4:44 Oh shit. My younger brother holds controllers upside-down, too. He tried playing on the N64 when he was super young and he couldn't hit L and R because his hands were too small. Eventually he started flipping it just to press them, then started to just hold it upside-down the whole time so he could at least hit all the buttons. He started doing that at way too young an age, so it carried on to Gamecube and Xbox. It really, really fucks with him when he's trying to learn fighting game moves and he has to translate a whole combo.
Pre-Built PCs are trash. I understand it's your sponsor and you gotta make money, but holy shit people, never buy a pre-built. Buy your parts, and assemble it yourself or pay a professional to assemble it. You'll have a MUCH MUCH nicer PC.
Truer in the past than it is today, when the pre-built market (in the right places) can be quite competitively priced and built to reasonable specs. Not everyone has the time or interest to research every component synergy and then spend an afternoon wrangling with cable management and triple checking that they seated everything properly.
@@Enuchful I completely disagree. Go to any pre-build site and they will never list every component in a build, and sometimes not list brands used. In the end you get an already maxed out pc, so when it can't cut it anymore there's no room to upgrade, except maybe a GPU, so then you have to buy another. It's a business. That's how they make their money. Assembling a PC isn't hard, but it can be time consuming, especially if you've never done it before. I just recently assembled a PC for the first time and it took about 2 hours. It was a PC I convinced my work to buy me for doing CAD, and I pieced it together from the most high-end parts I could. It cost more than my car, so needless to say, I was fucking nervous. I also think it's more manageable monetarily to do it part at a time. My home PC was built over a 6 month period and then I held onto all the parts until I could pay a professional to assemble it, so there was never a point in which I was breaking the bank to buy my PC. PCPartPicker.com is your friend. Also how I built both PCs. It makes it easy to build a PC based on compatibility and it's easy to sort through parts by performance and price. At the end of the day, the hardest question you have to ask yourself is, "How costly is the most expensive single purchase that I'm willing to make?". If you're reading this comment on this video, you have the time. The only excuse is laziness.
@@0rbnotacus Not being upgradable is only really true for like Alienware prebuilts where they have a few good parts but the mobo and case are unique and can't really be upgraded. These days a lot of prebuilts companies use all parts that you'd find on PC Part Picker and charge a premium for assembling and cable management. Definitely worth it if GPUs are still out of stock like everywhere nearby you. I'm honestly not sure what you're on about at all. I have to ask since you claimed this, what exactly are the parts that are missing from Simply's link that you think make it impossible to upgrade? To my knowledge the only part that makes upgrading hard is the mobo, and it's a normal Strix mobo that's listed..
@@TheVivi13 PcPartPicker has everything, so not really sure what your point was there. GPUs aren't out of stock like they were months ago, my work PC I mentioned was built recently and has a 3090. They're in stock. And I never specifically said anything about Apex PCs, just talking about Pre-builts in general. They cost too much for too little AND future disappointment, again, generally speaking. But like I said, business is business, so at the same time I don't really expect Apex PCs to do anything different. Really the only way they could be any better, while being the same is having A. Really good contracts with manufacturers for parts (unlikely), or B. A huge amount of money to buy parts in bulk from manufacturers and get them at a discounted rate. (which is a contributor to things being out of stock and prices being so high. No matter what way you look at it, at the end of the day the consumer is better off reading for a few hours, making a few decisions, and parting it out to assemble later. The only excuse is the consumers level of laziness. My at home PC, I was lazier with than my work PC. So I paid someone else to assemble it, but with both PCs I took the time to part them together to make really REALLY efficient machines, that also have plenty of room for growth. Again, not saying Apex PCs don't do that, but at a higher cost. This is why I say it's down to laziness. With assembling a PC, you're paying for labor and initial setup. With a theoretical perfect amazing pre-built, you're basically paying someone to read for a few hours to figure out what parts will be good together, but they only have to do that once.
@@0rbnotacus My point about PCPartPicker is that you specifically mentioned it by saying it has parts while pre-builts use their own special parts that make it not upgradeable. You are blatantly wrong. Pre built also takes away all the hassle of messing something up or troubleshooting. Your initial argument was that pre-builts are a scam and that they're not upgradable. You just don't know what you're talking about and acting like you're an authority on this when you said yourself that you only recently built your first PC. Lmao.
god it really is true that literally every squeex clip is THI secrets like wtf
4:44 Oh shit. My younger brother holds controllers upside-down, too. He tried playing on the N64 when he was super young and he couldn't hit L and R because his hands were too small. Eventually he started flipping it just to press them, then started to just hold it upside-down the whole time so he could at least hit all the buttons. He started doing that at way too young an age, so it carried on to Gamecube and Xbox. It really, really fucks with him when he's trying to learn fighting game moves and he has to translate a whole combo.
Wow what a handsome lad who holds his controller upside down, I wonder who that is.
The Legend
Been watching your videos since I started speedrunning mario 6 months, happy to see my TTM fail make it in 😂
I’m the one who clipped the dowsky clip at the end :)
Very cool indeed
Ok
I hope i can shake your hand someday
@@CrustyTip ok
Whats next a cure for cancer?
