans are space orks" and "earth is a space australia" tropes.
my favorite tropes
Honestly, pretty fun tropes. Alien invaders has been done so many times, humans beginning space exploration and being treated as less smart and capable has also been done, even humans being the invaders has been done(Cameron's Avatar) and alien/human friendship with exaggerated differences and weirdness (from our side) is probably not so common. It's pretty fun to think about what for us is normal and for other cultures would be strange.
Makes little sense coming from space mantis though easily comparably durable
While i love them for short stories
I'll despise such a trope otherwise because aliens will be the same for us(MOVING SILICONE CREATURES😮) Or something like that
@@TheAce736 Larger insects tend to be less durable when they increase in size.
have you covered the human immune system? "wanna see who dies first of overheating?"
The classic game of chicken
Next time I'm ill I'll think about it this way
For all our many faults, we've picked up some pretty neat tricks
@@Half-Blind-o4j Ah yes, Fire Chicken, the immune system's favourite game.
"I'm not locked in here with you, YOU'RE LOCKED IN HERE WITH ME!"
trillions of protein structures that attack the bacteria, slow it down and drill holes into it, micro organisms devouring viruses and bacteria, cells that are used for killing infected cells, cells that store information about a threat to create matching antibodies and etc.
overheating is only a small part of our immune system
Imagine discovering that aliens exist, and then discovering their inability to self-heal.
Probably not possible. Evolution would make sure of them being very tough, or at least be outstanding in other areas. If they're top species on their planet, they have to be very OP, just like us
@@misterdark-pl3jo OP in different ways, i'd imagine. maybe they can survive total exsanguination.
@@misterdark-pl3joAll of evolution is a pyramid of skulls, and any living species sits atop that pyramid. One does not gain or remain in a place atop such a tricky slope by chance alone.
@@misterdark-pl3jo In the canon these stories, it’s rare for any inhabitable planet to be as dangerous as Earth. The aliens didn’t have to be as strong to survive because their competition was very weak too. Something to do with Earth having a higher gravity but I don’t remember the details.
@the-letter_s total what
Edit: wait, context clues i see ex and sanguine. Do you mean to say that they would be able to survive without their blood?
"wait, so you're telling me our GAMES could be considered murder weapons to you?"
"yes."
"...yeah i won't tell you about our wars."
On the other hand, games are just codified, (mostly) less letehal, wars.
They're intelligent life forms just like humans of course they already know about war
@Moldy_Martian but how deadly are their wars?
that's the question.
@goldencreepersthesecond obviously very deadly possibly much worse than ours considering that they most likely have full control over their home solar system
@goldencreepersthesecond Unless they have some ability which completely incapacitates an opponent without doing any damage, their wars would have been plenty deadly.
Fun fact: a man once went to the doctor complaining about a headache only to find a bullet in his brain. A fast ball aint killing noone.
Well it could if you were unlucky and it hit your chest at just the right moment and stoped your heart but the possiblity of that happening is extremely low
@@davidm45614 heck, even if it just hit the head just right and hard enough. which is more likely but still not likely
Or someone complaining their knee hurt only to find their whole leg bone was shattered
I remember there was another guy with the same complaint, later they found out that he had NAILS (multiple) jamed in his skull, wife was atempting murder while he was asleep with a nailgun or something like that
That was 22lr after someone shot him in bed and complaining hours later, humans either die or survive weirdly.
considering how fragile large arthropods like tarantulas are (a one foot drop is fatal to them) it makes sense that an insectoid alien would be far more fragile than a human
Probably is some areas more than others, for example an insectoid would probably handle overall pressure better then a human, where as a human would be better at getting hit with blunt force
so it makes perfect sense to make humanoid insectoid creatures to take over universe
Ironic, since their exoskeleton resembles armor.
You are incorrect. Insects and arthropods (tarantulas for sure) are quite durable.
@Spider-r6d so getting squished wouldn't be as bad?
People aren’t always warm to humans being hyper adaptable in fantasy but let me remind you most animals will never walk the same if they break a leg, if the leg can heal at all. We’re already outliers on our own planet.
