Battle of the Atlantic - Mitsi Studio
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- Опубліковано 16 бер 2023
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The longest battle of World War II, was mostly fought in the North Atlantic ocean. German U-boats attacked the trans-Atlantic convoys of the Allies. This fight turned into a battle of numbers.
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Bro you are online?!!! Can I get some love here?
Love your vids
russian revolution
You guys are Brilliant, well done!
love ur vids
WHO else discovered these guys from the how countries fight series and now can’t get enough!?
Me
Me
same
Me
I think that’s 99% of their subscribers..
Give this studio 100 million dollars and an oscar.
Fuck yea
Oscar is for acting.
Fuck yea bby
HOW THE HELL WAS THIS 11 HRS AGO???
@@richardjohntan7471 I was gonna ask
Playing any historical U-Boat simulation as a German submarine commander is like starting out in "Casual Clicker" mode in 1939 and ending up in "Dark Soul's Nightmare" mode by 1944.
I’m literally playing silent hunter 3 as I’m watching this, and yes even with a type XXI late 44 is hell.
@@jdog345 Right? How did they ever put a torpedo into anything… I cannot fathom.
The point is that with the beginning of 1943 the newest german submarines were already completely out dated and no match for the allied navy. So basically since then every departure of a submarine was a suicide mission. Speaking in numbers: 820 submarines were destroyed. Sounds like Nightmare mode to me.
@@ekponlima6816 with how awful all other German Uboat designs actually were. I have no clue how they got they designed something as gorgeous as the type XXI
@@jdog345 and the type XXI didn't even see combat service in ww2
7:02 My grandfather was a radio operator on one of those anti-Uboat planes. He told me they saw a few submarines, dropped depth charges on them, but were never able to 100% confirm the kill
But knowing that a plane could come over the horizon, or out of the sun at any, time cramped their operations & greatly complicated putting a wolf pack together. There should be no doubt in your mind that that was good work that got a real thing done. Yay for our Greatest Generation.
nice
@@JoeOvercoatI prefer the ww1 generation
@@ls200076Bro?
Saying Alan Turing had "no sex life" is one of darkest jokes I've seen in a while.
He was one of those guys you knew you could absolutely trust your daughter with.
@@txgunguy2766 yeah bro's eyes was on another guys if you catch my drift
Elaborate
@@Crimsrn Dude got chemically castrated by the state for being gay after the war.
@@Crimsrn bro got shunned by those around him for the "disease" of being gay. He would sadly delete program never to see the recognition that followed
This is gonna be the best animated history channel since oversimplified, one day I can proudly say "I was watching them since the start"
Ya this shit slaps
Okay c'mon man, Armchair Historian, Operations Room, and Yarnhub are up there in best animated history channels since Simple History
Honestly I see it too. It’s nice and short and easy to remember. Love this channel since how countries fight in their wars 1
dont forget Yarnhub!
Yes
I think it is important to add that Alan Turning did not crack Enigma. Turing developed the idea of the Poles' "bomba kryptologiczna" but indeed, his machine was designed for much more general crib-based decryption. Credit for cracking Enigma goes to: Marian Rejewski, Henryk Zygalski, and Jerzy Różycki. Who also could have had little to no sex life.
The poles cracked it first but there was a switch up, which Turing then recracked it with using the basis of the original polish work.
i feel like in Alan's case the no sex life was justified by the fact that homosexuality was illegal af
yea, it was the USA that broke the code after we stol- i mean tactfully acquired a Type 9 C U-boat after trying to sink it, its in Chicago in the Ship museum today, its the only Type 9 C U-boat left in once piece from the war. if you want more of in watch the "Fat Electrician- the Time the USA stole a German U-boat"
Good to see I'm not the only one aware of who should get the credit for breaking the Enigma.
@@haus_of_wraith ??
6:21 well... Hitler did end up rage quitting
lol
Well he decided that Giant ships was better then a small sneaky ship
Adolf was so mad at the small pp jokes told by the allies that he always wanted to build big stuff
Bro I was just watching your video
"Hitler has only got one ball
The other in the Albert Hall"
Ya think he’s compensating for something?
