That opening scene is just perfection. The young actress who plays Janey really holds her own, and it hits me in the throat when she asks, "Is it your thumb . . . or mine?"
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there is NOT "character-based storyline" like the last of us. there's only world-events storyline. like you living through ww2. theres many different stories not just yours, yall do live through the same historical event.
@@zimvader25 WW2 is a story, History is a story. so in the LORE we get to know the HISTORY of the fallout world. not just events, but perpetrators, reasons, more information than just "dates of events" as a TIMELINE would be
0:05 All Fallout games do indeed have a narrative but the real heart and soul of the games is the journey in between the beginning and end. From the exploring the world and discovering the environmental storytelling to doing side quests that branch into differant outcomes depending on your choices to meeting new characters and factions each with a reputation system that will change over the course of the game. The series is also very much an anthology with each game following a new main character and set in a new location with a time jump. The West Coast games like Fallout 1, 2, and New Vegas have connections thanks to being close together such as mention of past events, returning factions, and even characters like Marcus a companion from Fallout 2 who appears in Fallout New Vegas 40 years later. While Fallout 3 and Fallout 4 also have connections thanks to the close setting (D.C & Boston) and only being set 10 years apart. This show is the same an original story set in the Fallout universe, 100% canonical to the games. Fallout - *2161* (Southern California) Fallout 2 - *2241* (Northern California & Nevada) Fallout 3 - *2277* (Capital Wasteland, parts of Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia) Fallout New Vegas - *2281* (Mojave Wasteland, parts of California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona) Fallout 4 - *2287* (The Commonwealth, Massachusetts, Boston) Fallout TV - *2296* (California)
everyones reaction to "cousin stuff" what do you think would happen in a colony in an underground vault over 200 years😂 societal norms would definitely change
Might have already been mentioned, but the bookending of the line, "We cowpokes, we take it as it comes" really solidified this episode as a solid pilot.
Every Fallout game is a separate story. Set in a different part of the USA and in a different year. The main character is always new. NPCs *very* rarely overlap, and the majority is new every time. So... this show is set five years after Fallout 4 (the "latest" game, chronologically), and has its own characters and storylines. Which fits perfectly the tradition of the series. As for the technology, the history, the factions, etc. of the setting... those are the common denominator, and the show does that part in an *EXTREMELY* faithful way.
The opening scene is set in 2077. Fallout is an "atom punk" alternate time line where they worked on nuclear sciences instead of electronics after WWII and the cold war never ended (but it was between USA and China instead of USSR)
The show does great justice to the games... many suttle refferences and good way of keeping side missions inculded in the main plot without dragging out the show pacing
The thing is once you close those doors to the shelter you don't open them up again due to the radioactive material you would expose yourself to. So you were right to begin with, The supplies you have set aside foe your family would run out so you and your family would die if you let others in even if it was only for a day you would die letting them back out.
27:51 This is a fantastic observation. At this time, he is still very scared and docile. He just had to run away from the melee in the vault, and in next episode I think, or 3, you hear his literal inner turmoil on his cowardice,. I think there at the dining table in the ceremony, he just didn't want to make a scene. He already poked and prodded while they were walking to the marriage hall, and it's shown he's a black sheep. I think he just feels he won't be taken seriously, and that he feels he doesn't have agency.
Whoever told you that there isn't a storyline in the video games have never played the games the TV show is in the fallout world it doesn't follow a specific fallout game it's its own story but there are elements from some of the games in there
Anyone who didn't "react" to that little girl seeing the first nuke drop...is already a ghoul. After 26 years of playing all of the Fallout games (except 76) I thought I'd be "desensitized" to such scenarios by now. Nope! Had to hit pause and refill my drink.
Ghoul here, if I may introduce myself. I thought the scene was wonderfully acted, and narratively fulfilling after the pretext of the thumbs up... But no, I didn't "react" outwardly maybe beyond a sigh. 🤷🏾♂️
They nailed the vibe and (mostly) the lore. Each game has its own story that influences the others, but the generally aren't directly related. The show is canon to the universe taking place 9 years after the events of the most recent *good game in the series. Love the blind reactions to this IP it's so fun seeing it expand its audience
congrats on being introduced to the fallout franchise! I can tell you will be hopelessly addicted to it like the rest of us.(also I recommend fallout 4 as your first game if you wanna play them)
I've played a few of the games. I think it's really remarkable how well this show has captured the look, feel, and tone of the games. They were able to do that AND combine it with watchable characters and story too.
