Get Facial Analysis, Self Improvement Advice, and Chadify Yourself at: chadify.me 0:00 Introduction 1:00 Check out Chadify.me! 1:15 Human Evolution Animation 1:55 Why Ethnicity (Phenotypes) Matters 2:35 Using Phenotypic Morphology Over Outdated “Race" 5:38 Veddid Phenotype (Vedda ethnicities of Sri Lanka and South India) 9:36 Indo-Melanid Phenotype (Southern Indian and Dravidian ethnicities) 15:29 Indid Phenotype (Northern Indian and Pakistani ethnicities) 20:05 South Mongolid Phenotype (Southeast Asian ethnicities such as Vietnamese, Thai, and Burmese) 26:23 Sinid Phenotype (Chinese, Korean, and some Japanese ethnicities) 32:52 Ainuid Phenotype (Indigenous Ainu people of Japan) 35:48 Turanid Phenotype (Central Asian ethnicities such as Kazakh, Uzbek, and Turkmen) 39:45 Tungid Phenotype (Mongolian and Manchurian ethnicities) 43:11 Sibirid Phenotype (Indigenous Siberian ethnicities) 47:10 Disclaimer (Personal Perspective, Rejection of Bias, Art & Science) 48:08 What Phenotype Are You? Check out Chadify.me! 50:24 Full Map Zoom Out! 50:35 Comparison of Morphological Phenotypic Traits 55:08 Closing Remarks 🌍 Part 1: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Africa: ua-cam.com/video/C4_v781t4fs/v-deo.html 🌍 Part 2: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Europe: ua-cam.com/video/Ps6HibWfx2E/v-deo.html 🌏 Part 3: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Oceania: ua-cam.com/video/cuflOSyT5vk/v-deo.html
There's a group of people called Anglo-Indians in India that have come from their mixed heritage through connections and relations to various different coloniser populations. One such in higher density apart from the name sake English-Indian ethnicity is the Luso-Indian ethnicity that formed out of connections to Portuguese during the occupation of Goa and Kerala etc. Could an Analysis be made of them?
True. Like imagine clubbing 2 billion people together, in one of the most diverse region of the world, second only to Africa. Indian states have more diversity than European countries
As a westerner, I personally think the best looking Asians are those that live to the north of the yellow river and below the Gobi desert plus Dongbei, Korea and Japan.
Interesting opinion! Honestly, we 100% all have our own unique preferences on these things. I personally am rather unbiased in many ways since I've studied each group (well many groups not all) extensively over the past year
I hate flat nose smalll slantt eye no eyelash nor line round fat face im Asian Chinese too. Why you black guy face all time seem bias report. We look best of moderate skin tone mean tan and features of nose lip head n face n smooth looking because human is evolved smooth look anyway n tan skin. Were going live in protect environment not too cold to have white pale orange pink skin tone nor we will have brown nor black skin tone because we don't live in hot bright climate anymore to have dark skin tone so look like black n white are outdated.
Awesome video, I am half Indian (Gujurati) and half Taiwanese. I am indeed an average of Indid(some Indo-Melanid) and Sinid phenotypes. I've got a lot of thinking to do. Growing up it was reinforced socially I was ugly but according to the comparison chart at the end I might be just less ugly? Not entirely sure. Keep up your work.
I have seen these Chad like guys in south India a lot. Most of them work as some manual labor like situations. However, These jobs are considered low by indian females, so they are never considered attractive . Because these facial type are associated with such work and also for not having proper education , they are generally considered unattractive. My point is culture plays a way more important role on who the most attractive is inside a community.
I’m from northeast Bangladesh and I believe there may be some SE Asian admixture as there are numerous people with squintier eyes from the region. I’m surprised you didn’t note this tbh but it was a very insightful video!
@@ssjluffy135 Great point! The dilemma is that it’s tough to cover every single detail. At some point I’d like to address these admixture regions , rest assured!