Hitler, has only got one ball! Göring, has two but very small, Himler, has something similar, but poor old Geobals has no balls at all!
Born too early to experience these virtually, born too late to see these wars unfold. Just in time to watch the next Mitsi Studio video.
Born too early to not have to wait for the premiere
@@muffinconsumer4431 Born just in time to watch it when it premieres.
VR
Along with Mustard, Neo and Melodysheep.
Yeah
I love your work. Thank you for sharing your creativity with us!
Awesome 🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤
@@mitsistudio Hi you make amazing videos keep it up👍
@@mitsistudio awesome animations! Could you mind making more badboys in history series? Well, if you have time to.
yes I agree
I love the art direction and will be supporting Mitsi in the coming weeks. Keep up the astounding work!
That was in the same time funny and gruesome, simplified but historically accurate, light and naughty. These people are unmatched animation geniuses.
5:36 The animation was so cute and sanitized that I was thrown completely Off-guard by that brutal strafing run
50 Caliber really blows your mind don’t it?
@@noggy3133 literally
@@noggy3133lol
Get wrecked
Imagine a WW2 style strategy game with a graphic style like this.
That was Battlefield Heroes and I loved it until they shut down the servers. My character's face was 60% Helmet and 40% mustache.
3:35 - It was Polish mathematicians (Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki and Henryk Zygalski) who broke the Enigma code as early as 1932, and it was thanks to their work that the British managed to break successive versions of the Enigma.
the poles broke an early version of the code and turing used their work to break all the rest
Bro why the poles always want to be credited with their achievements when they did fuck all.
Seeing Donitz screaming in the most cartoonish yet funny way that I think is possible in animation is probably my favorite moment from this channel. it's about 6:16. Made me die laughing.
You guys were able to explain the battle of the Atlantic in 8 minutes better than my university history prof could in 2 hours
That's a disservice to your professor. As a 3d artist i assure you it took weeks/months for them to make this.
@@sedghammer The prof has been working on it for decades..I have studied it for decades..my old man was in it..that was Explained wicked good and funny as fuck..in 8 minutes..🤯
@@sedghammer non one care of hard work, everyone care of success
Ye
The animation style of this is so delightful to watch. The semi stop motion is so cool.
hello war thunder guy
yea, agree about it
Fancy seeing you here Iron
Ship and other assets are just so cute. Wish you can also make RTS or TPS games with this kind of art style. The action of chaartacters typing is really cute, love it.
Armchair historian made Fire & Manoeuvre, so these Dutch chaps could probably make something in the future.
A 3D Advanced Wars but with significantly more blood
A turn based strategy would be cool too.
Not to mention the RMS Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, the 2 largest AND fastest ships in the world, that ferried as many as 16,000 troops from the US to the UK (more people put on any ship before or since) and still managed to outrun the U-Boats AND the Torpedoes they fired. So significant were the contributions of these ships that Churchill quoted that they shaved at LEAST a year off the war.
"Now every u-boat in the Atlantic was pretty much fucked" is one of the greatest sentences i never knew i needed to hear 😂
I love how you guys make the most light hearted, yet violent dark and gory videos and manage to make them the most historically accurate shit posts of all times with the best wise cracks and coarse language to boot, this well and truly made my day, well played sir, well played....
this is basically art its incredible how we can watch these masterpieces without paying any money
Good idea I didn't decide to watch this educational history video with my family.
@@ju-yuanchueh8444 well... The " eleven less evil things about Hitler" video was even worse
_you have been warned_
Loved it but it was weird to see Turing's story being reduced to "a 28 year old man with no sex life". He was gay, they forced chemical castration on him, and then he killed himself.
Just found this channel. Very enjoyable animation and content. My neighbor was a kriegsmarine submariner. He told me after narrowly surviving their first patrol without any contacts his Captain decided they were going to hunt for an Allied patrol and hope they could surrender before they were attacked. That is what they did. He sat out the last year of the war in Canada and he was allowed to join a farm labor co-op after V-E Day until Canadian soldiers returned in enough numbers to get the harvests in.