The games do have a story, but it's kind of secondary to the world itself, and how you survive/ deal with it. You can play the games for hundreds of hours (and many do!) without doing hardly anything related to the main story. The story in the TV show is written specifically for it, so you don't need any foreknowledge. The characters and their journeys are all new, even though the factions and environments are (mostly) taken from the games.
I just realized the reason they only told lucy to come back is because the platform to walk on was already put away so they couldnt actually get to her to stop her. After 3 watches i finally realized that part
You don't let other people in. You only have food, water and medication necessary for the number people that were intended to live in it, if nuclear war or some other huge disaster forced you to seek shelter. You might have to be inside one for months before it was safe to check conditions outside.
What's the best way to put this.... Every Fallout game is a standalone story in the Fallout world. Each game is a sprawling open world with a large and complex main questline and a genuinely vast array of sidequest stories that can be resolved in various ways. They do each have a story, but there's so much to do that if you don't want to rush through the main storyline you can EASILY amuse yourself in a broad variety of ways and largely ignore it. Because the various games tend to be set in different parts of the country it's easy for each game to serve as a standalone experience that doesn't depend on prior knowledge of the older games... but the show is set in Los Angeles, which is not terribly far from where the first two Fallout games were set, so it's building on the history they established... but coming back to that region after a long absence to tell its own story.
The games each have a different storyline, but they're all set in the same world and timeline. This is just another entry into the events of the Fallout world as a whole. It is a very faithful adaptation of the world!
As a fan, that prospect is just so exciting. I'm just sitting and wondering how much of the events in this show will be referenced in the next game, because there's going to be a S2 of this too.
8:03 one of the thematic strengths of the "west coast" fallouts (1, 2, New Vegas) is the relativism of apocalypse and post-apocalypse, political hegemony and the "frontier," and what culture means in the face of colonialism and massive political and environmental change. I live on (indigenous) Nisqually land because I was born here to settlers. This is post-apocalyptic. The people are gone, but the people are not gone. I can email them if I feel like.
8:51 I love the stream of thought here. Also, this is an interesting case study on men and women. You saying "us" here, it's how women internalize things where men are object-oriented. That's fascinating.
the games all have their own Story, what the show get right is the setting and Mostly all of the group/faction are accurate. tho you want to get techical F1 F2 have similar stories save your people stop threat, and F3 F4 diffrent but same. F3 find your dad get water F4 find your son beat other groups up.
Overall, games have more of a timeline rather than a single story line. The series is mostly an anthology with each entry taking place within the same world but at different times. Its like Grand Theft Auto or Final Fantasy in that regard.
It doesnt fall the "story" as each game has its own "main" story in the same world, so in essence the series' story is a co.plwtely new story set in the same "world/universe". Also its funny seeing non-fallout fans watching immediately getting tripped up with "cousin stuff" lmfao. Its more of an inside joke amongst game fans, as its never really explicitly stated in the games, but consider the same group of people in a vault for multiple generations, everyone is going to be related to everyone else at some point lol
"Why won't he let other people in?" Because what ever he has stockpiled for his family to last years, gets cut in half. As a father, My children will have that time. Not a stranger, politcian or some random Dad that happened to be there when the SHTF. I wont look at them, while my children starve for my choice to let them in. Just the way it has to be.
@@dwnkaomwn3953 Friends in social circles and the friend you would load up the truck with shovels a 3 in the morning. No questions asked. Are two very different friends
Fallout has overarching lore and the individual games have storylines to follow, however, every main fallout entry is a role-playing game, so you as the player have a lot of influence on the narrative outcome, unlike, say, the Last of Us. To add to this, most Fallout games are standalone stories, set in different parts of the US. So the series doesn't follow a specific game's storyline, rather, it uses the world of Fallout to tell an original story.
7:57 that was insightful! but marred at 8:03 with the racism there. It wasn't "white savior"ish, it was "Vault Dweller Savior"ish. But I'll stick around yet :)
Ya who ever said fallout didint have a story line is just wrong the world is drenched in lore. But it is different then common story's in games where the environment of the game tells out of the story and you don't follow the same protagonist through our the games as each one takes place in different parts of the world in different time lines.
