Sinking of Battleship Yamato Part I Animated 1945
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- Опубліковано 20 кві 2023
- The Sinking of Battleship Yamato Operation Ten-GO Part I (大和戦艦) is one of the most significant events in the history of naval warfare. Yamato was the flagship of the Imperial Japanese Navy and was one of the most powerful and largest battleship ever built. She was sunk on April 7, 1945, during the final stages of World War II, by American forces.
Sinking of Battleship Yamato Operation Ten-GO Part II Animated - • Sinking of Battleship ...
Animation, Directed and Produced by: The Warline
Support: / thewarline
Thomas Beerens - thomasbeerens.artstation.com
The Operations Room, Montemayor, Blue Jay - Фільми й анімація
She was a beautiful ship. Her sleek lines radiated power. She was truly a symbol of the Yamato people.
Now she is a reef.
Yes she makes a beautiful reef. Sleek lines and pretty doesn't get the job done.
Ran away from a single destroyer at Samar lmao
@@mynamejef7963hindsight 101
Also check this out:-
Sinking of Battleship Yamato Operation Ten-GO Part II Animated - ua-cam.com/video/a_tTlxsUu00/v-deo.html
Sinking of the Shinano by the USS Archerfish Submarine 1944 Animated - ua-cam.com/video/YdViIPbdbDs/v-deo.html
Sinking of Blücher - The Battle of Drobak Sound - ua-cam.com/video/hlBkym_Ky6E/v-deo.html
The Channel Dash 1942 - ua-cam.com/video/I6029I0kcLA/v-deo.html
The Saint Nazaire Raid - ua-cam.com/video/dyjeRWWbUns/v-deo.html
The Wake Island 1941 - ua-cam.com/video/Xiy02U0zg0k/v-deo.html
Could you cover Yamato's performance at the battle off Samar? It was Yamato's only time engaging enemy warships. It's believed that she sank the escort carrier Gambier Bay and the destroyer Johnston, helped to sink the destroyer Hoel, and damaged the escort carrier White Plains beyond repair.
right now can”t afford it. but i will back on this project.
more gptchat trash
Admiral Spruance: We'll do it the old fashioned way. A slugging match between BB's.
Admiral Mitcher: Not if I can help it!
Yamato, Musashi and Shinano will forever be known as the best ships ever built for the wrong war.
They were hoping for engagements similar to what they had gone thru with the, Russians, massive, open water battles, Battleships slugging it out. Yamato, Musashi and Shinano would have been great at it but by the time they launched, the very short, very limited windows of Battleship warfare had already come and gone.
They were obsolete before they touched water. All 3 sunk pretty quick.
"quickly" compared to what? Shinano is the only one that went down easily, 3 torp hits from Archerfish which was due to shoddy workmanship from the BB to CV conversion, they ran pipes thru bulkheads that were never resealed, water tight doors left open for easy passage for the trip... but the craziest part of the Shinano sinking was the fact they knew almost immediately they were being tracked by subs, they had the radar ping they could hear that cut out quickly which only meant one thing, an American sub within 10 miles.. and instead of turning around and parking back in the bay, they risked it anyway..
Yamato, 12 bombs, (1000 AP) 7 torp hits, Musashi 19 torpedo's and 17 bombs (1000 AP) that's hardly "quick" in terms of naval warfare...
here's a GREAT video on the exact engagement that sunk, Shinano. ua-cam.com/video/9Lgc_NtwApQ/v-deo.html@@SeanRCope
@@phillipschaber7836 Bismarck laughs at Yamato and Mushashi, ' that is IT, boys "? 400 battleship caliber shells from 20,000 yards to point blank range, countless cruiser and destroyer shells PLUS a minimum of 8 torpedoes , both aerial and ship launched................ and the scuttling charges! Brother ship , yes Bismarck and Tirpitz, were referred in masculine NOT feminine terms, Tirpitz took not one, not two BUT three Tall Boy , multi-ton Bombs and still took 15 minutes to capsize and sink ! PS - Both Bismarck and Tirpitz, unlike Yamato or Musashi, NEVER EXPLODED while sinking, just look at Bismarck's photos as compared to either Yamato or Mushashi.
How to sink a Yamato
Step 1: Torpedoes
Step 2: Torpedoes
Step 3: More torpedoes
Step 4: Even more torpedoes
Thank you for putting in such great effort for this I really enjoyed it can’t wait for part II. I’m looking forward to watching your other videos too. You deserved a sub.