¡Gracias!
Thx for your donation! We appreciate it❤
@@mitsistudio Can You PLEASE Do Anne Frank???????????
that is 1 dollar
@@haileeraestout5567 no
@@mitsistudio buy a hotdog
I just laughed at british women tbagging germans and the fact that germans could never rage quit. You made my day!
Lol
That tbagging looked a bit sus
I've recently read a book about the Battle of the Atlantic. According in the book, during the early stages of the battle German U-boats sometimes try to capture lone merchant ships instead of torpedoing them.
The crew of these lone merchant ships would board lifeboats and given directions to where their nearest port is. While the captured merchant ship would be controlled by a "prize crew" and then taken to a German port along with the ship's cargo.
like true pirates
If I remember correctly, these tactics, which I believe are called prize rules, was ended due to an event known as the Laconia incident.
When RMS Laconia was torpedoed by U-156, the crew operated under slightly modified prize-rules: rescue as many allied seamen as possible, broadcast intentions and position across all Allied radio, and request assistance from other ships in the rescue. However, during the rescue efforts, an American bomber attacked U-156 when it was flying the Red Cross with bombs, depth charges, and strafing runs, resulting in damage and the loss of life of many of the rescued seamen. U-156 was forced to cast adrift several lifeboats and have the seamen on the deck of the submarine swim or tread water as it dove to avoid the plane.
The aftermath resulted in the Laconia Order, which Donitz passed due to the events that occurred which forbade the rescue of allied seamen.
To me, it is easy to point fingers in this incident, but there are other factors to take into account: British radio had received the broadcast but distrusted it, believing it to be a ruse or a trap. The US Ascension Island base was close by, so most American planes and commanders were on edge and fearful of the discovery of the base. When the British sent information to the US on the sinking of the Laconia and their own rescue attempt, they did not pass along the possibility of the German rescue effort. The American Captain who ordered the attack did not believe that the rules of war stated combat ships were allowed to fly the Red Cross and may have thought it was a trap for two diverted Allied freighters.
Ultimately, I believe that this was a side-effect of the fog of war, where neither side truly knows what the other side intends, and resulted in an unfortunate and messy incident.
@@oldmeme1252 this didn’t even start in WW2, initially in WW1, German U-boats would essentially stop and search ships for war materiel. If they had been carrying things like ammunition they’d be allowed to evacuate and send a distress signal before being sunk. This ended when the British started putting deck guns on merchant shipping which invalidated their protection from “cruiser rules”.
@@CheewbacagameplaysSomething that the English Navy did for centuries. Famous "pirates" ups English captains like Francis Drake
At the beginning of WW 1 and WW 2, german submarines act under the international prize order / Prisenordnung. That means the uboat has to stop a merchant ship, get the crew from board / look that they were safe and then sunk the ship.
But a uboat had never enough people to form a prize crew and send a captured ship back to home. This tactic was done by German HSK ships (auxiliary cruisers / Hilfskreuzer). They had enough crew and were prepared to form up several prize crews.
My great uncle was a sailor on a Canadian merchant vessel during the war, and luckily his ship was never attacked. He did see other ships go down and watch the escort ships engage U-boats.
The most in detail story he told was during one night another vessel with a flammable cargo caught fire. Before abandoning it the crew set the ship to sail away from the convoy incase of an explosion. The ship never exploded though and he and his pals just watched this burning ship sail away and shrink into the night. The whole ship's crew was rescued, in part because the fire from the ship made it easy for a rescue ship to find them in the night.
but not as great as the punic wars
I cannot believe I haven’t heard of you guys before, this art style is so innovative and it really keeps me watching
The script is pure gold and the animation is immaculate
"Basically shoving a few torpedoes up the metal behind of the battleship."
Damn.. 😳
Fantastic that you got WATU in there; so badly overlooked and so vital to winning. Fantastic vid, thanks
Well said. We're hoping to stage some WATU recreations in the bunker this summer if you're interested!
Thanks!