If you stick 200 people under a rock for 220 years after a short time most will be related. In real life a 120 pound woman could not beat a 200 pound man no matter how skilled she is. As a matter of fact, she'd have a problem beating a 14 year old boy. She's knows her mother but doesn't know her father? Why drag him away then?
depends on the woman and the man. The bigger difference is intensity, she knows technique but she's never had to fight for her life before, while the dude has probably been fighting for his life since he was a little kid. You switch that difference in intensity around and add a bit of technique and she'd own him without any difficulty. It doesn't matter how big someone is when they get fingers jabbed in their eyes.
@@helgar791 first of all Ella Purnell is 5'5" and she's clearly not 120. Probably more like 150. When I was younger before MMA was cool and you just had to fight whoever they could match you up with, I did a full contact cage match at 170 vs someone at least 220, very muscular, and 6" taller. But they were a noob that just hit me like I was a heavy bag. He couldn't do any meaningful damage. Compared to the first guy I fought who was my size but he hit me like he'd caught me r@p!ng his sister and every blow was devastating. Intensity and experience matters _vastly_ more than size.
@@j.f.fisher5318 Ella Parnell, from looking at her standing next to the other actors, is at best 5'4". Walton Goggins is 5'10" tall. Does he look 5 inches or 6 inches taller? Perhaps even 7 inches taller" She is listed at 135 pounds. Again I state, no woman at that size, no matter how trained, can beat a 6', 200 pound man. I emphasize the phrase woman vs. man. Men vs. men are different contests. We share the same superiority and equivalencies of eye/hand coordination, higher blood platelets, higher bone mass, greater lung capacity, greater muscle density, and equivalencies of testosterone and quick twitch responses. As a 170 pound man, your experience against another man would be vastly different than that of a woman.
That opening scene is just perfection. The young actress who plays Janey really holds her own, and it hits me in the throat when she asks, "Is it your thumb . . . or mine?"
Holy hell same, I wasn’t expecting it to hit me so hard lol
Does it hit you in the throat like an arrow?
@@MarcosElMalo2 Heh, no. Like a barely suppressed sob.
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Mr Handy will stitch it too.
Who ever told you that the Fallout games didn't have a storyline didn't know what they were talking about and the show is part of the story
They probably mean that the games are mostly open world and that there are different endings.
there is NOT "character-based storyline" like the last of us.
there's only world-events storyline. like you living through ww2. theres many different stories not just yours, yall do live through the same historical event.
Timelines ≠ storylines
@@zimvader25 WW2 is a story, History is a story. so in the LORE we get to know the HISTORY of the fallout world. not just events, but perpetrators, reasons, more information than just "dates of events" as a TIMELINE would be
Yeah I clicked on the video to say exactly this. Very misinformed but I’m glad she checked it out anyways
0:05 All Fallout games do indeed have a narrative but the real heart and soul of the games is the journey in between the beginning and end. From the exploring the world and discovering the environmental storytelling to doing side quests that branch into differant outcomes depending on your choices to meeting new characters and factions each with a reputation system that will change over the course of the game.
The series is also very much an anthology with each game following a new main character and set in a new location with a time jump. The West Coast games like Fallout 1, 2, and New Vegas have connections thanks to being close together such as mention of past events, returning factions, and even characters like Marcus a companion from Fallout 2 who appears in Fallout New Vegas 40 years later. While Fallout 3 and Fallout 4 also have connections thanks to the close setting (D.C & Boston) and only being set 10 years apart. This show is the same an original story set in the Fallout universe, 100% canonical to the games.
Fallout - *2161*
(Southern California)
Fallout 2 - *2241*
(Northern California & Nevada)
Fallout 3 - *2277*
(Capital Wasteland, parts of Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia)
Fallout New Vegas - *2281*
(Mojave Wasteland, parts of California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona)
Fallout 4 - *2287*
(The Commonwealth, Massachusetts, Boston)
Fallout TV - *2296*
(California)
I love that they all have narratives but give you the choice on how they will play out
Main objective: Find Dad
Me retrieving the Declaration of the Independence: Thou shalt get sidetracked by bullshit every goddamn time
Fallout 76 - 2102
(Appalachia)
everyones reaction to "cousin stuff" what do you think would happen in a colony in an underground vault over 200 years😂 societal norms would definitely change
You’re right, doesn’t make it any less disgusting tho lol
Might have already been mentioned, but the bookending of the line, "We cowpokes, we take it as it comes" really solidified this episode as a solid pilot.
Every Fallout game is a separate story.