18:23 True most the people in my area that I have seen (north india specifically himachal pradesh) have light brown eyes but there are people with other eye colour that you will find pretty frequently like I have greenish eyes with light brown hair, I have also seen two people with completely blue eyes one of them is my relative and one was a random person I saw on the street.
@@ryusuki9151 The amount of time and energy I’ve spent creating this series is insane, not to mention the research and development of all the faces/ phenotypes. Anyways, thank you so much!
as an Indian guy , I can say that Indic features coincides with almost every feature of stereotypical chad . which actually gives a good base-line for looksmaxxing . Btw , really appreciate your video . the amount of research and work went in must be mind blowing . Keep it up bro .
There’s likely some truth to this! The Indid phenotype (often called Indic) generally exhibits features-such as shapes and proportions-reminiscent of Middle Eastern and even European phenotypes to some extent. I believe this can be traced back to the Proto-Indo-Iranian influence from ancient times, though it’s a point of debate for many. However, the genetic evidence supports this connection, and morphologically, the similarities are undeniable.
Basically we're equal regardless of race but when it comes to jawlines and cheekbones, one is an Ubermensch and the other is an Untermensch, sounds familiar!
I'm Indo-Caribbean, originally from Trinidad, which is an island on the east voast of Venezuela, but I look strikingly similar to the Indo-Melanid Chad shown in the video. My hair is also straight, but when I went without shampoo for a while, I noticed my hair was wavy. I think that wavy hair is my natural hair, but Im not sure. My hair type might be 2a. But on the humanphenotypes website, it shows the Indo-Melanids with darker skin. My dad looks like the Indo-Melanid shown from the website with dark brown skin that's darker than the website image, almost black, and he has curly to wavy hair. My mom has the same skin color as me or a little lighter. She gets mistaken for Pakistani or Mexican. There are Pakistanis that have very dark skin like dark brown, but the media shows only fair skin for Pakistan. There is overall diversity in Indian phenotypes. For me, I consider the chad in the video who is Indo-Melanid his skin color to be brown. Mine is stightly lighter brown, but my lip color is the same as his. For me, I have a higher protrusion of the nose like the Indid phenotype. Also, people have mistaken me for some ethnicities or countries outside of India like Pakistani, Mexican, and Bengali. I got Afghani and Middle Eastern, particularly Iraqi once, but I dont see it. But there is an Iraqi Mizrahi Jewish youtuber who I look similar to, and he has been mistaken for Bengali also. I've been mostly mistaken for Bengali, but Bangladesh is very diverse overall. I do have distant ancestry on my mom's side from Tamil Nadu and Kashmir in India, but I think it's mostly Kashmiri or North Indian on her side. But for the Kashmiri ancestry, my ancestor she looked European with light blue eyes and pale skin, but the Pashtun people of Afghanistan also look like that. I think this video did a great job of showing the phenotypes in Asia and I understand that it must be very time consuming with the research but I think that India and the South Asia region with Afghanistan and Pakistan is diverse overall and needs a seperate video on it's own but I do know the different ethnicities from that region.
You know alot about these different ethnicities and their history too. Came in expecting a racist video as that's how most people are in the looksmaxing community but I was surprised and can tell you just got a passion doing what you do as this video is literally an hour long. Fair play man, finally a decent person in the community
YOU CAN FIND LOADS OF CHINESE CHAD IN THE CITY OF Chongqing....EVEN THE CHINESE MEDIA HAS RECOGNIZED THAT THE CITY PRODUCED THE MOST HANDSOME MALE MODEL IN WHOLE OF CHINA. I know many westerners who been there were shocked at how many attractive men they can see all over the street there xD
@@PaulKapow Fascinating! Have you seen my video “The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Oceania”? This is the link: ua-cam.com/video/cuflOSyT5vk/v-deo.html I don’t cover that specific ethnicity but it may be helpful to watch nonetheless!
