I love the contrast in how open they both were with the shopkeepers. Liv is very "yeah it's an old fashioned meal" and Maddie just goes in hard with "so we have these D&D characters..."
Im fairly new to Dicebreaker and what I have gathered from this stream is that Maddie is a sweet and caring individual, and...Liv is the embodiment of chaos
You could get a few good traveling meals out of bread, cheese, nuts, dried fruit, and cured meat (like salami, jerky, bacon or biltong), along with anything fresh found in the wilderness. If you combine elements of Liv and Maddie's lunches, you can build a balanced, high-energy ration that would travel well. I've done a fair amount of historical recreation and re-enactment, and I can attest to the effectiveness of some straightforward, traditional foodstuffs. ...Or there's the Heroes' Feast D&D spell that conjures a spread of "magnificent food and drink" and can feed more than a dozen people. There's so much food that it takes an hour to eat, but everyone receives a slew of magical benefits that last for an entire day. The main downside is that the spell requires - and destroys - a very expensive jewel-encrusted bowl whenever you cast it.
The premise alone guaranteed that this was going to be a delightful video, but the sheer amount of joy that everyone brought to this highly scientific D&D experiment was lovely
Oh my god, Liv unbundling that DELIGHTFUL looking meal in contrast to the half a lemon and trout sandwich absolutely killed me 😂😭 I truly nearly spat out my drink laughing as so many point during this video 😅 absolute chaos energy
I started wheezing with laughter when Liv cut the corn off the cob and wrapped it in the wax paper. I love Wheels behind the camera with "All right. That's it, huh?" More wheezing laughter came when everyone was laughing about how bendy the sticks got at first. "There's a "p" on the end there, yeah?" I swear I'm going to have an asthma attack from all the laughing I've been doing. I was thinking guest or friend for the dinner riddle (though that assumes no one at dinner is a cannibal...). I was also thinking of time like Wheels said for the 2nd riddle. This was so fun to watch. Liv's laughter is especially contagious and I kept laughing when she laughed.
Liv & Maddie were so upbeat and infectious with their laughter as they did the tests. I couldn't stop laughing as I watched. I was stumped, though, with the flirty crone's second riddle. I thought air because, as you breathe in, you also breathe out. In any case, totally enjoyed it and having the whole group together. If this is part of a series, looking forward to the next episode. Thank you. Still subscribed.
Well its the equivalent of sending a super chat when they are live but as I never catch them live due to work I'll do it this way instead. Plus...its my money.
Oh. My. I have not laughed so hard at something in a very long time. The reveal of the food was, there isn't a word in existence that can describe how great it is. A+ content.
Based on my DnD groups rations are cake, crisps(potato chips), anything coated in chocolate, energy drinks, biscuits, and the odd ration of hummus with carrot sticks and water but you still ate the chocolate cake Katie, oh and the wasabi ration that only a warlock consumed 😈
Wheels- You dont have a chopping board in the middle of the wilderness. Me thinking about my Tortle Nature cleric who had a mini camp kitchen he carried around the under-dark on his back
I found the ability tests hilarious. I feel like it would be entertaining to see how people do with the tomato tests perhaps competitively (maybe not the standard constitution one which could be replaced with how many you can eat in a minute without being sick). I feel like the person testing for wisdom should have to argue for why tomatoes shouldn't be in a fruit salad while the person for charisma should (let the charisma person make/choose the salad contents to make it more even as their job is more difficult). Intelligence is just who can list the most facts about tomatoes.
This was a really nice video; I do think in terms of the format it should just be a budget rather than a time limit for the buying stage, 'cos you're at the mercy of the stall/queues etc. otherwise. 😝
Okay Maddie talking about the food groups remembered me of the scene in Atlantis the lost Empire, where Cookie said the four basic food groups are "Maize, bacon, whiskey and lard" X'D I just love to watch the funny shenanigans this two amazing people always pull of :3 Also props to Alex for her impersonation of Crown (I almost definitely misspelled this).
In a video full of hilarious moments, my favourite has to be Liv pulling the lemon out of the bag. A Dicebreaker hall of fame moment. 10/10 comic timing
And it was ostensibly to prevent scurvy. I kept yelling "there are oranges RIGHT THERE! Why would you choose a LEMON??" Like, who just...eats a lemon?? I haven't even watched the whole video yet, so I can't wait to see how that lemon works out... 🍋😝
Considering D&D is basically fantasy medieval setting the most accurate metric you could use would likely be a medieval ration. Salted Fish, Pork or Mutton and the portion size for a medieval soldiers ration would be about 200 grams per day. In addition to their meat ration they'd get some Bread, beans, various root vegetables, some cheese, and a beer or wine flask. They needed things that would be kept preserved without modern techniques so that means lots and lots of salt or sugar. Any fruit they had would have definitely been dried and preserved to some degree depending on expected journey length.