Set in a different part of the USA and in a different year.
The main character is always new.
NPCs *very* rarely overlap, and the majority is new every time.
So... this show is set five years after Fallout 4 (the "latest" game, chronologically), and has its own characters and storylines.
Which fits perfectly the tradition of the series.
As for the technology, the history, the factions, etc. of the setting... those are the common denominator, and the show does that part in an *EXTREMELY* faithful way.
Chet (Lucy’s cousin) is the gatekeeper and that’s how he was able to open the vault for her
The opening scene is set in 2077. Fallout is an "atom punk" alternate time line where they worked on nuclear sciences instead of electronics after WWII and the cold war never ended (but it was between USA and China instead of USSR)
The show does great justice to the games... many suttle refferences and good way of keeping side missions inculded in the main plot without dragging out the show pacing
I'm glad you also thought Maximus looked like Denzel; my mother and I thought the same 😅
The thing is once you close those doors to the shelter you don't open them up again due to the radioactive material you would expose yourself to. So you were right to begin with, The supplies you have set aside foe your family would run out so you and your family would die if you let others in even if it was only for a day you would die letting them back out.
If you look closeley, The Ghoul is still wearing his cowbow outfit underneath his duster, so it was him from the beginning.
27:51 This is a fantastic observation. At this time, he is still very scared and docile. He just had to run away from the melee in the vault, and in next episode I think, or 3, you hear his literal inner turmoil on his cowardice,. I think there at the dining table in the ceremony, he just didn't want to make a scene.
He already poked and prodded while they were walking to the marriage hall, and it's shown he's a black sheep. I think he just feels he won't be taken seriously, and that he feels he doesn't have agency.
Whoever told you that there isn't a storyline in the video games have never played the games the TV show is in the fallout world it doesn't follow a specific fallout game it's its own story but there are elements from some of the games in there
16:11 bahaha first time i heard the term 'tire toilets"
Anyone who didn't "react" to that little girl seeing the first nuke drop...is already a ghoul. After 26 years of playing all of the Fallout games (except 76) I thought I'd be "desensitized" to such scenarios by now. Nope! Had to hit pause and refill my drink.
Yea… fallout game veteran and honesty was shook by the thumb scene… that little girl is a scary good actor
The very idea of seeing the bombs go off makes me teary
Ghoul here, if I may introduce myself. I thought the scene was wonderfully acted, and narratively fulfilling after the pretext of the thumbs up... But no, I didn't "react" outwardly maybe beyond a sigh. 🤷🏾♂️
Right! I actually found myself shedding a tear at that scene.
By "react" do you mean tear up? If so I'm also a ghoul.
Fun fact: Lucy’s dad is Kyle McLachlan, who played Paul Atreides in the very first _Dune_ film.
They nailed the vibe and (mostly) the lore. Each game has its own story that influences the others, but the generally aren't directly related. The show is canon to the universe taking place 9 years after the events of the most recent *good game in the series. Love the blind reactions to this IP it's so fun seeing it expand its audience
The day she gave up on "Cousin Stuff" is the day the shit hit the fan.
Each of the games has a different story set in the same world. This show fits in really well
"Fake ass young Denzel" 🤣
congrats on being introduced to the fallout franchise! I can tell you will be hopelessly addicted to it like the rest of us.(also I recommend fallout 4 as your first game if you wanna play them)
I've played a few of the games. I think it's really remarkable how well this show has captured the look, feel, and tone of the games. They were able to do that AND combine it with watchable characters and story too.
The games do have a story, but it's kind of secondary to the world itself, and how you survive/ deal with it. You can play the games for hundreds of hours (and many do!) without doing hardly anything related to the main story.
The story in the TV show is written specifically for it, so you don't need any foreknowledge. The characters and their journeys are all new, even though the factions and environments are (mostly) taken from the games.
I just realized the reason they only told lucy to come back is because the platform to walk on was already put away so they couldnt actually get to her to stop her. After 3 watches i finally realized that part
You don't let other people in. You only have food, water and medication necessary for the number people that were intended to live in it, if nuclear war or some other huge disaster forced you to seek shelter. You might have to be inside one for months before it was safe to check conditions outside.
Well I can clear that up right now; the games do have a storyline. :)
What's the best way to put this....
Every Fallout game is a standalone story in the Fallout world. Each game is a sprawling open world with a large and complex main questline and a genuinely vast array of sidequest stories that can be resolved in various ways. They do each have a story, but there's so much to do that if you don't want to rush through the main storyline you can EASILY amuse yourself in a broad variety of ways and largely ignore it.