It's been 2 years and I'm still living off Simply saying I have a relaxing voice.
I want to get myself the Red Split PC.
Awesome video man ❤️
What is the backup for losing the shell in SL100?
A really fast slidekick that let's you get the two coins below the bully.
I love simply :)
Notification gang! Let's go!
Yessss
You have notifications on for this nerd? Same
3:52 these types of viewers should be perma banned tbh
#1 MARIO FAIL - MIZ RUINING SIMPLY’s WR
This is a video!
Your the funniest fail in all of speedruning
You’re*
Hi simply
Wish Simply would give editor more expressions for thumbnails with his current hair.
STEMHEADING
dowsky is a god is what i got from this video
Dowsky PepeLaugh
MORE VIDEOS.
Yo
Hey there gamer, I love Nick dankner♡
Let's go
what the fuck is being said around 2:18 ? Quietest video on YouTue
actually, how hard would it be to blj through the upstairs door?
you can lobby blj to clip through it, but opening the door triggers a loading zone so you can't go upstairs without opening the door.
So the answer is 'Not very hard, but also impossible'
@@burningfarts so the loading zone isn't there until i use the key on the door
Squeexed it
Next video do mario getting dropped of a building and hit by a car afterwards
yes 😊
Let's go first 5 viewer
first
Pre-Built PCs are trash. I understand it's your sponsor and you gotta make money, but holy shit people, never buy a pre-built. Buy your parts, and assemble it yourself or pay a professional to assemble it. You'll have a MUCH MUCH nicer PC.
Truer in the past than it is today, when the pre-built market (in the right places) can be quite competitively priced and built to reasonable specs. Not everyone has the time or interest to research every component synergy and then spend an afternoon wrangling with cable management and triple checking that they seated everything properly.
@@Enuchful I completely disagree. Go to any pre-build site and they will never list every component in a build, and sometimes not list brands used. In the end you get an already maxed out pc, so when it can't cut it anymore there's no room to upgrade, except maybe a GPU, so then you have to buy another. It's a business. That's how they make their money. Assembling a PC isn't hard, but it can be time consuming, especially if you've never done it before.
I just recently assembled a PC for the first time and it took about 2 hours. It was a PC I convinced my work to buy me for doing CAD, and I pieced it together from the most high-end parts I could. It cost more than my car, so needless to say, I was fucking nervous.
I also think it's more manageable monetarily to do it part at a time. My home PC was built over a 6 month period and then I held onto all the parts until I could pay a professional to assemble it, so there was never a point in which I was breaking the bank to buy my PC.
PCPartPicker.com is your friend. Also how I built both PCs. It makes it easy to build a PC based on compatibility and it's easy to sort through parts by performance and price. At the end of the day, the hardest question you have to ask yourself is, "How costly is the most expensive single purchase that I'm willing to make?".
If you're reading this comment on this video, you have the time. The only excuse is laziness.
@@0rbnotacus Not being upgradable is only really true for like Alienware prebuilts where they have a few good parts but the mobo and case are unique and can't really be upgraded. These days a lot of prebuilts companies use all parts that you'd find on PC Part Picker and charge a premium for assembling and cable management. Definitely worth it if GPUs are still out of stock like everywhere nearby you. I'm honestly not sure what you're on about at all.
I have to ask since you claimed this, what exactly are the parts that are missing from Simply's link that you think make it impossible to upgrade? To my knowledge the only part that makes upgrading hard is the mobo, and it's a normal Strix mobo that's listed..
@@TheVivi13 PcPartPicker has everything, so not really sure what your point was there.
GPUs aren't out of stock like they were months ago, my work PC I mentioned was built recently and has a 3090. They're in stock.
And I never specifically said anything about Apex PCs, just talking about Pre-builts in general. They cost too much for too little AND future disappointment, again, generally speaking.
But like I said, business is business, so at the same time I don't really expect Apex PCs to do anything different. Really the only way they could be any better, while being the same is having
A. Really good contracts with manufacturers for parts (unlikely), or
B. A huge amount of money to buy parts in bulk from manufacturers and get them at a discounted rate. (which is a contributor to things being out of stock and prices being so high.
No matter what way you look at it, at the end of the day the consumer is better off reading for a few hours, making a few decisions, and parting it out to assemble later. The only excuse is the consumers level of laziness.
My at home PC, I was lazier with than my work PC. So I paid someone else to assemble it, but with both PCs I took the time to part them together to make really REALLY efficient machines, that also have plenty of room for growth. Again, not saying Apex PCs don't do that, but at a higher cost.
This is why I say it's down to laziness. With assembling a PC, you're paying for labor and initial setup. With a theoretical perfect amazing pre-built, you're basically paying someone to read for a few hours to figure out what parts will be good together, but they only have to do that once.
@@0rbnotacus My point about PCPartPicker is that you specifically mentioned it by saying it has parts while pre-builts use their own special parts that make it not upgradeable. You are blatantly wrong.
Pre built also takes away all the hassle of messing something up or troubleshooting. Your initial argument was that pre-builts are a scam and that they're not upgradable. You just don't know what you're talking about and acting like you're an authority on this when you said yourself that you only recently built your first PC. Lmao.
First