Definitely true there, regarding beer or wine, given issues with water quality. In biomes that have them, nuts would definitely show up. As for a proper test, I would have probably suggested they leave their "rations" for a few days, *then* have them eat them. There's your real portability test. ;-)
Fairly representative 18th century military rations are (per person per day): 1lb flour as either bread or ships' biscuit/hardtack depending on access to ovens and length of time the rations need to last, 1lb fresh or 3/4lb salt cured pork/beef/fish or cheese, 3/4 pint dried peas or rice, and 6oz butter or oil. A mess of 6 would have a tin kettle to cook the food, and the ration would be supplemented with whatever could be bought or stolen from the local population. Sauerkraut, eggs, and locally harvested fruits and veggies were common. I think an adventuring party could reasonably have a kettle or frying pan in their gear, or something like a wok which can be used in a variety of ways. The cooking dish used by the 18th century French Army was very much like a large wok which could be tied to someone's knapsack. Food would be carried in a linen haversack worn on a shoulder strap so the bag sits under and behind the left armpit. From there, if it hangs high enough, it would swing much and is nicely out of the way.
What highly scientific D&D experiment should we tackle next?
Agility Checks - Dicebreaker Does Parkour!
Short rests and long rest! 😂
@@Krushdig Yes! DB camping trip!
Since their strength stats are so low, do a video to show if the encumbrance values in the d&d manual are realistic. 😄
@@alexbruce9499 definitely a camping trip.
I love the contrast in how open they both were with the shopkeepers. Liv is very "yeah it's an old fashioned meal" and Maddie just goes in hard with "so we have these D&D characters..."
I like how all the shopkeepers didn't really give a shit, just "are you buying something or fuck off with your camera".
Im fairly new to Dicebreaker and what I have gathered from this stream is that Maddie is a sweet and caring individual, and...Liv is the embodiment of chaos
Liv is more "spluttering havoc". Meehan is the "wildcard".
You could get a few good traveling meals out of bread, cheese, nuts, dried fruit, and cured meat (like salami, jerky, bacon or biltong), along with anything fresh found in the wilderness. If you combine elements of Liv and Maddie's lunches, you can build a balanced, high-energy ration that would travel well. I've done a fair amount of historical recreation and re-enactment, and I can attest to the effectiveness of some straightforward, traditional foodstuffs.
...Or there's the Heroes' Feast D&D spell that conjures a spread of "magnificent food and drink" and can feed more than a dozen people. There's so much food that it takes an hour to eat, but everyone receives a slew of magical benefits that last for an entire day. The main downside is that the spell requires - and destroys - a very expensive jewel-encrusted bowl whenever you cast it.
the funniest thing here is the guilt on Liv's face while she is eating the fine meal while looking at what Maddie eats
The premise alone guaranteed that this was going to be a delightful video, but the sheer amount of joy that everyone brought to this highly scientific D&D experiment was lovely
Oh my god, Liv unbundling that DELIGHTFUL looking meal in contrast to the half a lemon and trout sandwich absolutely killed me 😂😭 I truly nearly spat out my drink laughing as so many point during this video 😅 absolute chaos energy
Liv and Maddie are great together, and the editing was on point. More of this please!
I started wheezing with laughter when Liv cut the corn off the cob and wrapped it in the wax paper. I love Wheels behind the camera with "All right. That's it, huh?" More wheezing laughter came when everyone was laughing about how bendy the sticks got at first. "There's a "p" on the end there, yeah?" I swear I'm going to have an asthma attack from all the laughing I've been doing. I was thinking guest or friend for the dinner riddle (though that assumes no one at dinner is a cannibal...). I was also thinking of time like Wheels said for the 2nd riddle.
This was so fun to watch. Liv's laughter is especially contagious and I kept laughing when she laughed.
Liv & Maddie were so upbeat and infectious with their laughter as they did the tests. I couldn't stop laughing as I watched. I was stumped, though, with the flirty crone's second riddle. I thought air because, as you breathe in, you also breathe out. In any case, totally enjoyed it and having the whole group together. If this is part of a series, looking forward to the next episode. Thank you. Still subscribed.
I absolutely LOVE the Liv and Maddie combo, you guys are just amazing together 💙💙💙
One of my favourite Dicebreaker videos ever! Great job guys.
Same, but I wouldn't give them money when they work for a multi million company.
Well its the equivalent of sending a super chat when they are live but as I never catch them live due to work I'll do it this way instead. Plus...its my money.
Thank you so much, we put a lot of work into it 😊 Thanks for watching and for the super thanks! (Is that what it's called? Maybe haha)
Oh. My. I have not laughed so hard at something in a very long time. The reveal of the food was, there isn't a word in existence that can describe how great it is. A+ content.
I love that maddie made an actual meal and liv made a mess.
You guys are so cute
The look of guilt on Liv's face.... Beautiful :). That slam poetry slammed!!!
This was great all around. I would love to see what meals they can come up with given more time.
everyone is so genuinely awkward.. it's cute.. i'm loving this type of content..