Because the various games tend to be set in different parts of the country it's easy for each game to serve as a standalone experience that doesn't depend on prior knowledge of the older games... but the show is set in Los Angeles, which is not terribly far from where the first two Fallout games were set, so it's building on the history they established... but coming back to that region after a long absence to tell its own story.
Patrolling the Mojave almost makes you wish for a nuclear winter
13:40 this scene was the most gruesome for me. The thought of getting pickle juice up my nose was making me tear up.
The games each have a different storyline, but they're all set in the same world and timeline. This is just another entry into the events of the Fallout world as a whole. It is a very faithful adaptation of the world!
As a fan, that prospect is just so exciting. I'm just sitting and wondering how much of the events in this show will be referenced in the next game, because there's going to be a S2 of this too.
8:03 one of the thematic strengths of the "west coast" fallouts (1, 2, New Vegas) is the relativism of apocalypse and post-apocalypse, political hegemony and the "frontier," and what culture means in the face of colonialism and massive political and environmental change.
I live on (indigenous) Nisqually land because I was born here to settlers. This is post-apocalyptic. The people are gone, but the people are not gone. I can email them if I feel like.
Fallout 76 is multiplayer. All the others are single player RPGs and very much have a story.
Show takes place 9yrs after fallout 4 game. Bombs fell in 2077 show takes place in 2296.
The games do have a story.
8:51 I love the stream of thought here. Also, this is an interesting case study on men and women. You saying "us" here, it's how women internalize things where men are object-oriented. That's fascinating.
I know this will sound creepy, but your hair is really cool. It suits your face. Straight on it sort of looks like a curly Princess Leia.
the games all have their own Story, what the show get right is the setting and Mostly all of the group/faction are accurate.
tho you want to get techical F1 F2 have similar stories save your people stop threat, and F3 F4 diffrent but same.
F3 find your dad get water F4 find your son beat other groups up.
Amazing reaction. Subscribed.
5:24 Great observation!! I've watched enough react channels to fill 2 digits, and no one has commented on the astro-turf'd grass.
1:00 from the 1950’s through 1993 we were always on the brink of nuclear war. You had to find a way to get on with life and not think about it.
All the fallout games have hilarious and messed up stories : D
12:35 He just took a drug that slows your perception of time. Great for increasing your reaction speed. Not great for being crushed in half.
That guy really sucked if he couldn't get out of way of that door after taking jet.
For the Brotherhood of Steel! 🗡️⚙️
9:49 bahahaha good you caught that. I missed it the first time through lol
This is a great show. Your reaction is amazing. Please don't stop 😃
this particular story is new to the the franchise.
7:31 good callout!
16:45 Didn’t think of that 😂 but you made me think, what if they used Briskets
Overall, games have more of a timeline rather than a single story line. The series is mostly an anthology with each entry taking place within the same world but at different times. Its like Grand Theft Auto or Final Fantasy in that regard.
3:58..... "Birthday is 2/19"
Me..... "Mine is 2/06".... Which feels like 219 yrs ago 😂😂😂
Lol! Got two pieces of info before starting the series, and both of them are completely wrong. :D That's good though. Doesn't spoil anything.
It follows the in world elements. But its an original story.
Good and bad is not the same in the wastelands. patrolling the mojave almost makes you wish for a nuclear winter.
Best I can figure for "Cousin stuff" would be O&A. No risk of pregnancy, and you still get your jollies.
12:41 he's no longer half the man he used to be.
10:35 I love this!
Ok I’m new here to your channel and excuse me for saying this but damn you’re fine.
It doesnt fall the "story" as each game has its own "main" story in the same world, so in essence the series' story is a co.plwtely new story set in the same "world/universe". Also its funny seeing non-fallout fans watching immediately getting tripped up with "cousin stuff" lmfao. Its more of an inside joke amongst game fans, as its never really explicitly stated in the games, but consider the same group of people in a vault for multiple generations, everyone is going to be related to everyone else at some point lol
"Why won't he let other people in?"
Because what ever he has stockpiled for his family to last years, gets cut in half. As a father, My children will have that time. Not a stranger, politcian or some random Dad that happened to be there when the SHTF. I wont look at them, while my children starve for my choice to let them in. Just the way it has to be.