Eh, humans technically aren't that different from other animals on Earth in a purely physical sense. The only thing that really sets us apart in regards to other mammals and breaking bones, is that we not only have the medical knowledge to treat them, but also are both aware enough to limit movement in those areas as much as possible, AND also can afford to not have to move around and risk further injury. A mammal in the wild still has to get up and walk to food and water, which means at best they're dangling around an unset and/or unsplinted bone, and at worse they are actively having to make use of say, a broken leg, to cross or climb up or down difficult terrain to reach a required resource, or escape a predator. And even for us humans, many people break bones, even commonly broken ones, and either due to the type of break, or overall severity of the injury, never regain full use or range of motion where the bone is at for the rest of our lives, despite receiving perfect medical treatment and taking all precautions.
@@Jaimyoutubing Still, compare that to horses for example, one of the most if not the most used steed for battle and transportation in mankind's history, its literally just game over for a horse to break its leg since its so complex it will never heal good, even if you treat it well the horse's basically done for
@@Aureonw Pretty sure horses are unnaturally fragile for animals, but I've also heard people who work with horses say that some can recover fine.
@@AstroChara if it's a race horse it won't be usable in a race again, I think he's thinking about that? also unlike humans animals can't regain full composure in a broken limb like a human its kinda weird how quick and well our bodies can regenerate we're not sturdy in the same sense as other animals but we're able to heal off normally fatal injuries and then act like nothing happend, at most we'll just be innactive for a bit (sometimes anyways I've seen grown men walk off a femur being broken in two and eventually just be fine and dandy about it withen seven months it freaked me out a little cuz bro was in his 30's).
If an animal is capable of surviving and thriving long enough to get to the space age; they're at the top of the food chain in their respective niche.
This has the energy of being an adult and seeing how often kids brush off injury in ways we only vaguely remember.
Though, to be fair, tripping and scraping your knee would be a hell of a lot more impactful when you're 4x as heavy as you were in childhood
I have got to have 5x immunity from injury infections by now, I managed to injure myself like 3 times on the same driveway iirc.
Idk I still get up after busting ass on a skateboarding. Road rash from my knee all the way to my chest
@ idk why I didn't mention the time I slipped and hit my shin on the vertically positioned marble slab and then proceeded to stand up and wash my hands because I could not give anymore fucks that day.
I still remember my dad and my mom were more concerned than I was.
Oh and I managed to give my sister PTSD because of *Tin Cans.*
Speak for yourself lol, I was a total wimp when I was little
I love this, most sci-fi writes humans as either prey or vastly inferior in some way but it’s neat to see humans portrayed as strong or adaptable
omg ikr, In both military and pacifist SciFi, humans are always way weaker than the enemy/others.
Well in most sci fi humans are a new space faring race, so they're going toe to toe with much older civilizations with tech which is far more advanced. Makes sense that we'd be inferior in a story like that. Granted typically the humans win in the end so I'd consider that being strong and adaptable.
People like underdog stories...
@@arnold-t4pyes!
Very few sci-fi is like that, and humans almost always win in those
I remember a story about a man who got his head impaled and lost a part of his brain and an eye as a result. He somehow survived and atop of that expirienced a total change in his personality.
IN THE XIX CENTURY BTW.
I think his name was Phineas Gage.
Imagine the alien here learning that.
It's inconsistent, but most tellings indicate Gage had some pretty significant cognitive/personality changes afterward.
He lost like... a *lot* of brain.
Phinease Gage was the 1800s iirc, guy got a metal rod through the head and didnt realize anything happened because it went perfectly between both sides of his brain and it was only a few years later did he abruptly die because of an entirely unrelated disease i think
@@halcyon9686 You're thinking of some other incident.
Gage knew what had happened, as he was known to have went to the doctor's office immediately after he was wounded.
It didn't pass through "between both sides of his brain". The left frontal lobe of his brain was wholly destroyed, and the two docs that treated him wrote that they picked apart "an ounce or more" of brain chunks, and that he vomited "about a teacupful" more.
He spent ten weeks recovering, and passed away twelve years after the incident from what is basically a super long seizure (related to his brain injury).
medieval lobotomy
@@this_is_patrick the fact that there is enough people, that got their head impaled by metal rod and survived, to get them confused also says something...
I never heard the "vomiting brain chunks" part. How would that even happen? I thought he got impaled thru the eye and the back of his head.
I'm not saying you're incorrect, I'm just confused.
Ooh I love it it’s like the humans are space Orks
My favorite subreddit on Reddit
If humans are space orcs. And humans have concept of orcs too. Imagine how would look and behave orc's concept of doubleorcs
@@feilkate5892 We need to go more orky.
