✔️ MBS STORE: sizecomparison.net/store/ ⚠️ Many planets are missing (Caprica, Planet 4546B, Planet Miller, Xandar, Kerwan, Namek, Planet Vegeta, Vekta, Spherus Magna, Secunda and Masser, Pandora, Magrathea, Polus, Typhon etc, etc, etc) due to lack of information or impossibility of measurement, they could not be included. I'm sorry. Including habitable asteroids, moons, and artificial planets (but shaped like a planet). There may be some exceptions like the Discworld. -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.- -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.- ✔️ TIENDA MBS: sizecomparison.net/store/ ⚠️Faltan muchos planetas (Caprica, Planet 4546B, Planeta Miller, Xandar, Kerwan, Namek, Planeta Vegeta, Vekta, Spherus Magna, Secunda y Masser, Pandora, Magrathea, Polus, Typhon, etc., etc., etc.) por falta de información o imposibilidad de medición, no se pudieron incluir. Lo siento. Incluye asteroides habitables, lunas y planetas artificiales (pero con forma de planeta). Puede haber algunas excepciones como el Diskworld.
@@RadicalWaff which would be weird, since it would be several times more heavy than any gas giant its size, probably rivaling some dwarf stars in mass.
@@andresvalverde5182 yeah the Cybertron we saw in "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" would be immediately tearing the Earth apart from tidal forces alone when it is teleported as close as it's shown in the film.
@@jeffumbach well, that wasn't so much teleportation as much as it was a portal, so it isn't known how that would work tbh. I'm still pretty sure we'd be smoked though simply because an object that size in that proximity would fuck with our atmosphere lol Actually I'd go as far as saying the fact that a portal could be that powerful would probably mess with our atmosphere by itself.
It's less about volume and more about mass. It could have a large metal core at it's center. It's said its gravity is 90% that of earth so it should be sufficient to maintain an atmosphere of some sort. Also dependent on distance from its sun and presence of a magnetic field.
well I guess Titan is that sized and it has a thick atmosphere. Some of the Star Trek ones are strange, the Romulan homeworld is smaller than our moon? they should be puny weaklings, I guess them showing Qonos as being bigger than Earth gives Klingons their strength
In a certain country, in a certain place on the internet we have a saying for unfunny, used to death and normie jokes like this one, and it is this: wypierdalaj.
@@King_Nex wait the other one is from Transformers 3 as someone pointed out in the live chat. You can see the hexagons or whatever shaped surface,similar to dotm. But maybe it is from the marvel comics
@@MrMikeCarlson If the spores of the Flood start wrapping around the Xenomorph, I'm just imagining a fluffy Xenomorph just like SAO Abridged (from Something Witty Entertainment) refers to.
@Graustreif Elvanien The cordyceps would be completely annihilated against the Flood. The Xenomorphs however do have a susceptability to spores (mold) as it was shown in Accounts of the Earth War with Dr. Church when he got "farmed" by them.
Not unless the gravitational forces of each of these planets have anything to say about it, specifically "YEET!" And the most powerful one is from Whoville of Horton Hears a Who
Well the Star Trek and Star Wars tech is so powerful, that like the Predator Aliens, they could take out the Xenomorph easily. All you would need is some lightsaber wielding force users Sith, Jedi, or Knights of ? Ren, I don't remember how to spell it. They would take them out, you could use Droid armies like was fighting the Clone Wars. The Xenomorphs would have trouble vs Kryptonian tech as well. The real threat is the Star Trek Borg, they can adapt to anything. They could develop combined tech of Krypton, Star Trek, and Star Wars realms into something unstoppable by anything but Q's deity-like powers. Also the Transformers would also be a force in that scenario. Although, I think the Borg eventually beat them as well.
Some real surprises in there - Arrakis is TINY. Nice to see Hal Clement's Mesklin getting a mention, too. When we did the final pull-back from the sun, I wondered if we'd be getting Larry Niven's Ringworld, but the Dyson Sphere is actually a better choice. Couple of other possibilities, both from Niven - The Smoke Ring, which isn't technically a planet, but is very cool, and Brennan's doughnut-shaped asteroid from the novel "Protector"...
Saturn, Uranus and Neptune have at least 4 things in common. List them. 1. They are all planets. 2. They are all round. 3. None of them have McDonald's.
"Imagine living on a flat planet balanced on the backs of four elephants which in turn stand on the back of a giant interestellar turtle" - Terry Pratchett
To be fair, there *is* a limit to how large *rocky* planets can be, as most of these are depicted as, and past a certain size they'd all have to be gas giants. I have no idea what the limit is and whether it applies here, though, and things change if any of them are using *Technology* ™ to be hollow, made of lighter materials than expected, or have any kind of gravity cancellation magic going on.
@@BeforeBalloons so I did some research, the largest terrestrial planet in the Solar System is Earth (obviously) followed closely by Venus. The largest rocky exo-planet (planet outside of this solar system) I found was Gliese 163C which is ~7 times the size of Earth.
"size" -- Careful there... Gliese 163c is ~7 times the _mass_ of Earth. If the density is the same, that's both ~1.9 times the diameter and gravity, hardly habitable for humans, and the escape velocity would easily exceed what conventional rockets could manage.