Except that it wasn't a random dad, the man that jerk punched was his friend.
@@dwnkaomwn3953 Friends in social circles and the friend you would load up the truck with shovels a 3 in the morning. No questions asked. Are two very different friends
Think of people as rations with a long shelf life that will probably fight back when you try to eat them.
"Is he gonna murder us with his naked body?"
"Of course not - well, yes. But also no."
Fallout has overarching lore and the individual games have storylines to follow, however, every main fallout entry is a role-playing game, so you as the player have a lot of influence on the narrative outcome, unlike, say, the Last of Us. To add to this, most Fallout games are standalone stories, set in different parts of the US. So the series doesn't follow a specific game's storyline, rather, it uses the world of Fallout to tell an original story.
Mind you, while the yield is close to accurate, LA would probably take a dozen nukes to the city.
it starts in the end and the end is te beggining
"We don't need a trash husband.".....Wellllll......
7:57 that was insightful! but marred at 8:03 with the racism there. It wasn't "white savior"ish, it was "Vault Dweller Savior"ish. But I'll stick around yet :)
There was no racism. I chose that term since it explains his idea and it mirrors Kyle MacLachlan character in Dune.
You are gorgeous! Love your reaction
Ya who ever said fallout didint have a story line is just wrong the world is drenched in lore.
But it is different then common story's in games where the environment of the game tells out of the story and you don't follow the same protagonist through our the games as each one takes place in different parts of the world in different time lines.
Liked and Subscribed.
Basketbrick...
This show is so good so far. I'm only on ep 4 tho.
There is a storyline but the game is open play.
11:03 😆😆😆😆 Priorities!
15:45 LOLOLOL
*8:10
That’s only wyt libs
Stormfront earrings, huh?
I got them for x-men '97 but I like to wear them when it rains 😊
@@DeashasAlwaysWatching Not the Stormfront I was talking about. lol
this is a new story. it fallows the lore and feel of the games well, not the story.
You have good brain on you 🙂
20:32 BAHAHAHA
6:23 to 6:24 Bahaaha
Whats cousin stuff? Go ask someone in Alabama they will likely know 😂
She should pause the show when she's reacting. She's missing a lot
The white savior thing when the dad was the og Paul atredes was funny.....lol 😂😂
Well.. that was not the most annoying reaction.
"Young Denzel" is an interesting moniker. Most folks are going with "Store Brand John Boyega".
8:04 white saviourish? 💀💀
It does have the “white man’s burden” vibe to it, but obviously it’s something other than race.
If you stick 200 people under a rock for 220 years after a short time most will be related. In real life a 120 pound woman could not beat a 200 pound man no matter how skilled she is. As a matter of fact, she'd have a problem beating a 14 year old boy. She's knows her mother but doesn't know her father? Why drag him away then?
depends on the woman and the man. The bigger difference is intensity, she knows technique but she's never had to fight for her life before, while the dude has probably been fighting for his life since he was a little kid. You switch that difference in intensity around and add a bit of technique and she'd own him without any difficulty. It doesn't matter how big someone is when they get fingers jabbed in their eyes.
@@j.f.fisher5318 It also doesn't matter once the 200 pound man gets his hands on her 120 pound body and slams her onto the hard ground and not a mat.
@@helgar791 first of all Ella Purnell is 5'5" and she's clearly not 120. Probably more like 150. When I was younger before MMA was cool and you just had to fight whoever they could match you up with, I did a full contact cage match at 170 vs someone at least 220, very muscular, and 6" taller. But they were a noob that just hit me like I was a heavy bag. He couldn't do any meaningful damage. Compared to the first guy I fought who was my size but he hit me like he'd caught me r@p!ng his sister and every blow was devastating. Intensity and experience matters _vastly_ more than size.
@@j.f.fisher5318 Ella Parnell, from looking at her standing next to the other actors, is at best 5'4". Walton Goggins is 5'10" tall. Does he look 5 inches or 6 inches taller? Perhaps even 7 inches taller" She is listed at 135 pounds. Again I state, no woman at that size, no matter how trained, can beat a 6', 200 pound man. I emphasize the phrase woman vs. man. Men vs. men are different contests. We share the same superiority and equivalencies of eye/hand coordination, higher blood platelets, higher bone mass, greater lung capacity, greater muscle density, and equivalencies of testosterone and quick twitch responses. As a 170 pound man, your experience against another man would be vastly different than that of a woman.