This is likely based on one of those stories.
WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGHHHH!!!!!!!!
To be honest, a very large arthropod would probably be rather fragile. We like to think they're pretty strong, but thats because most of them are tiny, but if you look at stuff like crabs and lobsters, they get pretty fragile the larger they get. There's a reason exoskeletons are very rare in anything larger than a small dog.
To be fair, the reason for that to my understanding has more to do with breathing than fragility. Arthropods soak in oxygen through their bodies, so their size is directly limited by the oxygen content of the atmosphere. About 300 million years ago, during the Carboniferous, we had absolutely gigantic insects. I'm talking dragonfly analogues the size of seagulls and millipedes as long and wide as men. This was possible because the oxygen level was at its peak of 35% instead of its current 21%.
@@TheAngryXenitewouldn't last a day around east asians
Okay, I was about to freak out when you said larger than a small dog and then I remembered about fucking coconut crabs😂 those things get fucking huge! But yeah I'm honestly curious to see how strong that exoskeleton Is.
That has to do with how terrible passive respiration is. And how expensive it is to make an exoskeleton.
giant invertibrates did used to exist. i doubt an alien bug species would realistically be bipedal but a human sized bug would not be that insane. take arthropleura for example, absolutely massive centopede things. however they were also pretty flat to the ground.
oxygen intake is also a limiting factor, but more than that is available niches. when vertibrates got on land, they outcompeted all the large insects until it was only the smaller sized niches that could be filled, and thats where they've stayed since.
Virgin HFY mantis: *scared of small injuries*
Chad FASTER THAN LIGHT mantis: dismembers any intruder and goes batshit insane due to the pheronomes upgrade.
oh god mantis sector boarding ship ptsd is back
If I may ask where is the idea of the faster than light mantis? What franchise is that from?
@@andrasarky5291 "Faster than light" thats it. Not sarcasm thats what the games called. Unironically playing it right now and boutta lose
@@noah3438 Thank you. Oh and good luck with the gaming.
@@noah3438 Did you lose or did you turn it around?
Cockroaches: I can survive without head
Humans: JA! I can survive my own stupid inventionts!
Ohh! there is the "t" i lost. Thanks for finding 🙃
"im glad they are on our side" YOU BET
I have so many shorts that i just don't see me being able to animate any time soon, for various reasons. I'm thinking of doing a new style of videos soon, more like a story book feel
That sounds like it might be easier. Can I talk you into a comic style?
@GenStallion on some, I definitely think that may be possible!
@@theWildWaffle Human would you be interesting in taking on other workforce species in an effort of collaboration?
@SB-hr2mk i could be interested, I've never done a collab though, so I'm not sure what all it would involve
@@theWildWaffle well, I’d love to help you with writing, art editing or animation if you need. As these are all things I am fairly experienced with.
I love the series, especially how creative the alien designs are, though I kinda wish you gave aliens their fair share of weirdities. It's a dumb thing to ask for in a series called "humans are weird", which I completely acknowledge, but I'd like to see humans find their own share of "wtf, you can do that?" with other aliens.
Honestly, if the aliens had their own oddities it would make this much more unique. We’re seen humans are weird and weird non-humans separately but I think odd things are more strange in contrast with eachother, the two types of stories aren’t mutually exclusive
@@deathisdead270 IKR? I wanna see humans be freaked out by that one fluffy alien in "humans have no fur" talking to them telepathically while they are freaked out by humans broadcasting what they're saying publicly or something like that.
@drakesword5214 so real
There's a non-linear work like that already, I believe the title was The Token Human, it's in one of the playlists of Netnarrator
Like the booka always being on fire, for example?
It's nice to see an HFY/Humans are Space Orks video that actually shows the unique and often forgotten little traits that make humans so cool even aside from intelligence.
I fell down a rabbit hole a few months ago of finding HFY stories, but most of them were just AI generated trash where the big plot twist was stuff along the lines of "but then the humans brought out *_SWORDS!!!1!!"_* Completely missing what makes this genre interesting at all. 🙃
After that, this audio was a huge breath of fresh air. Interesting story, actual VAs and art, and a real trait that humans have that makes them stand out from other species. Loved it!
Here a fun fact about the human body,
One of our greatest and most terrifying abilities besides our brain, is being able to run for miles and miles without stopping for a break, imagine you being an animal trying to run away and after an hour of running despite out running your hunter he is still there running towards you, also we are probably the only species with such an ability.