Ito and his command staff reportedly were furious when given the order initially asking with bitter sarcasm, "If the Naval High Command would be joining this 'Honor' with the crews." Yamato and her sister ship Musashi were wasted by doctrine and face saving.
Agree anything the Living Embodiment of God Hirohito wanted was done. All depended on who had the Emperors ear.
@@stunick1573 done in his name, it's unclear how much he himself actually had a full say in strategy as he was kept in the dark about the state of the fleet and military situation until late in the war.
@@grandadmiralzaarin4962 I would think with the crushing defeat Japan was facing with it's fleet every time it went out he had a pretty good Idea what was awaiting him. He may not have known the numbers and types but he knew it would be bad.
@@stunick1573 surprisingly no. He was actually completely in the dark about the naval losses as the IJN lied to both the Emperor and IJA about how badly they'd been mauled at Midway, Philippine Sea and Leyte Gulf. The army and Emperor were still thinking the IJN had a viable surface fleet until early 1945
If Kurita had attacked the landing ships after Samar, the Yamato could have done some damage.
Instead the surviving ships were destroyed piecemeal, doing nothing.
FYI: The kamikazes sank or damaged 400 US ships. They were really successful.
Despite her oversized guns, _Yamato_ actually had a shorter effective engagement range than contemporary American ships, as she lacked fire-control radar.
And very poor quality radar, given the number of shells it had to fire to sink a WW1-era US DD in the early months of the war. At least the CVE's in Leyte were presumably slower and easier to hit.
This actually only applies at night or poor weather: during the day, optical systems could match FC radar in effective range, due to WWII-era FC radars having shorter effective ranges than commonly assumed (even American radar fire control was simply not capable of reliable gunnery at the very long ranges people assume would’ve allowed American battleships to effectively outrange Yamato, as a gunnery exercise in 1944 using Iowa bore out).
Pretty much all WWII-era battleships had effective ranges of around 25,000 yards. The difference radar made is that those with fire control radar kept that 25,000 yard effective range regardless of how bad visibility got.
@@hoosieryank6731
Yamato never fired on any American ships in the early months of the war (though she was around); the only time she fired on enemy ships was during the Battle off Samar, where her gunnery was surprisingly good, getting in a number of very near misses on the CVEs (at a range that was actually beyond her effective engagement range) as well as direct hits on Johnston (though it’s worth noting that while she found accurate firing solutions quickly during the engagement, she also lost her targets once they moved into the cover of a rainstorm).
@@bkjeong4302 This itself is also just an assumption made by only some of the contemporary historians who debate the issue, almost none of it has been proven. It's sad that the only chance these two ships would've had to fight was barely missed in the Philippines.
1300 ships !!
That definitely made the Emperor needed a sudden change of his underwear!!
Great video! Kind of an abrupt ending, though.😂😁
It rates a 1 out of five.
Need part two! can't find it.
Nice video, but a strange place to interrupt it…mid sentence🤔
It's a mistake, my apologies for this. I will try my best further.
Why can’t this channel use a real voice to narrate this? I found myself irritated on several pronunciation errors rather than content. Maybe he doesn’t speak English. I’ll narrate for you for free
Yamato and her sister Musashi were literally the largest battleships ever built with the largest naval cannons used as main armament on any warship. Germany's Bismarck was the largest battleship in the world ironically for only six months before Yamato was launched, and much of what made Bismarck so big and heavy was classic German overengineering, particularly in still insisting on still using layered light, intermediate, and heavy gradated armor protection throughout the ship rather than the American innovation of the all-or-nothing armor scheme only over the ship's citadel.
The sad fact of the matter, moreso for Yamato and Musashi given Bismarck was given an honorable end of a duel with other battleships, was that they were ships made on the basis of belief in a form of warfare that was already outmoded by the time Yamato was launched, and ironically-enough built and crewed by a navy that had shocked the world by adopting then-latest Western military technology and tactics to defeat the Russian Navy a mere three decades before the early 1900s.
The Allied WWII-era battleships were just as outdated upon launch; they (save PoW) simply didn’t get sunk, and much of that was because the Axis powers left them alone due to their lack of value.
Yeah, even attempting to compare Bismarck to Yamato is in itself sad. Nothing produced by the KMS or Royal Navy could stand a chance against it in old Battleship warfare. Bismarck was nothing but a huge amount of propaganda.