While I've always known that I am from India, It's actually taken a very long time for me to figure out why I look so different. I was adopted by an Irish American family. The tribe I come from is called Kharia and is located in Chota Nagpur Plateau in Eastern India (Jharkhand). In your video, I found the most similarity with the Toalid segment. It's not a complete surprise as there are theories that Munda arrived from Southeast Asia approximately 4,000 to 3,500 years ago. There are some differences. I am 5'10, 155 lbs with a a relatively light frame, long bone structure. I my eyes do have epicanthic folds. My skin in quite dark with a purple undertone. My hair very black and straightish with a loose wave. Thank you @chadify007 for your videos and having this conversation with me as most people really don't know talk about beauty in a global sense. It feels nice to be acknowledged and seen. Most Americans tell me that what I am saying isn't even real! You can see me in my parkour/dance/movement videos on my channel like here for reference: ua-cam.com/video/T90cDFMOQNw/v-deo.html
The History and evolutionary biology knowledge in this video is awesome ..really puts into perspective how much of attractiveness is just functionality based on the sorroundings. Really well presented and explained ...and the disclaimer was very clear. Earned a sub from me for sure.
I'm a Sri Lankan Moore I don' look like a typical South Asian. I don't know about other Asian countries but Sri Lanka is a very diverse country because we have strikingly different looking people with in the family
@@Decki777 100%, sadly it’s difficult to cover all the variations in physical appearance from a specific region. At the end of the day these are approximations, but still hold merit in general sense in my perspective. It’s also worth noting we all have TONS of admixture and unique variations resulting in exactly that, strikingly different looking people! It’s the beauty of human ethnic diversity.
@chadify007 you have described average South Asians very well. I'm a Sri Lankan Moor western coast of Sri Lanka we mostly have Arabian, Turkish , North African and Native Sri Lankan DNA for example the Turks came to Sri Lanka to sell horses and they settled here. Eastern coastal Muslim Sri Lankans have higher Malaysian DNA and etc. you are doing I can't wait to see your next video.
@@Decki777 Thank you so much! I really appreciate your detailed explanation. I’d love to eventually create full cultural videos for each ethnicity or phenotype around the world, focusing on their rich histories (like in extensive detail). There are so many fascinating ideas to explore!
@@MichaTheLight The Ainu people still exist, but their numbers are simply a lot lower in comparison to historic time periods. Very fascinating group of people for sure! It’s good to bring awareness to them in my opinion
In this series, we embark on a journey to explore the unique beauty of the human species across the globe. In this episode, our focus shifts to the vast continent of Asia. Every phenotype in the world is capable of Chadification, although their Chadified states may vary based on differences in the expression of morphological phenotypic traits. This video focuses solely on observable morphology-what is visible to the eye-and does not address genetic differences beyond the observable level. It should not be misconstrued as a classification system, as such systems have been misused by harmful individuals in history. Instead, the goal is to foster a deeper appreciation for the vast diversity in human appearance. Without this nuanced approach, discussions often resort to textbook, cookie-cutter answers that fail to account for ethnic specificity, ultimately resulting in greater discrimination. It is unfortunate that today’s world has embraced such oversimplifications. My goal is to take a step in the right direction by fostering awareness and pride in our unique differences-both physical and cultural-while promoting unity in the discussion. I believe we should celebrate these differences while coexisting harmoniously as one incredible equal human species. That said, human ethnic diversity exists as a gradient or along clines; there are no clear boundaries where one ethnicity begins and another ends. Human phenotypes, therefore, are approximations based on visual similarities among nearby or closely related ethnicities, rather than strict geographical divisions. They offer a general representation of the "average" appearance of humans in a region. This is why historic research, even if considered outdated from a strictly biological or genetic perspective, can still hold value in a visual context. In today’s world, most people are of mixed heritage, embodying multiple “phenotypes” or ethnicities, which adds complexity. Some people may be unfamiliar with the term "Chad." While traditionally a male name, it has evolved in recent internet culture to symbolize a good-looking, often charismatic man. Today, we are expanding that definition to include all ethnicities-simply put, anyone can be a Chad! In my opinion, "Chadifying" oneself can boost confidence, ultimately leading to an improved quality of life. This belief motivates my intention to conduct studies and research on facial attractiveness in the future. If this pursuit weren’t valuable, this channel wouldn’t exist.