Imagine if they learned about trepanation, like "Yeah our ancestors in the stone age WILLINGLY made holes in their own skulls as a medical procedure."
"It didn't do anything meaningful, but people did it survived, and healed from the experience, now with a chunk missing from their skull."
"I'm glad they're on our side" is so quintessentially human a phrase for an alien to say! A beautiful irony
Finally some "humans are space orks" that do not immediately dip into human exceptionalism and badassery and just focuses on the silly UvU
Looks like the algorithm really spred this one around but I'm happy it did because I found your channel. I watched all your humans are weird and they're all pretty fun and clever.
A fun scenario might be a safety officer sees a human's pet dog and starts freaking out wondering how they got approval to bring a dangerous predator onto the ship and the human has to try explaining canine domestication.
Some humans survived with 80% of their brain gone
Some humans even achieved the "richest person in the world" status with 80% of their brain gone
My class is an example of this
@@piotrwisniewski70 LMAO
@@piotrwisniewski70 my physics class, basically (one group tried starting an electrical fire a few days ago)
Yeah me n my bro
I’m glad I decided to watch that at double speed halfway through.
I dunno, humans can't regenerate our limbs when we molt. That definitely seems like a disadvantage to me even if we are squishy enough to absorb some decent impacts
Imagine this but reversed
"Human James, how have the peace negotiations been developing?"
"Fantastically so far, they've all agreed to-ah-holdonIgottasneeze-" and in barely enough time for you to wipe dust off your antenna, he's on the floor making a human sound of distress because turns out that the process of his body expelling dead white blood cells and foreign particles put so much force onto his spine that it majorly damaged the bone segments that protect a very vital human nerve
And now you have to reevaluate every concept of how much you can safely push a human before they just shatter
i love the idea that, from most alien perspectives, humans are absurdly durable.
Humans be suffering injuries that could kill any glorfgarp gnorp and just going
“Owie”
Just a reminder that humans have evolved a face that was designed to be punch-able.
Though honestly, this idea can apply to many adaptations to inner species conflicts. Cat fur for example is very slash resistant, whereas our own skin gets easily bloodied in just 1 blink of a cat attack.
"humans are space orks" is so overplayed
I wonder who helps you with voice acting the characters. It seems fun!
Another wonderful vid from the wild waffle 🎉
@scarlettefoxx5585 over the years it's been various friends and family
I don't have much to say, but I wanted to leave a comment for engagement. This series is very fun :)
How are humans so fragile and so durable at the same time?
Good question; trip from standing height, hit a rock wrong, and you're a goner, but get hit by a FUCKING TRUCK and it's possible to make a full recovery if you're lucky.
@@justsomejerseydevilwithint4606 Anatoli Bugorski was hit in the head with a particle accelerator beam, had a sizeable chunk of his head pierced through with a massive dosage of radiation and still lived with a bit of damage but still.. He even managed to write a PHD! and he's still currently alive lmfao
@@Aureonw But inhale the wrong dust from a sealed off area and suddenly you've got lung cancer from asbestos. The body is wierd like that.
@@justsomejerseydevilwithint4606sprayed in face by plutonium and surviving to 79
human body be funky like that. sometimes its because some spots are just more fragile. other times, its just like that.
like i got hit by a car once, came out totally fine with nothing more than a few scrapes and bruises. but then my friend got pushed once and broke her arm.
funny how that works.
3:48 where can i get more of this song, please? its such a viiiibe i love it
wow space OSHA really needs to get on this, a captain hiring crew without even knowing the basics of their biology? Unacceptable.
0:33 bug man hassint seen american football or mma yet :D those are awesome! so many injuries though.
cue Never Meant by American Football
The Captain's immediate concern for his crew member is quite respectable.
_"By all things bright and shining..."_ Well, that would be you sunshine! 👍
Honestly? This is such a breath of fresh air among all the AI slop channels I have seen, great job guys, keep it up.
I keep seeing all ai channels doing these stories - they are unwatchable, but you make the topics feel _human_ and natural - it's brilliant thank you. First video, first watch subscribed! 👍
If he thinks a game of catch is horrifying I can't wait to hear his reaction to accounts of WW1 and the 30 Years War.
imagine telling him about riding in cars and planes and space rockets! oh wait...