Some theories hold that supersized moons (like Endor) might be havens for life if they’re big enough to build an atmosphere, since their primary would be able to keep them from getting smacked by asteroids all the time.
The Dysonsphere opening and revealing the inside looks so beautiful. I remember the much simpler Dysonsphere from one of the older videos XD The quality has improved so much!
@@purpleturtle8841 yes that makes sense but why be afraid of it its just life its just how it is humans are nothing in the universe its impossible that we exist
I was a bit surprised that "Starkiller Base" was so small. Why weren't they all hopping around like astronauts in the extremely low gravity? Starkiller (and everything smaller in this list) is too small to be spherical. 1,000 km is normally accepted as the diameter where a planet has enough gravity to pull itself into a spherical shape.
@@Mr.Ekshin You could get away with higher gravity (including Earth-like) on a smaller world if the planet's density is high enough. Think about how small neutron stars are, yet also how strong their gravitational pull is.
@@ShadowWolfTJC - It would have to be a star remnant or something to have that kind of gravity in an object that size. Earth is mostly nickel and iron, two very high density metals, so it's not like we're lightweight for our size. Seriously, half the planets in the Star Wars universe should have people jumping around in near weightless conditions... that is if they could retain an atmosphere... most could not.
It does seem a tad bit small, had a look around on the interwebs, according to Memory Beta, one of two Star Trek wikis, it is 14,000 Kilometres across: memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Romulus A wee bit larger than Earth.
Love the inclusion of some of the Outer Wilds planets. Would have liked to see the other Kerbal ones though! In fact I'd be interested to just see all of those, compared to some real moons, planets and asteroids (I am aware they're all relatively a lot smaller :P)
@@rhuman8672 I'm sure it wouldn't have made that cut if it were just me. I also suggested one of the Microverse planets from Marvel comics, but that's probably way too small!
@@amn9433 little trivia but: In the comics, Thanos' homeworld is the real-life moon of Saturn named Titan, rather than a fictional planet of the same name in another solar system. And the comics are sort of the original source material...
you do realise that this is FICTIONAL planets right ? From movies, comics and video games.......The real planets are there purely for reference so you can see the difference in sizes of the fictional planets.
@@proffessorX As I already said. The original titan from marvel comics was actually supposed to be the actual moon of Saturn titan. It wasn't changed to be a fictional exoplanet until the movies and MCU came along. So either it doesn't have a place in this list of fictional planets, or he shouldn't have used the actual look and diameter of the existing moon titan for a fictional one. And yes, I know we're knitpicking... But hey, if it gets a conversation started about one of the most fascinating moons in the solar system, or even simply makes some people aware of it's existence, I'm all for knitpicking! ;)
First of all this is seriously impressive it’s amazing. Secondly I love that it seems like a lot of fictional worlds don’t consider the effects of gravity changes when sizing their planets 😂
@@DMichaelAtLarge Up to a point. Gravity still works, hydrogen is still the majority of the matter out there... and brown dwarfs don't get much bigger than Jupiter (diameter-wise) but they are 10 - 60 times its mass, while Saturn isn't much smaller but is a third of its mass. There seems to be a limit to how large a gas giant can get, diameter-wise (I think about 2x Jupiter from observations, however the low-density, high-radius planets found so far are all extremely hot). I think Peyton Ashley's comment applies equally to the rocky planets, but again, given elemental abundance, Earth is about as dense as stuff gets (large iron/nickel core), so a body half the radius would have a surface gravity significantly lower than Earth's since there isn't much that would give it a higher average density. Also, at the low end, bodies of less than ~200 km diameter are not likely to be spherical... but there are only 8 in the video, and quite a few of these aren't "scientific".
@@Kashimo_Glazer123 Tip of what? It's a sphere, it has no tips. Do you mean its North pole? The circumference of Oris, given the diameter in the video, is about 300,000 km, so half of that is 150,000 km. 'To cross' by what means? Does Oris have a gravity similar to Earth? Is its surface transitable? Does it have an atmosphere similar to Earth, so that flight is possible? Do we assume highly capable, autonomous vehicles, or something that is remotely controlled? If the latter, from where? Or are you talking about animal transport? Assuming it's all relatively flat, but transitable by something like a Mars rover, travelling constantly at its maximum speed of ~0.15 km/h, it would take more than a century; a snail would be 3 times slower - and very long lived. On the other hand, assuming a Mach-3 hypersonic airplane (say something like a Lockheed SR-71) is used to do the trip, it would take less than 2 days, again assuming travel at constant maximum speed. The fastest bird on Earth (again, assuming uninterrupted, maximum speed in level flight) would take a bit more than a month. Take your pick.
As others in the comments have pointed out, Gallifrey should be much bigger: it's at least 3 times the size of Earth. (And for anyone who's read The Ancestor Cell, when the TARDIS manifests as the Edifice (by projecting its interior dimensions onto its exterior dimensions) above Gallifrey, it's bigger than Gallifrey itself.)
OMG You added Timber Hearth! And the Spore planet! And Kerbin! And Pandora! And Ilus! And Mesklin! This video was amazing, probably one of my favourites!
Someone should make a comparison video of most underrated channels and at the end it whip zooms out and you see that all the channels up to this point have been specks sitting on top of the first L in MetaBall Studios with room to spare and also the moon for reference
Thanks for including Spore! I knew the planets were small but I wasn't sure how small! Less than a kilometer wide (about a 1/2 mile) for context the Earth is about 12,000 km (8,000 miles) wide making the Earth over 12 trillion times the size of the Spore planets!
