I love the variety in food choices so I made a list of all the food I saw: Found tamale Ate fried chicken Ate salmon Ate leftover pizza Found one potato chip Found gorgon eyeballs (??????????????) Found anchovies pizza Found cheeze pizza Found peppers ahoy pizza Found sushi Found overflowing goulash Ate spring water Ate eyeball pudding (!!!!!!) Ate jade coin (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) Ate hamburger Found fried rice Found chili pepper Found raddishes Found pancakes Found coffee Ate jalapeno omelette Ate key candy Ate galbi beef Ate tamale Ate potsticker Ate beef wellington Ate corn dog Ate fruit cake Ate glass noodles Ate mayo pizza
I love all of the weird foods in the game. They didn’t have to be weird and interesting, but they were anyway, and that was cool to see. Gives the game even more character
One thing I never really considered when we were chatting about Glorious Trainwrecks until watching this finished video is copyright. I love the "ripping sound samples from your favorite television shows" element of underground art that the site's mission statement speaks to. While copyright should probably exist in some sense it also is a shame that we live in a world where sampling and repurposing existing media comes with extensive licensing fees or fair use baggage.
Yeah, I agree that copyright should exist to a certain extent, but the impact on preservation that licensing has had on games is immense, to say nothing of the creative ways copyrighted materials can be utilized. Fortunately there are people out there doing cool stuff with copyrighted materials.
We had a booth at GDC in 2012, and set up a game jam event on the website where people could submit stuff that would show up to play on a laptop that was set up in the booth. We would literally just launch random games all day, with no idea what was coming. I like to tell people that nothing draws a crowd faster than suddenly blasting Whitney Houston belting out "I Will Always Love You" at full volume. Explaining to the confused nerds that assembled that this was a game about having sex with the sun (Fuck The Sun II: Sun Lover) is one of my most cherished memories. The other big thing I remember about that experience is that our booth got visited by a LOT of lawyers. I pretty much told them all, "hey, we're exhibiting a bunch of illegal art, please move on and forget you saw us", and they would kind of chuckle. Nobody narced on us. A couple of them were really curious and talked to us for a while - not about any sort of legal stuff, just genuine interest.
Great seeing a new vid from you! Probably never wouldve heard about this game if not for you, so thank you! And maybe its cheesy but seeing all those glorious trainwrecks presented with love and respect makes me believe I actually *can* make my own games in the future, that its not something thats out of my reach
Yeah, the site has always wanted to show people that making games is a very possible thing that just about anyone can do, and I think it does that really well. The site doesn’t need a game to be polished. Weirdness and rough edges are absolutely accepted, which I think makes it a great platform for new developers. I’m glad you enjoyed the video!
Thank you for not only highlighting a fantastic looking game, but a whole site of true indie devs that are making things that most people would never have found. personally, I think that there is a huge field of ideas that games can grow into, but it's only possible by people taking risks, and TrainWreck seems to be encouraging just that. Plus, it's always good for people to be able to see truly short and small games made by people that don't know what they're doing to encourage them to try it out for themselves.
Really enjoyed the video, thank you. Never heard about the game or even the community before this, and seeing games that are posted on the GT website is inspiring in a sense.
The first game is called Tram Simulator, and is a game from Glorious Trainwrecks www.glorioustrainwrecks.com/node/11681 The second game is called Quite Soulless, and is an adventure game, one quite difficult to explain. archive.org/details/QuiteSoulless
starting with a man with one of the biggest wizard cone hats i've seen is the best introduction
kickass vid
I love the variety in food choices so I made a list of all the food I saw:
Found tamale
Ate fried chicken
Ate salmon
Ate leftover pizza
Found one potato chip
Found gorgon eyeballs (??????????????)
Found anchovies pizza
Found cheeze pizza
Found peppers ahoy pizza
Found sushi
Found overflowing goulash
Ate spring water
Ate eyeball pudding (!!!!!!)