I had a smile on my face the whole time while watching this. Thanks for the amazing video! 💜
Based on my DnD groups rations are cake, crisps(potato chips), anything coated in chocolate, energy drinks, biscuits, and the odd ration of hummus with carrot sticks and water but you still ate the chocolate cake Katie, oh and the wasabi ration that only a warlock consumed 😈
Loved this video, great work!
Wheels- You dont have a chopping board in the middle of the wilderness.
Me thinking about my Tortle Nature cleric who had a mini camp kitchen he carried around the under-dark on his back
The one Maddie made made me super hungry. The one Liv made took care of that problem pretty quick though.
Great video! For some reason, I'm craving blueberries...and cheese...and lemons...
I don't even like d&d but this was fantastic, great work guys! 🤣
Luckily they had the most common place for a dnd campaign, a modern office and dense urban streets, just lying around. Super lucky.
33:05 best bit
I found the ability tests hilarious. I feel like it would be entertaining to see how people do with the tomato tests perhaps competitively (maybe not the standard constitution one which could be replaced with how many you can eat in a minute without being sick). I feel like the person testing for wisdom should have to argue for why tomatoes shouldn't be in a fruit salad while the person for charisma should (let the charisma person make/choose the salad contents to make it more even as their job is more difficult). Intelligence is just who can list the most facts about tomatoes.
I love this channel.
Maddie casts "Fireball" at point-blank-range. There were no survivors.
commenting for the algorithm and also that was a lot of fun!
This was a really nice video; I do think in terms of the format it should just be a budget rather than a time limit for the buying stage, 'cos you're at the mercy of the stall/queues etc. otherwise. 😝
Okay Maddie talking about the food groups remembered me of the scene in Atlantis the lost Empire, where Cookie said the four basic food groups are "Maize, bacon, whiskey and lard" X'D
I just love to watch the funny shenanigans this two amazing people always pull of :3
Also props to Alex for her impersonation of Crown (I almost definitely misspelled this).
*Crone. Not being a twat just helping you out.
In a video full of hilarious moments, my favourite has to be Liv pulling the lemon out of the bag. A Dicebreaker hall of fame moment. 10/10 comic timing
And it was ostensibly to prevent scurvy. I kept yelling "there are oranges RIGHT THERE! Why would you choose a LEMON??" Like, who just...eats a lemon?? I haven't even watched the whole video yet, so I can't wait to see how that lemon works out... 🍋😝
Poor Maddie 😂
Oh no.
Accurate.
Considering D&D is basically fantasy medieval setting the most accurate metric you could use would likely be a medieval ration. Salted Fish, Pork or Mutton and the portion size for a medieval soldiers ration would be about 200 grams per day. In addition to their meat ration they'd get some Bread, beans, various root vegetables, some cheese, and a beer or wine flask. They needed things that would be kept preserved without modern techniques so that means lots and lots of salt or sugar. Any fruit they had would have definitely been dried and preserved to some degree depending on expected journey length.
Definitely true there, regarding beer or wine, given issues with water quality. In biomes that have them, nuts would definitely show up. As for a proper test, I would have probably suggested they leave their "rations" for a few days, *then* have them eat them. There's your real portability test. ;-)
Wouldn't the charactets have carried sharp knives?
Thanks!
11:00. Why is Honey Monster not in the Monster Manual?
No (Skyrim) sweetroll? I feel shot in my knee...
I'd say do something to test your comstitution bug I'm afraid you'd poison yourselvez.
You could do an experiment for combat by going larping.
Great content. D&D chars do have sharp daggers and swords not butterknives. That should have been accounted for but wasn't.
Arrgh this is great :>
Fairly representative 18th century military rations are (per person per day): 1lb flour as either bread or ships' biscuit/hardtack depending on access to ovens and length of time the rations need to last, 1lb fresh or 3/4lb salt cured pork/beef/fish or cheese, 3/4 pint dried peas or rice, and 6oz butter or oil. A mess of 6 would have a tin kettle to cook the food, and the ration would be supplemented with whatever could be bought or stolen from the local population. Sauerkraut, eggs, and locally harvested fruits and veggies were common. I think an adventuring party could reasonably have a kettle or frying pan in their gear, or something like a wok which can be used in a variety of ways. The cooking dish used by the 18th century French Army was very much like a large wok which could be tied to someone's knapsack. Food would be carried in a linen haversack worn on a shoulder strap so the bag sits under and behind the left armpit. From there, if it hangs high enough, it would swing much and is nicely out of the way.
I made some food from the elder scrolls cookbook and it was interesting
Hey! The Lady Boys are in town!!!
Didn't Bob the world builder just do this?
We've had this in the works for a while so great minds think alike
He did, but the approach and results could not have been any more different! But both terrific!
Who? Different people in the world can have similar ideas at the same time, you can't copy them if you don't know who they are.