AWESOMEEE!!!!🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
This is the chaddest comment of all time
You're welcome
3rd time now...
This is one of the comments of all time.
Would be awesome to see a video about American submarines in the Pacific as well
American submarines are underrated.
@@LarryWater Absolutely. Once the Mark 14 was sorted out they absolutely slaughtered the Japanese Merchant fleet.
we sunk a Japanese train
@@nikkity5491 Yeah whoever did that was really lucky
@@CrownVictoria-zl6dh It wasn't really luck. It simply a matter of patience and timing, not too dissimilar from hunting a merchant ship. The submarine responsible was the USS Barb.
The decision to start making history videos in this format might be the best development in youtube ive seen in a looooooong time. Good Work, look forward to seeing more!
When this appeared in my UA-cam suggestions I could not believe my good fortune!! I'm as excited as a little kid at Christmas to see more by Mitsi!! I totally adored the How Countries Fight Their Wars!! Thank you sooo much for this!!
I’d just like to say that the animation style is amazing and level of detail and dedication is incredible. Keep up the good work ❤
"Remember, it's not about how big the size of your ship, it's how small it is, that enemies can't see it"
-A guy called Dönitz
I love how you called him 'a guy' as if he wasn't the literal supreme commander of the Kriegsmarine lmao.
There is something so satisfying about your animations. It feels like chewing gum or something, it just scratches an itch. Keep up the great work!
As a fan of Das Boot, this video's attention to detail is remarkable. I loved the Churchill depictions, too.
I enjoyed this so much I watched it, oh, 5 or 6 more times. I shared this with all my U-Boat model friends as well. Absolutely brilliant!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Keep the vids coming !
Awesome ❤🎉🎉❤❤
@@mitsistudio Your my NEW History channel haha
E
2nd donation comment I’ve ever seen
Love this style of animation and the dark humour, alongside cold hard facts. Keep up the good work.
This is so awesome, please keep these historical animations up!
I’m just gonna leave this comment here so in 2 years time when they reach 10 million subs I can prove I was here from the start
same
Same
I love how unfiltered you guys are, hats off to mitsi.
VERY WELL DONE and VERY WELL explained! Instant subscriber looking for MORE.
This is my first time learning about the contents of the battle, and I'm glad that I learned through this video. Educational yet simplified, presented with great animation, and sprinkled with some humor. It was made so well that it makes me want to learn more about the battle. I love this video, and I hope you guys make great future videos like this!
I love the animation style! You guys could have your own TV show!
As an American I'm shocked that you didn't say " You guys should make your own Teli show, innit time?"
I'm so sorry that I said this, but it's true they should!
Also have a lovely day
@@NatenotFinnishthough lol you too mate
This is the cutest battle of the Atlantic video I’ve ever seen. Absolutely AMAZING ❤
There are other cute Battle of the Atlantic videos? 🤣
This should be a tv show
this is truly a beautiful sight to behold, i will from now on watch very single thing you guys upload, no matter if i'm in the middle of a life saving surgery im watching.
We need The Battle of The Pacific after this.
Thanks for the WATU callout. Vital to winning. And loved the teabagging and rage quitting references. Outstanding work.
YOU MAKE AMAZING CONTENT! PLEASE NEVER CHANGE THIS STYLE OF HUMOUR AND THIS QUALITY OF ANIMATION. SUBSCRIBED!
These animations are beyond awesome! I can't stop watching you guys, the quality content is insane!
I love the animation style of this channel. It’s so unique and really stands out from the rest. The art is so pretty with the lighting and shadows
This is by far one of the best history channels on UA-cam, excited for more animations!
This looks absolutely phenomenal. Can't believe I haven't seen this until now.
I love their style of animations, it's so goofy while explaining one of the most brutal war in history lmao
They also have a video with an extremely accurate description of how a Sidewinder air to air missile works.
Amazing job combining my love for WW2 history & animation. This was very well done.
The word "Group Raping" had me laughing. Its like saying the word ORGY without even saying it. Hoping to get an episode about the battles fought over Europe in WW2 and even the Pacific theater.