FYI while in Marvel comics Titan was indeed referring to the real-life moon of Saturn in the film "Avengers: Infinity War" Thanos's home Titan is a totally different planet in another star system.
Happy to see King Kai’s planet. I was a little disappointed that nothing from Super Mario Galaxy was included which would probably be around that size, nor a representative example from No Man’s Sky (their sizes vary), but I appreciate the effort that went into recreating all of the ones that are here.
Yeah, the Gateway Galaxy micro planet would of been nice to see. At least, Majora, Metroid, and even StarFox (that series needs more love) got regard here.
*yeah lets just check Wikipedia for the sizes of these planets without Checking offical souces of their sizes yeah that will work cus wikipedia "obviously" has articles of these worlds*
Yep was about to comment the same thing. It's not a fictional world at all but one of the most interesting bodies in our solar system. Also only other planet/moon to have confirmed liquid on its surface!
@@iheartscience7427 I know. But minor corrections: titan is Saturn's only major moon. All the rest are dwarf moons at best with a diameter less than 1000 km. Titan is more than 5 times larger than any other Saturnian moon. Secondly it's not oil on its surface but liquid methane and ethane, which on earth is natural gas. As far as we know there's no oil on titan.
@@user-dt3of5gr2f It's 60,000,000 meters (30,000,000 from zero on each side) and the in game world is flat, but the representation of the world in almost all media indicates it's a cube (meaning the 60,000,000m flat terrain is only one of the sides.)
I was a little surprised the diameter of Arrakis was approximate. Considering how much detail Herbert went into with the worldbuilding, you'd think a precise measurement would be down somewhere.
@@joncastilloaltube7211 They made it smaller because they tested the real sized version and determined doing the real sized version was going to take forever to get stuff into orbit (like 8 minutes as opposed to 2 that it does from Kerbin)
I'm happy that Trantor was included. I was kind of waiting for Terminus as well, but I'm satisfied. That's not how Trantor would look like in "reality" though
@@LadyMcGiusti yep in both cases about 1 AU, earth's average distance from the sun, in radius. though note ringworld as it's name suggests is a ring around the equator about 1 million miles thick rather than an all encompassing Dyson Sphere like Sarcophagus or the Star Trek one.
I was sitting there going "come on Cybertron!" So when I actually saw it I was ecstatic. Love these videos, always keep it up, this stuff never fails to impress me Edit: never realized how small G1 Cybertron was
✔️ MBS STORE: sizecomparison.net/store/
⚠️ Many planets are missing (Caprica, Planet 4546B, Planet Miller, Xandar, Kerwan, Namek, Planet Vegeta, Vekta, Spherus Magna, Secunda and Masser, Pandora, Magrathea, Polus, Typhon etc, etc, etc) due to lack of information or impossibility of measurement, they could not be included. I'm sorry.
Including habitable asteroids, moons, and artificial planets (but shaped like a planet). There may be some exceptions like the Discworld.
-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-
-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-
✔️ TIENDA MBS: sizecomparison.net/store/
⚠️Faltan muchos planetas (Caprica, Planet 4546B, Planeta Miller, Xandar, Kerwan, Namek, Planeta Vegeta, Vekta, Spherus Magna,
Secunda y Masser, Pandora, Magrathea, Polus, Typhon, etc., etc., etc.) por falta de información o imposibilidad de medición, no se pudieron incluir. Lo siento.
Incluye asteroides habitables, lunas y planetas artificiales (pero con forma de planeta). Puede haber algunas excepciones como el Diskworld.
I Dont Have bobux
Ok
Movie time. You should make short movies
I love space
Edit: thanks MBS
I have suggested this video before. Thanks for making it.
*camera stop at sun
Me: "that's it?"
*camera start zoom out
Me: "oh no"
Oh yeah
I wish they had included the Sarcophagus from Halo, it would have ended up being the largest by a large amount.
F
Y E S
The Sun: "Why do I hear boss music?"
my favourite planet "moon", from my favourite movie "reference"
What did you think about the sequel “Jupiter”?
@@LickMyRainbow77 jupiter sucked but the sun was way better
@@jhenwiener9725 we have opinions but for me the sun is indeed better haha
@@LickMyRainbow77 its sucks
Moon was a harsh mistress there.
Cybertron G1: moon sized
Cybertron Marvel Comics: *you know, I'm something of a gas giant myself*
More like an iron giant
@@RadicalWaff which would be weird, since it would be several times more heavy than any gas giant its size, probably rivaling some dwarf stars in mass.
Where was Unicron?
@@andresvalverde5182 yeah the Cybertron we saw in "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" would be immediately tearing the Earth apart from tidal forces alone when it is teleported as close as it's shown in the film.
@@jeffumbach well, that wasn't so much teleportation as much as it was a portal, so it isn't known how that would work tbh.
I'm still pretty sure we'd be smoked though simply because an object that size in that proximity would fuck with our atmosphere lol
Actually I'd go as far as saying the fact that a portal could be that powerful would probably mess with our atmosphere by itself.
I never expected the Speck from Horton hears a Who would be on this list. Yet it somehow qualifies as a planet.