Ahh! I am ever so glad when I see a wildwaffle upload, I do so love the ideas you put into your storys. I remember it feels like so many years ago you asked for suggestions and got such great feedback! Beautiful work as always, I am always happy to see another upload from you!
Oh, to add on to my origional suggestion of humans sweat to regulate body temperature, something only us and horses do (though not near the extent we do). Perspiring might be quite a shock to a few species!
I would also like to add that most animals have a Tapetum Lucidum a extra layer in their eyes that reflects light to help them see at night/low light, humans do not, meaning in the dark our eyes dont reflect light, which to another intelligent species that has that might be quite terrifying. It does mean hide and seek in the dark is pretty easy for us, we just have to shine a flash light and we can see the refelction of their eyes, that would be a fun video to make xD little alien kids playing hide and seek with human kids.
@Pathfinder118 oh that is a very fun idea!!!
Just wait till they learn about combat sports!
An alien mantis assuming a minor head injury would be fatal... A mantis. A Mantis!
What next, an axolotl going into panic over a broken arm? A ram hyperventilating over someone bumping their head?
I mean it would be very fatal in their perspective... but from a cultural perspective. He'd more likely come in and say to the human that hit her in the head "Congratulations, when will there be a baby?"
@@Tenebrio-Morio these HFY HASO people have a very shallow understanding of biology
Mantis can survive decapitation?
mantises are pretty fragile, also they stop molting after reaching adulthood (like most insects) and they live very short, probably not the best candidate for a technological species, i prefer... sentient lobsters (or something idk)
@@random6033 not very fragile but i digress. tho your right, some other insect clades are probably better, aswell as non-hexopod crustaceans.
I'm pretty sure any species with an exoskeleton would be tougher than a human.
The narration in this is amazing! Haven't followed HFY for a while and I feel like it slides too quickly into grimdark/edgy/trying too hard to be cool, but the light and humorous voiceover is perfect 💜
I can only imagine the aliens explaining to each other how humans achieve space travel:
-"Those beings reached scape velocity filling their vessel with with explosives!"
-"but how could they control the trajectory?"
-"They did it manually... from the inside!"
-"Oh my Glorb. I'm glad they are on our side."
Humans are one of the very few animals that can actually throw objects with any amount of precision, it wouldn’t be a stretch to suggest that any intelligent aliens we discover would not have the ability to competently throw objects. Meaning aliens would not be able to participate in baseball, cricket, basketball, and most other form of sports involving balls being thrown.
@JohnHunter-ns4mu i actually wrote a sequel to this short story that addresses that!
throwing stuff is already pretty impressive in the animal kingdom. accurately is an entirely different ballpark, no pun intended
First time ever seeing anything by your youtube channels and I really like this! Good job!
Excellent! I love the stories that emphasize what we see as mundane and point out how aliens could differ in a believable way.
I could see the mantis’s bafflement and worry, even without much facial expression. I think you did a good job with this, thank you!
I love hearing the narrator voice
It's very soothing
I want a 20 minute upload of her narrating anything and just her voice only
So a giant space insect is extremely afraid of modestly weighty fist sized objects hitting them?
I know its not COMMON to have rocks thrown at you as a species but how did this species survive being incapable of sustaining minor blunt trauma?
yeah hfy has a problem where humans are godlike beings, whereas every other alien species dies from a strong wind gust. If it wasnt for that, I'd be a bigger fan :(
@@grimtygranule5125 ongod
@@cheesemanmaster true. Humans are always super strong beings from a super dangerous planet, while the aliens will die if you look at them wrong.
Sometimes I wonder how some of these species manage to become space faring at all.
Reminds me of those audio-to-text where humans are the bizzare species of the panicking alien races - indominable human spirit and all that.
What is the name?
but like, arent we pretty fragile?! At least I always thought this when compared to insects, so to me it's funny that a mantis type alien is glazing us like that ahah
Glazing is common with humans are space orcs stories
Late congratulations on a new baby Waffle 🥳👶
HFY story?
I doubt such would really happen. No spaceship captain is stupid enough to take someone on board who he doesn't know about enough.
"Amazed" "Have never experienced crew loss during voyage" should be enough to understand that this is HFY-style story
Yeah especially since the guy assumes an injury as small as that would kill someone like him I don't see how he hasn't lost anyone if aliens are supposedly made of wet cardboard
2:37 species that are made of paper
A mantis thinking that Human leisure activities is dangerous is funny to me as i assumed mantis's typical pastime was murdering trade caravans and sending off pirate raiding parties. But that may be the racism talking.