South Mongolid looks good. Good part for mixing. especially with very pale "Pheno's" it brings a bit healthier color and at the same time preserves good features see Simeon Pham (Mother Half Baltic - father Half Vietnamese)
It would be interesting to look at the chadification of Tajikistan, Pamir, Afghanistan, Pakistan, where there are mountainous regions, there are a lot of fair-haired, light-eyed people. Nuristanis, Dardas, Pashtuns, the Kalash tribe. And the chadification of the Middle East, Iranians, Tajiks
@@МихаилЗубенко-ф8ф I’m thinking of doing morphs for each specific country in these regions. I’ve already completed one directly for Armenia (granted that’s a bit away from that general area). I realized every country may have a slightly unique convergence in terms of it’s facial appearance. I still think phenotypes, tend to do a decent job for highlighting main morphological differences - but doing a country by country basis would be even more accurate no doubt
in china, people moved around so much in the past 100 years - sometimes you can't even tell what region someone is from. people from Sichuan tend to have sharp features and foxy faces, but you can find someone in the south with the same features. people from the north are tall af and have bigger jaws but you can find someone with those kinds of features in the south, and all their parents and grandparents are from the south too lol
Thank you very much! If you have the time, please let me know the areas to research further, so I can make improvements for when I create an Indian Subcontinent focussed video
24:55 while it's true that some SE Asians have epicanthic folds, many of them have very weak or no apparent folds as well. I think those people need to be represented too, not sure why you selected an individual with rather strong epicanthic folds as their representative. And moreover based on my knowledge about East and SE Asian phenotypes, I think Far South Chinese (people from Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, and Yungui regions) should also be included in this SE Asian phenotype.
Bro nice video and analysis, however I think you should have included Tibetid phenotype which is an unique Asian phenotype with it distinctive features.
The Veddid map is incorrect because according to Human Phenotypes, Arabia is shaded but only because some of the phenotypes there bear resemblance to Veddid features found in South and Southeast Asia. According to the website, the Arabian phenotypes are "Veddid-like" but not actually Veddid. Genetically speaking, they derive West Eurasian lineages that mixed with African lineages while the Veddid represent an early East Eurasian phenotype with no West Eurasian or African input.
The Veddid phenotype followed a more Austroasiatic migratory path compared to the Sinid phenotype, which predominantly originated from a higher East Asian migratory route that traveled through Central Asia, as opposed to the southern routes like the Indian subcontinent, which the Veddid group traversed. That said, I agree that the South Mongolid phenotype may have had some interaction with the Veddid group. Additionally, there are points regarding the Indid group being influenced by Proto-European and Middle Eastern lineages far back in time. Of course, these models simplify the true complexity of human genetics and ancestry, but they are still useful for understanding morphological and physical characteristics.
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x Technically though the Veddid group evolved from an early out of Africa migration which travelled through Southern Arabia and then across the Indian Subcontinent (and continued onwards to Australia). So I tend to think the map is simply indicating that this is the case here versus just bare resemblance. That said, I appreciate you highlighting the potential nuance here.