Because whoville.
Our planet is but a speck in the vastness we call reality.
Willy Wonka Shakespeare - "One small step for mankind, but one giant leap for me..."
@@TheLazyFusspot_3428 Didn’t egg man in the sonic movie say that?
Literally the first thing I expected
the quality of these 3d models has really gone up
Yeah and background music is awesome
ayyyyy xploshi
Eww its you
@@hyonesia2450 lmao
@@blaker107 I already talked with them, they don't wanna show their real gender
Arrakis is THAT small? It shouldn't be able to even hold an atmosphere. Even Acheron is tiny!!!
It's less about volume and more about mass. It could have a large metal core at it's center. It's said its gravity is 90% that of earth so it should be sufficient to maintain an atmosphere of some sort. Also dependent on distance from its sun and presence of a magnetic field.
How big did you think it was? When I read dune and researched it it said it was the same size of the moon
well I guess Titan is that sized and it has a thick atmosphere. Some of the Star Trek ones are strange, the Romulan homeworld is smaller than our moon? they should be puny weaklings, I guess them showing Qonos as being bigger than Earth gives Klingons their strength
Arrakis could be an iron rich world with an enormous metallic core
*As a wise man once said* :
_"there's always a bigger fish"_
Ok Qui Gon Jinn
*camera stops at the biggest fish* huh guess not
Hello there
Until a hunter shoots it.
"if he's so wise, why is he dead?"
I am so delighted that you included the Little Prince and Discworld in this!
Yes
"How many Star Wars planets do you want to feature?"
"Yes."
Star Wars fans come up with lots of details for the planets, more than most franchises do
In a certain country, in a certain place on the internet we have a saying for unfunny, used to death and normie jokes like this one, and it is this: wypierdalaj.
@@ovni2295 Yeah yeah, keep talking about Star Wars 😴😴
@@joaquinlaroca2886 get out.. star trek and star wars are the ogs.. this marvel and dc shit came after..
@@ovni2295 yea that is one of the things I love about star wars
I loved how he added cybertron knowing it will be difficult to make
Heck, he added it twice. I wonder why the size difference?
@@King_Nex one from g1. The other was from some marvel tf comic that came out once.
@@yash7461 Oh, I get it! Thanks for clearing that up.
@@King_Nex wait the other one is from Transformers 3 as someone pointed out in the live chat. You can see the hexagons or whatever shaped surface,similar to dotm. But maybe it is from the marvel comics
@@yash7461 Look, your guess is as good as mine here
By lining them all up so closely next to each other you've allowed the Alien Xenomorph to infest the entire fictional universe.
Imagine the xenomorphs being infected by the flood from halo. God help us all.
@@MrMikeCarlson If the spores of the Flood start wrapping around the Xenomorph, I'm just imagining a fluffy Xenomorph just like SAO Abridged (from Something Witty Entertainment) refers to.
@Graustreif Elvanien The cordyceps would be completely annihilated against the Flood. The Xenomorphs however do have a susceptability to spores (mold) as it was shown in Accounts of the Earth War with Dr. Church when he got "farmed" by them.
Not unless the gravitational forces of each of these planets have anything to say about it, specifically "YEET!"
And the most powerful one is from Whoville of Horton Hears a Who
Well the Star Trek and Star Wars tech is so powerful, that like the Predator Aliens, they could take out the Xenomorph easily. All you would need is some lightsaber wielding force users Sith, Jedi, or Knights of ? Ren, I don't remember how to spell it. They would take them out, you could use Droid armies like was fighting the Clone Wars. The Xenomorphs would have trouble vs Kryptonian tech as well. The real threat is the Star Trek Borg, they can adapt to anything. They could develop combined tech of Krypton, Star Trek, and Star Wars realms into something unstoppable by anything but Q's deity-like powers. Also the Transformers would also be a force in that scenario. Although, I think the Borg eventually beat them as well.
Some real surprises in there - Arrakis is TINY. Nice to see Hal Clement's Mesklin getting a mention, too. When we did the final pull-back from the sun, I wondered if we'd be getting Larry Niven's Ringworld, but the Dyson Sphere is actually a better choice. Couple of other possibilities, both from Niven - The Smoke Ring, which isn't technically a planet, but is very cool, and Brennan's doughnut-shaped asteroid from the novel "Protector"...
Saturn, Uranus and Neptune have at least 4 things in common. List them. 1. They are all planets. 2. They are all round. 3. None of them have McDonald's.
"Imagine living on a flat planet balanced on the backs of four elephants which in turn stand on the back of a giant interestellar turtle" - Terry Pratchett
I see you don't believe in the fifth elephant hypotetis.
"The Turtle moves!"
@@magicquill1116 Christ I have no idea why that made me laugh so hard but it really did
Flat earthers be like:
But you don't need to imagine, just go to the bottom of the map and look over the edge
I should be doing schoolwork
Maybe I should check these fictional planets first tho
I know, I've been waiting for this video since the poll came out.
Thats actually me right now tho
Just a note: You marked the forest moon of Endor as a moon, but Yavin 4 is also a moon, orbiting Yavin.
Which he called Yavin Prime
@@darthkek1953 Uh-huh.