Bismarck was more comparable to the British KGV class or the American South Dakota class with it's outdated armor and paltry 8 15" guns. Was a laughable wasted 50,000 tons of metal compared to the Iowa class or Yamato.
But, like you said. BB battles were a thing of the past by the time it was launched.
Some information is wrong sorry honestly i wouldn't be the only one to notice
Been waiting for this one, can't wait for part 2!
thanks. how's it..
@@TheWarline it's fantastic mate
I have to focus more on Part-2. and, I will upload Full video.. Combining Part-1 & 2.
@@TheWarline can't wait for it!
The ammount of mispronpunced words just drove my ocd crazy
Bruh Yahagi jammed the video instead of the airplane signals.
Can you imagine being this Japanese Admiral with his modest force and seeing the massive wave enemy aircraft and armada the size of which they cannot count. Suicide Mission.
Possibly the single biggest suicide act in which literally thousands participated and perished.
The Japanese already figured this was a one-way trip from the start, actually.
Truly a slow burn. Can’t wait for part two
This channel is excellent, can't wait for part 2. Hopefully more great videos are to come
waiting for those 6 zeros to leave was essential for succes of 280 aircraft strike group
Yeah good catch, but no, only to the Shadowing float planes. There were so many Hellcats flying and buzzing Yamato diving in to strafe that 6 zeros would have lasted 30 seconds.
Whoa there, I remember veterans saying our Iowa class BBs having a gun range of 25 miles. I expect Yamato went only modestly farther.
The Yamato was like a perfectly forged katana in the 20th century; it was the perfectly crafted weapon in the wrong era of war.
I'm not sure that's fair. Yamato was launched in August of 1940, it was a product of the mid 30s.
The Battle of Taranto was in Nov of 1940, the first all aircraft ship to ship attack in history, which was an incredible success and is arguably the battle that made the allies realize the potential of air power at sea. Prior to this, aircraft carriers were largely seen as support ships, not something that could actually take out a fleet (albeit it these were in port).
Bismarck was sunk in May 1941, famously crippled by carrier aircraft, allowing it to be easily hunted down, once again proving air power at sea was a valuable asset.
Pearl Harbour was THE global defining moment for carrier based operations, and that wasn't until Dec 1941.
Now while all the fleet carriers the IJN used in Pearl Harbour were actually launched BEFORE Yamato, what's important to remember is that they really had very little idea of how effective carriers were going to be at the time.
The D3A Val dive bombers, and B5N Kates were only just making their first flights as prototypes as Yamato's keel was being laid. And the famous A6M Zero wasn't in service until a month before Yamato was launched.
So if you consider what naval power looked like in the 1930s when Yamato's plans were being drawn up, battleships were still very much the dominant force in naval warfare.
It's more accurate to say the Yamato and Iowa classes of battleships came in around very end of the battleship era.
Some battleship had to be the last class to be built before they went obsolete. And while carriers had been around since the 20s, it was until the 40s that their dominance was achieved (or maybe, ABLE to be achieved)
@thundercactus by the time it was launched, it arguably already was obsolete.
@@hmk5123 arguable only in retrospect. If you consider the information they had at the time, it made perfect sense.
And you can see their thinking change as the carrier battles proved the carrier was the future, because the nations who could still build NEW battleships post 1942 cancelled the designs.
For example, the Montana class was planned as early as 1939, and ordered, by chance the shipyards to build them were too busy with Iowa and Essex. The keels were to be laid down in mid 1942, but by June (Battle of Midway) it was clear that battleships were obsolete, and the class was cancelled entirely.
The British King George V battleships were completed, as the last one had its keel laid in 1941 and was completed 1946. The succeeding Lion class had their keels laid and were in construction, but were scrapped in 1942.
The IJN Yamato class had 2 ships completed by the end of 1940, and taking 3yrs to build, Shinano would have been only half complete by the time of the Pearl Harbour attack. Consequently, construction was then paused because only by then was it apparent that battleships were a questionable investment. And the conversion was only begun the following year in July of 1942, after the battle of Midway where they lost 4 carriers.
Every nation basically just finished the battleships they had in construction from 1939-1941, but no new battleships were built AFTER it became apparent that naval air power was the future.
Given the state of Naval warfare in 1935-1939 (when the last lines of battleships were being designed and approved by govts), a proposal to shift the navy to a carrier based fighting force with no battleships would have sounded absolutely insane.