Ate jade coin (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
Ate hamburger
Found fried rice
Found chili pepper
Found raddishes
Found pancakes
Found coffee
Ate jalapeno omelette
Ate key candy
Ate galbi beef
Ate tamale
Ate potsticker
Ate beef wellington
Ate corn dog
Ate fruit cake
Ate glass noodles
Ate mayo pizza
I love all of the weird foods in the game. They didn’t have to be weird and interesting, but they were anyway, and that was cool to see. Gives the game even more character
Great find. You're so good at digging up stuff that renews a sense of awe in what games can be.
One thing I never really considered when we were chatting about Glorious Trainwrecks until watching this finished video is copyright. I love the "ripping sound samples from your favorite television shows" element of underground art that the site's mission statement speaks to. While copyright should probably exist in some sense it also is a shame that we live in a world where sampling and repurposing existing media comes with extensive licensing fees or fair use baggage.
Yeah, I agree that copyright should exist to a certain extent, but the impact on preservation that licensing has had on games is immense, to say nothing of the creative ways copyrighted materials can be utilized. Fortunately there are people out there doing cool stuff with copyrighted materials.
We had a booth at GDC in 2012, and set up a game jam event on the website where people could submit stuff that would show up to play on a laptop that was set up in the booth. We would literally just launch random games all day, with no idea what was coming. I like to tell people that nothing draws a crowd faster than suddenly blasting Whitney Houston belting out "I Will Always Love You" at full volume. Explaining to the confused nerds that assembled that this was a game about having sex with the sun (Fuck The Sun II: Sun Lover) is one of my most cherished memories.
The other big thing I remember about that experience is that our booth got visited by a LOT of lawyers. I pretty much told them all, "hey, we're exhibiting a bunch of illegal art, please move on and forget you saw us", and they would kind of chuckle. Nobody narced on us. A couple of them were really curious and talked to us for a while - not about any sort of legal stuff, just genuine interest.
I loved how you moved the camera around after certain jumps. You were clearly thinking, "That actually worked? Alright, next jump."
No idea how I missed this upload, it's been a while since I've wanted to play a game so much after watching a video about it
Great seeing a new vid from you! Probably never wouldve heard about this game if not for you, so thank you! And maybe its cheesy but seeing all those glorious trainwrecks presented with love and respect makes me believe I actually *can* make my own games in the future, that its not something thats out of my reach
Yeah, the site has always wanted to show people that making games is a very possible thing that just about anyone can do, and I think it does that really well. The site doesn’t need a game to be polished. Weirdness and rough edges are absolutely accepted, which I think makes it a great platform for new developers. I’m glad you enjoyed the video!
Thank you for not only highlighting a fantastic looking game, but a whole site of true indie devs that are making things that most people would never have found. personally, I think that there is a huge field of ideas that games can grow into, but it's only possible by people taking risks, and TrainWreck seems to be encouraging just that. Plus, it's always good for people to be able to see truly short and small games made by people that don't know what they're doing to encourage them to try it out for themselves.
Wonderful. I think I like hearing about odd games more than playing them, but ZK Map sounds like something that would be fun to try. Great video! 😃
Really enjoyed the video, thank you. Never heard about the game or even the community before this, and seeing games that are posted on the GT website is inspiring in a sense.
most underrated channel on youtube
fuck yeah zk map always nice to see someone give it a shoutout
just got here from the Cursed Judges video, and your videos are amazing! Keep this up :) Already looking forward to your next video
Deeply fascinating video, and very good soundtrack picks too!
Thanks! I spent so long picking out the soundtracks, so I’m glad people are enjoying that part of the video
If you made more Glorious Trainwrecks videos I would forever be grateful
i love falling in games this game looks like it has some really cool movement i love it !!!!!
Finally a good gaming video
Great video 👍 thanks for sharing small stuff like this
I love this video so much.
Man look at all the loops in that one level! :D
awesome video gotta try this out
cool video thanks for the cool video
Survey my aroundings!
Great video! Can you please tell me the names of the games at 0:36 and 0:38 ?
The first game is called Tram Simulator, and is a game from Glorious Trainwrecks
www.glorioustrainwrecks.com/node/11681
The second game is called Quite Soulless, and is an adventure game, one quite difficult to explain.
archive.org/details/QuiteSoulless
@@Chariot_Rider Thanks
Please start getting more views 🙏
oh hi
Hey man remember that time we met on Discord?