To be fair, Yavin Prime is more of a Brown Dwarf than a Planet or Star, so, its safe to conclude Yavin 4 as a planet instead of a Moon
Me: "man, these fictional planets are getting too big, it's just stupid now"
Jupiter: "Bitch you thought"
yess!!!! lmao
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂👍👍👍👍
To be fair, there *is* a limit to how large *rocky* planets can be, as most of these are depicted as, and past a certain size they'd all have to be gas giants.
I have no idea what the limit is and whether it applies here, though, and things change if any of them are using *Technology* ™ to be hollow, made of lighter materials than expected, or have any kind of gravity cancellation magic going on.
@@BeforeBalloons so I did some research, the largest terrestrial planet in the Solar System is Earth (obviously) followed closely by Venus. The largest rocky exo-planet (planet outside of this solar system) I found was Gliese 163C which is ~7 times the size of Earth.
"size" -- Careful there... Gliese 163c is ~7 times the _mass_ of Earth. If the density is the same, that's both ~1.9 times the diameter and gravity, hardly habitable for humans, and the escape velocity would easily exceed what conventional rockets could manage.
Dyson Sphère : (*Opening-up*) ... "You know, I am a bit of a planet myself".
Some theories hold that supersized moons (like Endor) might be havens for life if they’re big enough to build an atmosphere, since their primary would be able to keep them from getting smacked by asteroids all the time.
Kerbin and Hellstar Remina being on this list was a welcome surprise.
I'm glad Kerbin made it. But identically upset Jool didn't.
What is hellstar remina?
@@dedos206 It's a living planet from a manga of the same name which was written by a man named Junji Ito.
@@Zachomara or the rest of the kerbol system? Just about all the star wars planets were added
I agree
The Dysonsphere opening and revealing the inside looks so beautiful.
I remember the much simpler Dysonsphere from one of the older videos XD
The quality has improved so much!
I was NOT expecting that Hellstar Remina would make an appearance! Truly impressed :D
I am both amazed by how much effort this channel put into their videos AND terrified because of my weird phobia of large space objects.
Not to alarm you, but... you live on a large space object...
@@shawnthompson8016 nah its small..
@@purpleturtle8841 yes that makes sense but why be afraid of it
its just life
its just how it is
humans are nothing in the universe
its impossible that we exist
@@alchemist6819 yeah it really is
go on google earth... you'd be surprised to see how little you have to zoom in to see individual cities
@@alchemist6819 the sheer fact that pandora is close to earth size makes me hate the navi even more.
I was very surprised you included diskworld. Also I do like the movie “reference” it’s so realistic it’s almost real life😂
Hey, I think you were in it!
Nah. That "Reference" movie's director looks like he has no creativity AT ALL.
Is refernce on Netflix?
@@Sennahoj_DE_RLP no, it's on the
Discovery Channel.
Terry Pratchett?
OMG! I thought you'd forgotten Gallifrey, how wrong was I! Thanks so much for including Gallifrey! I'm a massive fan of you and Doctor Who!
Nobody:
Star Wars: Aight, Imma just going to add a couple extra zeros to every thing.
That honestly fits Warhammer 40k better than much else
Do you watch Greystillplays?
I was a bit surprised that "Starkiller Base" was so small. Why weren't they all hopping around like astronauts in the extremely low gravity? Starkiller (and everything smaller in this list) is too small to be spherical. 1,000 km is normally accepted as the diameter where a planet has enough gravity to pull itself into a spherical shape.
@@Mr.Ekshin You could get away with higher gravity (including Earth-like) on a smaller world if the planet's density is high enough. Think about how small neutron stars are, yet also how strong their gravitational pull is.
@@ShadowWolfTJC - It would have to be a star remnant or something to have that kind of gravity in an object that size. Earth is mostly nickel and iron, two very high density metals, so it's not like we're lightweight for our size.
Seriously, half the planets in the Star Wars universe should have people jumping around in near weightless conditions... that is if they could retain an atmosphere... most could not.
Outer Wilds was such a good game. Highly recommend it to everyone who likes charming adventure and exploration driven games.
Nerd
@@TroyMcClure26 ?
Def agree go buy this game now
A lovely game with an impactful message
@@TroyMcClure26 "nerd"
-The guy with no social skills
For those playing the home game: Titan is not from Marvel. Titan is a real moon of Saturn.
Titan exists in marvel too.
Pandora is also the name of a real moon too.
A Dyson sphere is also not just fiction it is something scientists have wanted to make.
Its 2 different Titans
4:54 Flat Earthers "FINALLY THE TRUTH"
😂😂
XD😂😂😂
Lol true
Lol
But not our planet😂😂😂
Glad someone remembered the Dyson sphere from Trek. Also had no idea Romulus was so small.
Same here
It was impossibly small, unless the core is made of some super-dense material that can emulate gravity to being equal to Earth's.
It does seem a tad bit small, had a look around on the interwebs, according to Memory Beta, one of two Star Trek wikis, it is 14,000 Kilometres across: memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Romulus A wee bit larger than Earth.
@@GofaqYusef I wouldn't trust Memory Beta - it relies on non-canon sources of information (comics, novels, etc.) to fill in the blanks.
@@DayneTreader Fair enough, Tried typing Romulus size in google, didn't really help either.