Japan was actually a rare exception to focus on carriers early on, but carriers made a lot of sense for what they were trying to accomplish in the pacific.
@@thundercactus I would add to your answer the following:
Both Yamato and Musashi took incredible punishment to sink. It literally took hundreds of planes hours to do the job. In Yamato's case, the US sent over 400 planes to sink her...and it took hours. How many navies, at the time, could bring to bear that many resources. No battleships, in the entire war, were ever sunk by aircraft, if they had aircraft cover. The only battleships sunk by air power were resting in port (in America's case, the US wasn't even at war) or not utilizing combined arms tactics (looking at you PoW and Repulse).
@@ajalvarez3111 Couldn't agree more with this, if battleships were all ready obsolete why did it take 400 plus attack aircraft several hours to push this brute into the sea floor. She was an immense threat and to pawn her off as obsolete is lazy Monday morning quarter backing. Imagine if this was any other Navy going up against this monster Battlewagon or the American Navy During Coral Sea actions with only the Big E, Saratoga and or Wasp or Hornet as at Midway. People forget that American and British forces had between them 40 aircraft carriers of assorted size and function. Yamato was swimming up stream into the hornets nest without any of her own hornets. Conversely America was fielding the latest Hellcats and Corsairs with the improved dive bombers and torpedo planes with better torpedo's and all the lessons learned and put into action from the three and a half long years of fighting in open Pacific waters. Ito knew it was fruitless, but due to the the "living embodiment of God" Emperor wanting it done, he relented. Imagine if he had timed it better and came on the downward leg at night, steaming at 22 kts or 27 which she was capable of. Reaching Okinawa at morning. That all ready Obsolete battlewagon would have pounded the snot out of the American ground forces. Pretty much the same mission as the earlier one to the beach heads in the Philippines but with way less ships.
The battleship Yamato carried one-way fuel on its last voyage. Go to Okinawa to court death.
So the lesson learned in this story is a saying common to our parents' and grandparents' generations:
"The bigger they are, the harder they fall."
Or as Mr. Miyagi would say, "Somebody always know more."
Just like Musashi...
If Yamato did beach herself, do realize that the USS Massachusetts battleship would relive her days fighting against an immobile naval target (Vichy France's Jean Bart) off Casablanca in 1942.
Or they would have just bombed the shit out of it with carrier and land based aircraft.
excited for your future videos!
The typing sound effect needs balancing. Way too loud and distracting...
So far a very good depiction of the action that ended the Yamato. My father served on the Bunker Hill at that time. One small nit to pick...the US flag should be 48 stars, flags shown are 50 stars.
thanks for pointing it out.
great video, could you tell me which program you use to make the animations?
Truly, the background music is too loud
Can't wait for the Part 2
Extraordinarios los mapas y los gráficos....y la continuación?
The power of naval air power of the United States Navy
Very nice Video 👍
Bottom line, easily sunk despite all the video's hyperbole.
This is one of the most well-made historical videos ever! Its like a combination of Baz Battles, Montemayor, and Operations Room style of editing. Well done, keep going.
Don't forget Historigraph too!
all i needed to hear was how he pronounced “leyte” to click off the video
Admiral "Sproo-auntz"?
I love ALL about yamato sinking!!
Great vid
This is great
Wonderful and well done. When can we watch Part 2?
Will be released in the middle of next month.
Yo man we're waiting on part two.
Will be released in the middle of next month.
@@TheWarline awesome!
why do almost every operation by the u.s sound so cool😂
A lot of good this ship did
It’s been 3 months and no update to this video!!!
Will be released in the middle of next month.
A consequence of war. Imperial Japanese treachery with Pearl Harbor and the massacre of American Prisoners at Wake demanded her destruction. Yamato was an agent of this philosophy and had to be destroyed. Simple as that. Don't tell an American Pacific War vet any different. Destruction of the Japanese war machine and all of their weapons that threatened them was absolutely necessary. This was a glorious victory against a brutal empire.
Sproo-Anz? Sproo-Enz!
Waiting eagerly for Part 2😅
The PART 2 ???????
Excellent and clear. You should work on your Japanese pronunciation, though.
Her and her sister did not go easy.
The Yah-MOT-tow is one of the most famous ships in history. You might want to get the name right. It's only in 10,000 other videos.