That would in fact be the space racism talking
I just found your channel and its an instant follow from me. I love the idea of "humans are weird" to the rest of the galaxy concept.
I love that the ship is shaped like a detergent bottle
How lovely !! I really really enjoy sci-fi that treats humans in a way that has the humans being at the same level as the alien species in regards to treatment, but with the alien species treating them that way because they're as clueless to the humans as we'd be to them. I really like when we get peaceful mutual relationships like these, it's a really nice avenue to explore !!
I love the longer template! and the storytelling here is superb!!
"im glad they're on our side" just blew my mind, i dont know why
It's space racism it's often crammed into these types of scifi stories because the many writers can't help but glaze their idea of the human species
Just found your channel and have been loving the content.
Years ago I saw someone on Tumblr talk about how humans would be such an odd, weird, and dangerous thing to have on other species space ships so much so that other species would have "Human insurance" in the event damage to the ship was caused by a human. Somewhere I have a screenshot of that chain but it's something that's stuck in my head ever since because, well, we are kind of weird.
I'm new here so I probably don't understand anything but why is it humans who are the confusing ones here. Do insects not recover from minor injuries in real life or is that just an in universe thing with these alien insect people?
I know spiders can regrow legs. so not sure
im so glad the algorithm showed me this channel. Just binged the entire humans are weird series. i love this.
Yay! I'm so happy to see you post!
adaptability & being communal animals are humanity's two biggest strengths as well as our intellect
I feel like in the topic of space traveling races to be a space traveling race you need to at least a good amount of all three of those things because otherwise how the fuck would you get off your planet, you surely aren't accomplishing it alone, you have to be smart enough to think of a way you could potentially do it, and you have to be adaptable enough to get to the point where you'd be working towards that goal, it's like saying humans are great at traveling in space because they can accomplish escape velocity, create rooms that provide life support, and can survive reentry
Ok, so why are humans different from other animals? What's so special about injuries?
@@surgeonsergio6839 i think it depends on the injury... and the person
@@theWildWaffle I actually don't get the message of this. Like are injuries like these supposed to be fatal or something to mantises or whatever?
@surgeonsergio6839 not specifically mantises, especially ones from earth (tbh throw a baseball at some earth species, you'll just make them confused or mad) but that a hit like that ~could~ have killed a lot of others as far as alien races go.
Humans also bruise and swell, which may look pretty alarming, but is just a result of the body's healing process
@@theWildWaffle
I guess what's confusing here is the fact that the video implies that humans would be a lot more resilient compared to other alien races. However, even within existing species found on earth, human physiology is particularly vulnerable compared to others. What makes it doubly confusing is that bugs are extremely resilient with regard to their size so a human-sized bug man proabably wouldn't even register a baseball as any threat.
@BurniOwnz i don't mean to be confusing. This was my first 'humans are weird' story I ever wrote years ago. It's not meant to be super scientific or anything. Thanks for watching and commenting!! Means a lot to me
So glad RUclips recommended your Chanel to me! Just watched all your Humans are Weird and Earth Report videos! They’re very fun :D
Lol, this is cool. Makes you think a little about things people don't normally think about.
Humans are really really good at catching and throwing things. figuring out the general trajectory, speed, and distance of something is second nature after some practice. Our hand eye coordination is pretty cool 👌
1. This is good, but why can't other species heal?
2. Isn't HFY meant to be like lame warhammer-style slop? And not like GOOD.
It’s nice to see non-corporate animation and something from the heart
Long have I waited for this
These are so good! I only wish they were longer
Yes! A new upload!
Congrats on the whole “having a child” thing.
Man... i seen several of these by finding this one alone, i wish aliens would studdy me like they do in your other animations
Man I want this as a whole Star Trek type of show. A wholesome multi-species 8 year mission exploring space, discovering the things that make us different and the ones that make us similar, and facing issues where everyone can contribute their own perspective into a solution. Like I’d like it to be thought provoking but more lighthearted than Star Trek, but not as goofy as The Orville.
Imagin if they have heared of how strong are Space Marines compare to the normal human. 💀
A space marine to a human, is a human to a mantis alien
fun fact: throwing in itself is a rare ability proving humans to be even weirder on the universal scale
Wow what an original comment.