Love the inclusion of some of the Outer Wilds planets. Would have liked to see the other Kerbal ones though! In fact I'd be interested to just see all of those, compared to some real moons, planets and asteroids (I am aware they're all relatively a lot smaller :P)
kerbin
Jool is right around the size of earth
When you showed the speck from Horton hears a who that just made my day.
I believe I suggested that one!
@@catwhowalksbyhimself thanks for doing so!
@@catwhowalksbyhimself me to 😁
@@rhuman8672 I'm sure it wouldn't have made that cut if it were just me. I also suggested one of the Microverse planets from Marvel comics, but that's probably way too small!
@@catwhowalksbyhimself glad it made the cut - obviously we both have good ideas 🙂
"Titan, Marvel Comics"
Titan one of the moon of Saturn with a diameter of 5149 km : Pikachu face
Me too... Probably the most interesting moon In the solar system: "invented by marvel comics" apparently... 😂
according to the mcu: titan is a completely different place and not the moon of saturn, but yes, the video shows the moon's real life measurements
@@amn9433 little trivia but: In the comics, Thanos' homeworld is the real-life moon of Saturn named Titan, rather than a fictional planet of the same name in another solar system.
And the comics are sort of the original source material...
you do realise that this is FICTIONAL planets right ? From movies, comics and video games.......The real planets are there purely for reference so you can see the difference in sizes of the fictional planets.
@@proffessorX As I already said. The original titan from marvel comics was actually supposed to be the actual moon of Saturn titan. It wasn't changed to be a fictional exoplanet until the movies and MCU came along. So either it doesn't have a place in this list of fictional planets, or he shouldn't have used the actual look and diameter of the existing moon titan for a fictional one. And yes, I know we're knitpicking... But hey, if it gets a conversation started about one of the most fascinating moons in the solar system, or even simply makes some people aware of it's existence, I'm all for knitpicking! ;)
Sees Arrakis and Trantor.....breathes a sigh of relief.
First of all this is seriously impressive it’s amazing. Secondly I love that it seems like a lot of fictional worlds don’t consider the effects of gravity changes when sizing their planets 😂
It could be that the larger planets have a lower density.
@@DMichaelAtLarge Up to a point. Gravity still works, hydrogen is still the majority of the matter out there... and brown dwarfs don't get much bigger than Jupiter (diameter-wise) but they are 10 - 60 times its mass, while Saturn isn't much smaller but is a third of its mass. There seems to be a limit to how large a gas giant can get, diameter-wise (I think about 2x Jupiter from observations, however the low-density, high-radius planets found so far are all extremely hot).
I think Peyton Ashley's comment applies equally to the rocky planets, but again, given elemental abundance, Earth is about as dense as stuff gets (large iron/nickel core), so a body half the radius would have a surface gravity significantly lower than Earth's since there isn't much that would give it a higher average density.
Also, at the low end, bodies of less than ~200 km diameter are not likely to be spherical... but there are only 8 in the video, and quite a few of these aren't "scientific".
@@dlevi67 so how long would it take to cross from the very tip of oris to the every most southern point
@@Kashimo_Glazer123 Tip of what? It's a sphere, it has no tips. Do you mean its North pole? The circumference of Oris, given the diameter in the video, is about 300,000 km, so half of that is 150,000 km.
'To cross' by what means? Does Oris have a gravity similar to Earth? Is its surface transitable? Does it have an atmosphere similar to Earth, so that flight is possible? Do we assume highly capable, autonomous vehicles, or something that is remotely controlled? If the latter, from where? Or are you talking about animal transport?
Assuming it's all relatively flat, but transitable by something like a Mars rover, travelling constantly at its maximum speed of ~0.15 km/h, it would take more than a century; a snail would be 3 times slower - and very long lived. On the other hand, assuming a Mach-3 hypersonic airplane (say something like a Lockheed SR-71) is used to do the trip, it would take less than 2 days, again assuming travel at constant maximum speed. The fastest bird on Earth (again, assuming uninterrupted, maximum speed in level flight) would take a bit more than a month. Take your pick.
You'd never have this many earthlike planets in a real universe.
As others in the comments have pointed out, Gallifrey should be much bigger: it's at least 3 times the size of Earth. (And for anyone who's read The Ancestor Cell, when the TARDIS manifests as the Edifice (by projecting its interior dimensions onto its exterior dimensions) above Gallifrey, it's bigger than Gallifrey itself.)
"Flat Saturn is not real, it can't hurt you"
Flat Saturn: 5:41
Flaturn
Slat
OMG You added Timber Hearth! And the Spore planet! And Kerbin! And Pandora! And Ilus! And Mesklin! This video was amazing, probably one of my favourites!
Reading your comment I thought I missed Pandora from Borderlands, but in fact it's the one from Avatar...
isnt mesklin just a squashed saturn
Timber Hearth. Probably the best planet of the end of time
I'm so glad Gallifrey made it there. Not sure why it said "The Doctor Who" but I can't complain.
But Gallifrey is significantly larger than they made it here lmao
@@repentium Yeah at some point in the show, Gallifrey gets teleported to Earth and you can see it's at least three times larger than it
Lol I have been watching doctor who
@@shriveledbean69 Man doctor who is the best
@@Lightning7112 From "The End of Time", yep. I would say from that that it's at LEAST twice as big as Earth.