Cry more nerd neck
It’s an AI voice, not much you can really do to fix it. It also pronounced Yah-Ma-tow or Yah-Muh-tow depending on accents
Well it's a reef now,but I can say Battle Ship Texas and I can also go visit her. It's a shame they wasted this beautiful Ship. I would definitely love to see Yamoto as a museum Ship somewhere in Japan.
@@zeroelevens4957 Yes there is something that can be done to fix it, use a real HUMAN voice.
Yeah a lot of important names were pronounced wrong... Leyte and Spruance were butchered in the first 90 seconds
This is the story of the IJN Yammatoe…
Despite sounding natural, is this video narrated electronically? I can maybe understand a couple of mispronunciations by younger presenters but seriously, who in heck hasn't heard of the legendary ship Ya-MAH-to? How do you butcher a common name like that? And how in the world do you get ma-REE-der out of mariner?
Thanks to the generals' arguments, this ship was built too late.
Spru‘-ance
Ya-ma‘-to
Mar‘-in-er
Sheesh!
Sinking of Musashi please.... it's rarely discussed
Is there any video about the Battle of Leyte?
The writing is questionable. Maybe drop the script into chat gpt and ask it to proofread?
I mean what can they do?
Us at this time has found a cheat code to litelary printed aircraft carrier☠
Why does the video end in the middle of the story? Cliffhanger doesn't work if everyone knows what what happens next.
Awesome video, but why the change in the narrator?
were not available then.
You mispronounced Adm. Spruance's name and you managed to mispronounce the name of every single Japanese ship.
Part 2 when?
I am currently working on it.
@@TheWarline Great, we need more content like this. Visual Learners(psychology term) benefits drastically from this kind of videos on epic histories.
Pronounced almost everything wrong and cut off the end of the battle info?
not his fault he can’t speak Japanese
@@thenormaldino3404 ... Nor English either, it seems.
@@thenormaldino3404raymond sproo wonce, “late” instead of “lay tee” and that was the first minute and a half alone
Sounds normal for computer voices.
Using computer voices is his Operation Downfall.
Where’s part 2?
Even if they beached the Yamamoto it would blow up in a day unless the island had really really good aa which the Japanese don’t have so it would just be a supply ship
Yamoto was made with very low quality armor. It was actually quite brittle.
Yes, and the armor piercing ammo it fired was of similar quality. The Iowa-class guns supposedly had better penetration, but less explosives than the Yamato cannons. But the Yamato-class were built mainly to be floating artillery anyway.
Technically no. The Yamato was built to withstand shells from other battleships, not bombs and torpedoes from aircraft. It was built too late.
The japanese navy built this massive Ship to counter US battleship etc. Not torpedo and Bombs
the armor quality was around the same quality as British WW1 era armor (being based on it), so yes it was low quality for the time it was build. HOWEVER, the difference was rather small. The British Royal Navy estimated that their WW2 era armor steel was around 15-20% stronger than their WW1 era armor steel. Historians all agree that British and German (pre war) armor steel was the best worldwide. So Yamatos armor quality might be lacking 15-20% behind other nations, but does that matter when you have a 25% thicker belt and a 33-45% thicker deck?
@@LILKRANKIN The Iowas guns had around the same penetration as Yamatos guns against vertical armor (so side armor belts), however Yamatos guns had a little bit better penetration against horizontal armor (armor decks). The reason for that is simple: 45cal length vs 50 cal length. Iowas shells have a flatter angle at impact, making them worse at deck penetration, but better at side penetration. However, they also have a lower mass, which negatively impacts penetration.
In the end it doesnt really matter, both gun types are among the guns with the highest armor penetration of the war.
The Musashi was the first to go down 17/bombs and 19/torpedos
American battleship guns didn't have the range of Yamato's but being able to shoot really far only matters if you can hit your target. With their radar controlled guns, the Americans could. Yamato, not so much.
I was suprise that most of japan ship at the time didnt even have a radar☠
Going to have to some what disagree here, Japanese gunnery was above average and if they could see it they hit it as all prior hostile contact with Nippon's forces prove that out. The battle in the Philippine Sea was proof albeit the Japanese were firing at smallish warships with massive armor piercing shells which blew holes threw the ships but didn't disintegrate them had they used contact fuses. Go back and check only one Japanese Captain realized the mistake being made.
I’m very confused as the voice acting changed from this video and the last
Please pronounce the ships name correctly. YA MA TO. Not Yam a to
wow that was their plan? use their valuable assets in suicide missions?