Heren en dames die dit maken. Ik zeg het in het Nederlands want misschien zien jullie dat sneller. Blijf dit soort content volhouden! Het is leuk om naar tekijken (vooral voor de jeugd) en super leerzaam! Heel belangrijk werk wat jullie doen! Ben blij als een mede historische UA-camr te zien dat jullie dit soort content gaan maken. Keep it up!
Goed om te horen :D
Nooit geweten dat deze channel Nederlands was. 😂
I was confused for a second and thought this was german then I saw Ik and was like oh its Dutch, I was reading in the wrong language haha.
Don't worry about it, it happends haha.
Ja dacht al dat dit Nederlands was
Always wanted to learn more about the battle of the atlantic
Pure Gold! Thank you guys for existing! :D
Amazing, refreshing work Mitsi Studio!
I would howl to see the battle of Jutland in this animation style 😂
The "Heil Hitler" Engima thing is probably a myth: what was definitely happening though was that the operators were using the code/decode ability of the machine as a way for two different machines to quickly check they were on the same setting.
The problem with that is it created a pattern: if enough people used the same letters for the check every time (much like how most people don't make an entirely new password for every login,) and if they used simple phrases like "weather" consistently, then the huge number of theoretical encryptions becomes reduced to the point that a simple understanding of grammar can make the message reasonably clear.
Not positive, but there is a movie about the enigma code cracking, and in the movie at least it is the Heil Hitler in the message that eventually cracks the code
The way Enigma is built, and the way Enigma follow on were built, repetition matters in a very limited way.
There is a plugboard, later card reader, that establishes the "code" the machine will use for all messages until the plugboard pattern is changed. This was changed every day and every station had a book with the upcoming patterns for some period of time. Obviously the patterns have to be reused but cannot repeat in any sort of predictable way.
If you know a message will always contain HH at the very start of the message, and it has to be the very beginning or it won't work, then you can monitor traffic for two days when all the traffic starts with the same set of characters. You can assume this pattern includes HH and attempt to backward engineer what plugboard combination gets that result and if produces legible text for all the traffic for the day. If so you now have solved Enigma and have one of the plugboard positions solved and anytime that position is used you can decrypt it in nearly real time.
This is why asymmetric cryptography is now standard. I could hand you the most important public key the NSA has and it would not do you a lick of good. You could never hope to decrypt any message encrypted with that key. For that you'd need the private key and the amount of number crunching needed to break such even with a public key and lots of encrypted messages, assuming a reasonable length and properly chosen private key, exceeds the expected remaining lifetime of the universe.
The Enigma was cracked because of the pattern to end with OBERKOMMANDODERWEHRMACHT and at D-Day it was the crib: WETTERVORHERSAGEBISKAYA. Thats the original report from the Wehrmacht and the code standard for messages from Berlin to the boats.
Rumour had it that one Luftwaffe operator used his girlfriend's initials as a set-up for enigma, of course our guys in Bletchley park cottoned on to that one quickly and started to read Luftwaffe signals quickly.
@@theonlymad2876 Stereotype was afaik: Das Oberkommando der Wehrmacht gibt bekannt. I dont know if its true
The enigma machine code was broken by the Poles but Turing developed another way of decrypting it more efficiently. The 'computer' he built was called a 'Bombe' after the Polish 'Bomba' from which it was developed. The first programmable computer built was for Bletchley and was built by Tommy Flowers and others at Dollis Hill and called 'Colossus'.
Turing was a cryptanalyst, not a computer inventor or engineer. He was however very important in theoretical computer science and gave us the 'Turing Test' (another misunderstood thing in the media).
While he didn’t build it, a Turing machine pretty much explains what a general purpose computer is and what isn’t, as well as give us the halting problem. Those are very fundamental aspects of computing. He’s an inventor because what he invented was computer science itself.
I loved this episode! I have watched a lot of documentaries on WW2, but I have never heard the term ‘Tea-Bagging the Enemy’ nor have I seen it done, until now. I hope to see many more episodes, so keep them coming guys. Greetings from Australia!