This channel is severely underrated!!
it really is
Someone should make a comparison video of most underrated channels and at the end it whip zooms out and you see that all the channels up to this point have been specks sitting on top of the first L in MetaBall Studios with room to spare and also the moon for reference
@@johnthomson9614 Actually, use the observable universe for the reference.
This video shows how beautiful fiction is, and how the human mind is powerful.
Wait till you find out about Remina
"Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't"
Tallon IV even has the crater caused by the Leviathan impact.
Love the detail!
The fact that Discworld was included was great. Rest easy,Sir Terry. You are dearly missed.
@digifalc0087 I saw him die, and it was brutal...
GNU Terry Pratchett.
Thanks for including Spore! I knew the planets were small but I wasn't sure how small! Less than a kilometer wide (about a 1/2 mile) for context the Earth is about 12,000 km (8,000 miles) wide making the Earth over 12 trillion times the size of the Spore planets!
I actually didn't expect Hellstar Remina to be there. I almost forgot it to be a planet. This video is so impressive.
Nice touch having another Earth wrapped up in it's tongue for scale.
The Sun: "Why do I hear boss music?"
Our Sun is a little star.
It wasn't called Yellow "dwarf" for a reason.
I really love seeing both Discworld and Hellstar Remina in this.
I'm honestly amazed by the amount of different franchises, movies and video games you cover in your videos. Great work once again!
That was the first premiere I've ever watched on UA-cam. And in California, the video started just he right time.
FYI while in Marvel comics Titan was indeed referring to the real-life moon of Saturn in the film "Avengers: Infinity War" Thanos's home Titan is a totally different planet in another star system.
"MY LIFE FOR AIUR!"
"Warp fields stabilized."
"Carrier has arrived."
"Adun Toridas."
"POWER OVERWHELMING!"
*YOU MUST CONSTRUCT ADDITIONAL PYLONS*
moo...
En Arudin Rajzagal
@@jaqenhghar2970 thereisnocowlevel
I wonder how many people living in Brooklyn see these videos and now know how big their apartment building is compared to a Star Destroyer
Thank you for including Mesklin! I was fascinated by this book as a kid.
Отличная книга, просто отличная.
Happy to see King Kai’s planet. I was a little disappointed that nothing from Super Mario Galaxy was included which would probably be around that size, nor a representative example from No Man’s Sky (their sizes vary), but I appreciate the effort that went into recreating all of the ones that are here.
Anomaly from NMS would've been a nice pick, it's something (nearly) every player has seen and it's a static size, even if it's not a proper "planet"
Yeah, the Gateway Galaxy micro planet would of been nice to see.
At least, Majora, Metroid, and even StarFox (that series needs more love) got regard here.
Yeah. That’s what I was saying. They could do a frame of reference from the average size of each planet in No Man’s Sky.
Meanwhlie camera man: i dont get paid enough to feed my family
1:58 Oh my goodness thank you!! Reference is my absolute favorite movie of all time!!
It's not a movie, it's a series!
Yay discworld!!!
this and B612 made me happy :D
@Yoda are you flat earther, im wondering
These videos must take so much effort to make.
not really its just made with a 3d tool
@Namir Deshmukh wikipedia
*yeah lets just check Wikipedia for the sizes of these planets without Checking offical souces of their sizes yeah that will work cus wikipedia "obviously" has articles of these worlds*
So glad to see Kerbin from KSP, I was hoping you would add Jool as well, but still super awesome!
@Rigel2112 dres doesn't exist
True Hardwork seen.
And that make music made it of other level.
I am so glad we saw Great A'Tuin in there. Discworld stood out a bit from the others. In shape, if not in size.
Glad to see that Timber Hearth and Giant's Deep made it on this list! ::D
1:57 Reference is such an underrated movie!!
Yeah, Is there a full movie?
It's because it's not a movie
It's *R E A L L I F E .*
@@SHIN2024_official
Welcome to the joke
@@a.t.p.engineer7154the movie is still in production and has been for 4.5 billion years.
Absolutely amazing. Just when you thought this guy couldn’t up his game.......👏
Thanks for including planet Zebes from my favourite game, Metroid.
Tysm for adding Timber Hearth, I love that game
Ah man,. I remember you videos from 4 years ago. How much you have grown. Keep up the great work, Metaball
Gallifrey should be larger tbh. In "The End Of Time Part 2" it's shown to be at least a time & a half bigger than Earth.
2:20 titan is also a real moon that orbits saturn
Yep was about to comment the same thing. It's not a fictional world at all but one of the most interesting bodies in our solar system. Also only other planet/moon to have confirmed liquid on its surface!
@@johanwittens7712 Titan is Saturn's 6th major moon, and it is believed to have more oil on its surface than Earth.
@@iheartscience7427 I know. But minor corrections: titan is Saturn's only major moon. All the rest are dwarf moons at best with a diameter less than 1000 km. Titan is more than 5 times larger than any other Saturnian moon.
Secondly it's not oil on its surface but liquid methane and ethane, which on earth is natural gas. As far as we know there's no oil on titan.
@@iheartscience7427 oh no america is coming
@@thef2pgamer500 Ha, you forgot America's already been there. We launched the Huygens probe the year before last I believe.
I can’t believe you didn’t include Minecraft world size as a cube, lol.