I couldn’t keep watching with all the mispronunciations.
it is pronounced .... Ya - Ma - To ......
dont forget about beehive shells on Yamato
The video did describe Yamato taking shots at aircraft with her big guns. They would have fired beehive anti air shells.
Sekutu sudah Mengetahui Mereka tidak akan Menang Melawan IJN Yamato apabila Berhadapan Man to Man,Makanya Mereka Mengerahkan 400 Pesawat yang terdiri dari pesawat Pembom,Pesawat Pembawa Torpedo n Masih Banyak
Some of the pronunciations are odd, so I'm wondering whether this is computer-generated speech.
I think it is
The lack of research into the pronounciation of basic terms and names made this video very difficult to watch.
昔の日本は間違っていた。
アメリカと日本は友人🇺🇸🇯🇵
ヤマトは最高の戦艦だった。
Such an amazing and beautiful ship. It is a shame that she had to be sunk.
Not a shame. A consequence of war. Imperial Japanese treachery with Pearl Harbor and the massacre of American Prisoners at Wake demanded her destruction. Yamato was an agent of this philosophy and had to be destroyed. Simple as that. Don't tell an American Pacific War vet any different. Destruction of the Japanese war machine and all of their weapons that threatened them was absolutely necessary. This was a glorious victory against a brutal empire.
Maybe you should think about all the personal deaths that this ship inflected on the allies.
@@deanmason5827 So you were there then?
Is it just me, Or we thought this was A Rusted Warfare Mod 💀 because of the thumbnail. (RTS)
And I want play BATTLESTATION PACIFIC again
Yamato’s sinking was not significant at all-everyone by then had long since figured out battleships were obsolete, and the IJN planned this as a suicide mission specifically because they figured they’d be lucky to even get to Okinawa.
Great graphics but your pronunciation needs work. "Spruance," "Yahagi," and others are incorrectly pronounced, and it's completely distracting for the viewer.
Soooo, this is about the sinking of the Yamato? Well, are you going to show it?
Yes, part-2 animation work in progress
Um ijn yamato was 72,000 tons
Very cool stuff here, I'm a full-time Voice actor and have voiced films for the World War II foundation, Omaha beach during the day, the battle of the bulge and others. We should chat.
“Firing range of 25 miles, far above the range of any American battleship”.
BULLSHIT!!!
American 16-inch (406mm) Mark 7 guns had a range with AP ammunition of up to 27 miles. This statement couldn’t be more misinforming.
Yamato had 18-inch guns.
@@MiniMC546 you think I don’t know that?
In any event, anything above 16 miles was not meaningful in ship-to-ship combat. No one ever scored a hit beyond that range.
@@MiniMC546 And manual/visual fire-control. The American ships had FC radar and computers, so they could actually hit targets at those ranges.
If USS Montana was built, he could reach that target on Yamato with 27 miles
YAMATO WAS THE IMPERIAL JAPANESE NAVY'S DEATH STAR...
Except it was useless🤣
@@h.n.t.d7963 YES, AS GRAND ADMIRAL THRAWN POINTED OUT, THE DEATH STAR IS EXPENSIVE, HARD TO DEFEND , AND ITS RESOURCES SHOULD HAVE BEEN BETTER SUITED TO A FLEET OF STAR DESTROYERS ; THE SAME PROBLEMS FOR THE YAMATO AND MUSASHI IN CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE LIKE FUEL, PLUS A NUMBER OF HITS AND THEY WOULD BE SUNK
358 American planes attacked yamato
Not directly though. Only about 1/3 targeted Yamato, while the rest attacked the escorts. About half of the total aircraft were also only fighters.
Ya MAH to. 🙄
I'm sorry but your continued mispronunciation of both place names and people's names makes it impossible to listen to your narration. And not only Japanese names, but English names as well. This makes it seem as though you may have at best a passing familiarity with the subject. It's too bad, because your video, animation, and editing skills seem quite good.
A bit eight grade but fine
The song "Sink the Bismarck," is a pretty catchy tune:
ua-cam.com/video/M1Ufc2hI4FM/v-deo.html
Too bad Yamato doesn't have the equivalent.
Google fait des milliards de profits, et sollicite les gueux pour une œuvre humanitaire, comme c'est charmant. Et les gueux mettent la main au porte monnaie.
ah we 25miles well above any american ships -Iowa class 24 mile radar guided range
Bro is copying the operations room
Obviously read by a non native American English speaker.