2:18, u even captured (briefly) how the Bismarck sank
4:04 I am not sure about the sex life thing. I mean, it is well known that he was gay.
That's the joke Sherlock
@@zachkoptun9637 You obviously do not know much about gay sex life :D I am not gay, but trust me, most gay guys live their sex life to the fullest; why should Turing be an exception here. He regularly swam naked with friends.
@@globaldefenseinitiative Got it. Thanks.
@@StefanHoffmann84the reason he took suicide was because he couldn’t be gay back then, safe to say he wasn’t
BRAVO! It’s a good thing I already knew the story as I could not hear your rendition over my own raucous laughter.
I absolutely LOVE this animation style! Please keep the history coming!
It's amazing how much effort there is in these animations. I'm more then impressed.
Just found these guys by accident, can't wait for a new video, it's great to have something to make you laugh and smile these days
Bro you have no idea how much i love to watch this video again and again. This one is probably the most entertaining way to deliver the story of WW2..
And if possible i hope you‘ll make a merch of Toys especially the Germans/Wermacht boys.. I would love to collect them all.. More power to your channel! 💯👍🏼
This is singlehandedly one of the funniest things I have ever seen, and I have watched all your videoes
These guys make history discussions interesting without people falling asleep KEEP IT UP
My German grandfather would often walk me down the beach in France and wave his hand out to the empty sea.
He’d exclaim: “Do you see that? the kriegsmarine!”
He probably did the same at the local synagogue....
"Do you see that. The jews....!"
That... is fucking hilarious omfg lmao
Omygod, the character design is very distinct and the snappy and fluid animation. I love this channel!
Brilliant animation and thank you for taking the time to get the history bang on.
Just discovered this channel and holy shit you guys are godlike. Story telling at it's finest and i was laughing my ass off at the animations (they are too good). You gained a subscriber and i hope this channel reaches milestones after milestones
Me too
Historical update, the Polish captured the first Enigma and passed it onto SOE early in the war
This video honestly left me speachless with only a big grin on my face.
Brilliant. I am awed at the style.
If you want to teach history to kids this is the way. Short, funny and informative. My grandad was a merchant man who survived being torpedoed by a U-boat, he said it took weeks to recover from the oil and diesel fuel he'd swallowed whilst waiting to be rescued.
Lucky him lad. Swimming in a sea water with burning oil on the surface are definetly deadly.
And to think despite his ordeal he was one of the 'lucky ones'! Those merchant navy guys had balls of steel.
@@howtofixauboat . He certainly was a lucky man though he wouldn't agree with you because as soon as he was passed fit for service, they sent him on the Atlantic run to supply Russia with arms, ammunition and food to keep the Eastern front going against the Nazis right in the middle of their winter. He said him and the crew spent most of the trip breaking the build up of ice on the ship that threatened to pull her down.
@@danyleon4870. The nightmare scenario of navy men the world over at that time.
Leerzame en toegankelijke content die jullie maken ga zo door!!😊
WELL!! I didn't think a video about WW2 could be both this educational and also so very engaging and... dare I say FUN?
Great job
These video’s are in-sane-ly well done. Hats of to you!
*10yo me with my toys:*
5:41 poor little ensign
Brutal.
Brilliant graphics. Please keep them coming.
this artstyle is so satisfying! i love it, keep it up
Great animation team! This is very high quality work :)
04:31 Would have been nice to mention that Turing's machine was called "British bombe", named after the Polish machine it was based on, named "bomba kryptologiczn"!
Absolutely amazing work.
Love your videos 😊👏 and especially the great visuals!
Love the art designs
The 'gaming unit' derived from a particular officer and some of his friends running a 'parallel' convoy plot after hours (when no admirals and senior officers were around) on the various convoy and tactical plots. According to their simulation, they could have saved a significant number of ships, and engaged a significant number of U-boat. With those results, they went to the chief of the plot room, who approved a fully supported simulation. This formed the basis of a change in convoy strategy and tactics, in combination with the other factors coming into play at the time. Once the air gap in the atlantic was closed, the U-boats were on the back foot strategically.