I was waiting for that.
ya but how big is it then?
and its not a cube its infinately flat
Minecraft is not cube its flat square(in java)
@@user-dt3of5gr2f It's 60,000,000 meters (30,000,000 from zero on each side) and the in game world is flat, but the representation of the world in almost all media indicates it's a cube (meaning the 60,000,000m flat terrain is only one of the sides.)
Seeing the planet from The Little Prince makes me want to cry 🥺 I love that book so much!
So fascinating that Illum is so small, considering how big of a threat it is to any other planet
This was beautiful, and some of these blew my mind. I had no idea Starkiller was so small, and same for Arrakis! Great music choice too, SUBBED!
I was a little surprised the diameter of Arrakis was approximate. Considering how much detail Herbert went into with the worldbuilding, you'd think a precise measurement would be down somewhere.
fun fact: Nessus is real, there just isn't any Vex on it irl (hopefully lol)
Happy to see Outer wilds planet and Trantor from Foundation ! One great game and a nice serie of book !
You've included the discworld!! How fantasticly good of you!
Me realizing the missed potential for a your mama joke here:
*my disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined*
0:46 I thought Timber Hearth would not get Into This comparsion, But I am really happy it did. Also, the same I thought about Giant's deep. Good job!
Bro I get excited when I get a notification from your channel. Freaking awesome stuff
I liked that you put Hellstar Remina on the video. it was a nice surprise. :)
Este video me ha llegado al corazon, haber estado en algunos de esos planetas y verlos ahí es una sensacion indescriptible.
SOLO RECUERDO A CYBERTRON
El que mas me sorprendio fue kerbin del ksp sabia que en ese juego todo era mas pequeño pero no sabia que tanto
I wasn’t expecting Kerbin to show up, but I’m glad it did. KSP is one of my favorite games.
Actually, i tought its Bigger. Tbh I learnt a lot about space physics and technology in that game.
I thought that Kerbin was as big as the Earth, not so small.
@@joncastilloaltube7211 Kerbal System is roughly 1/10th the size of the Solar System, Jool is about the size of real life Earth.
@@joncastilloaltube7211 They made it smaller because they tested the real sized version and determined doing the real sized version was going to take forever to get stuff into orbit (like 8 minutes as opposed to 2 that it does from Kerbin)
After seeing that Spore world is so tiny makes you think that planet busters are actually just regular nukes.
I'm happy that Trantor was included. I was kind of waiting for Terminus as well, but I'm satisfied. That's not how Trantor would look like in "reality" though
Great video, I loved that both Pandora and Polyphemus were in it. Keep up the good work!
Another impressive video… well done, MBS👍🏼
You don't realize how cultured you are until you recognize almost every single planet at a glance before the name shows up, and where it's from
For anyone wondering:
-The speck
-Craftworld
-B612
-moon (Majora's mask)
-homeworld planet (spore)
-Nessus
-Ilum
-Kerbin
Recognized dune, not the planet))
-Romulus
-Endor
-Ego, the living planet
-Hoth
-Mar Sara (rip Chau Sara)
-Yavin 4
-Tatooine
-Requiem
-Pandora
-Zebes
-Naboo
-Coruscant
-Korhal
-Vulcan
-Mar Sara *yes twice*
-corneria
-Aiur
-reach
-krypton
-Tuchanka
-Feros
-Qo'nos (was it the devil's planet? With the gray liquid that replicated stuff?)
-Genesis
-bespin
-Polyphemus
-Yavin Prime
-Dyson Sphere (generic superstructure)
@Isaiah Rashid [insert troll face here]
I kinda tricked myself at the very end. "YES! ONYX FROM HAL--- oh."
@@aarshir9500 No Solaris, how uncultured...
Catch up to the classics, man.
@@Halo_Legend hey, I only counted once so I'd have to double check if I didn't see Solaris in there
Was not expecting Mission of Gravity or Foundation to show up here. Great work
1:14 *cheerful music intensifies*
Amazing video as always!
I miss Magrathea 😅
Thank you for lighting up our weekend 🐌
Im so happy they included the homeworld planet from Spore!
boy do I love the inclusion of Spore
edit: and also the discworld
Can we all just appreciate the epicness of this score?
Cool fictional planets.
Hey, Should add Larry Niven’s Ring World!
they included it along with dyson sphere at the end of their updated starships video ua-cam.com/video/aTPwbVqU6lc/v-deo.html
@@wurmsrus2 What's the ring-world's diameter?
@@LadyMcGiusti wikipedia says 186 million miles (299 million kilometres)
@@wurmsrus2 It's almost the size of Onyx from Halo, then!
@@LadyMcGiusti yep in both cases about 1 AU, earth's average distance from the sun, in radius. though note ringworld as it's name suggests is a ring around the equator about 1 million miles thick rather than an all encompassing Dyson Sphere like Sarcophagus or the Star Trek one.
I was sitting there going "come on Cybertron!" So when I actually saw it I was ecstatic. Love these videos, always keep it up, this stuff never fails to impress me
Edit: never realized how small G1 Cybertron was
It was small in the Sunbow cartoon. The Marvel comic version was roughly "Saturn-sized".
5:30 Never imagined he would add Hellstar Remina!!
4:38 remember reach
Oh everything is smaller than the Sun.....oh wait....Star Trek with the win lol These are always so epic and exciting to see unfold :-)