I actually need more of this. This is such good content
If our games are considered Murder weapons
Think about our actual murder weapons
honestly though, a real bad finger cut that hits an arterial would probably mean you lose that whole part of the appendage as a bug, as a people you can just get a few stitches and you'll be fine. Sure you'll have some nerve damage for a few months, but it'll pass (Might sometimes come back now and again though). Just numbness in that whole finger.
@@Weldedhodag arthropods can grow scars and heal tissue too, some of them can even regrow limbs
@miguelpedraentomology6080 depends on the arthropods of course. Hell humans can reattach and heal appendages that have been completely severed. How many non-regenerating arthropods can make that claim?
@Weldedhodag now thats just unfair, we can only do that in a few rare situations and only because of medicine, since bugs lack medicine yhey cant reattach members, but without it we wouldnt either. now arthropods shrugging off part of a limb or whole limbs is extremely common, the exposed flesh will bleed for a bit before quickly turning into a hardened scar.
@miguelpedraentomology6080 you're right, it is unfair. Thats why humans numbah 1 babyyyyyy
@@Weldedhodag Yeah? well then erm um uhh! m-maybe you'll regret that once i give those chernobyl roaches some fire like prometheus aswell as some suture tools!!!
Whats funny is that humans arent even that durable compared to other earth creatures. Most other animals have thick hides, scales, and other forms of natural armor to protect them from injury. I would love to see him react to an elephant or a hippo
2:40 and thats why humans are #1 babyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
Humanity, fuck yeah!
The alien designs are pretty cute honestly
To aliens we probably look like timelords with our ability to regenerate.
To aliens we make up and nerf to make ourselves feel superior.
@@Tenebrio-MorioFrankly, we don't know much about aliens. As far as we know, aliens could totally be physically pretty weak. We genuinely don't know.
I loved this video! Just binged all of the other videos too, keep them up :3
Yayy new ep!!
And now this got me hooked.
I want 21 seasons of this immediately-
0:34 ONLY AMERICANS, this sh!t game is only favoured amongst AMERICANS.
NO other self respecting nation plays it, only americans, and those who were bombed by americans in wars.
I am not trying to be disrespectful, but saying that this game is "a favorite past-time among their kind" is an *INSULT* to a LOT of people who prefer *FOOTBALL* and *FREE HEALTHCARE* , also known as "the rest of the world"
They weren't really playing "baseball" they were playing catch which is pretty universal
@@ignoreth No catch is NOT pretty universal, stop thinking that JUST because you see AMERICAN fathers playing with their sons catch, in AMERICAN movies/TV Shows it is UNIVERSAL because IT IS NOT.
Show a hundred examples out of EVERY OTHER COUNTRY THAN AMERICA where a NON AMERICAN FATHER plays catch with their NON AMERICAN SON catch in a movie/tv show and I will admit defeat, YOU CAN'T. Because it is NOT universal.
And even if it was, it is STILL NOT "a favorite past-time among their kind" as I already quoted.
kc*f you
@@ignoreth No catch is NOT pretty universal, stop thinking that JUST because you see AMERICAN fathers playing with their sons catch, in AMERICAN movies/TV Shows it is UNIVERSAL because IT IS NOT.
Show a hundred examples out of EVERY OTHER COUNTRY THAN AMERICA where a NON AMERICAN FATHER plays catch with their NON AMERICAN SON catch in a movie/tv show and I will admit defeat, YOU CAN'T. Because it is NOT universal.
And even if it was, it is STILL NOT "a favorite past-time among their kind" as I already quoted.
@@ignoreth Noone even mentioned Baseball but you boy, sheeeeeeesh
@@fugofugo5135dude chill, he is just a Child, probably doesn't even know what a third World country is😅😅😅❤
I’m in love with the animations! I have a lot of videos that read out the stories and I always think about how it would good to turn those stories into animated cartoons
Love it 👍😎
Oh my goodness this was amazing!! I have something to binge watch and look forward to more videos now!!
guys hear me out on the mantis guy 7w7
LMAOOOOO based honestly 👽
what those mandibles do?
@@cheesemanmaster love bites i guess?
I love Crim.. (sorry If I said it wrong) insectoid like creatures are just so HUGGABLE!
today,... is a good day
I mean... It does usually end up in a blue eye and that's it, but also simingly minor head injuries sometimes lead to stroke, so his worrying isn't completely unwarranted and they probably should wear helmets🤷