@@chadify007 Thanks for your comments. Humans originated in east Africa and one of these lineages moved out into Asia where it genetically split into East Eurasian and West Eurasian. The Veddid phenotype is associated with the East Eurasian lineage which went on to cover most of Asia and Oceania and basically represents the oldest East Eurasian phenotype typified by ancient groups like the Andamanese, Vedda and the now extinct AASI and Hoabinhian hunter-gatherers. The Sinid and South Mongolid phenotypes derived from a separate yet related East Eurasian lineage known as ESEA. The West Eurasian lineages went on to cover Europe and the Middle East (hence its name West Eurasian as in Western Eurasia), these West Eurasian lineages also made their way into Central Asia and South Asia (which were originally inhabited by East Eurasian lineages) where they developed into the phenotypes we know today. It's hard to understand ancient physiognomy but genetically speaking, the different West and East Eurasian lineages developed modern Asians.
Can you please do a Native American/ Latino/ Hispanic chadify video? I know most are mixed and you already did a European phenotype looksmaxxing video but the Native American phenotype present in north and South America is a common one but I can’t find one on Native American phenotypes. I’m looking one but can’t find anything on it.
@@chadify007 thank i wanted for a long time one video about native ameircan phenotypes, since is rare to see native american models also are mestizos, but still there are a great varierity between no mix native american
Your caste system explanation is completely wrong and very general publicized information and not based on recent research. Especially aryan migration has been rejected by many modern historians and archaeologists. That being said good facial feature comparison
This started because Europeans wanted to take credit for the Hindus valley civilization. Hitler helped to push the “Indian” migration theory, saying that Europeans invaded the subcontinent and created the Hindus Valley civilization. He then proceeded to steal the swastika and Europeans stole the name Aryan.
Bro i am brazilian primarly portuguese and native and some lebanese and black (youruba). The funny thing is that with the much mixing here the ranges you can born are big
@@guilalves Exactly, that’s the primary reason why my unity continuum model works well for phenotype / ethnicity analysis. No clear boxes, just a 45 (and counting) dimensional approximation!
The phenotypes of Asia derive from different ancient West Eurasian and East Eurasian lineages. The Veddid phenotype is a predecessor to the Sinid and "South Mongolid" phenotypes that cover a large part of Asia while the phenotypes of South Asia and Central Asia like Indid developed from different West Eurasian lineages that mixed with different East Eurasian lineages that produced phenotypes like Veddid and South Mongolid.
The Veddid phenotype followed a more Austroasiatic migratory path compared to the Sinid phenotype, which predominantly originated from a higher East Asian migratory route that traveled through Central Asia, as opposed to the southern routes like the Indian subcontinent, which the Veddid group traversed. That said, I agree that the South Mongolid phenotype may have had some interaction with the Veddid group. Additionally, there are points regarding the Indid group being influenced by Proto-European and Middle Eastern lineages far back in time. Of course, these models simplify the true complexity of human genetics and ancestry, but they are still useful for understanding morphological and physical characteristics.
@@chadify007 Oh I what I said is a simplification as Asians (exclude Middle East) derive from the Ancient East Eurasians. The first East Eurasians had darker skin and Veddid-like features, they migrated through to India. In India, the Ancient East Eurasians genetically split into four main lineages during the Palaeolithic in which they spread out across Asia. One of these lineages was known as the ESEA which further divided into several different lineages in southern China and included the Northern East Asian (ANEA) and Southern East Asian (ASEA) lineages. The Sinid and South Mongolid phenotypes can be said to have developed from these two lineages. All of the lineages of Asia (exclude Middle East) derive from the Ancient East Eurasians with the Veddid phenotype being the oldest East Eurasian phenotype while the Sinid phenotype developed later on with the development of the EDAR gene and is now the most widespread East Eurasian phenotype. The Indid phenotype and those in Central Asia developed from the mixing of East Eurasian lineages with West Eurasian lineages that came from the Middle East and northern Eurasia.
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x I agree with a ton of what you are saying here; however, based on my understanding while both share distant roots in the Ancient East Eurasians (AEE), their evolutionary paths diverged early. ANEA followed a northern trajectory through Central Asia, evolving separately from the southern Veddid lineage that migrated through India and Southeast Asia. From what I understand the Veddid have immense implications across the entirety of the Indian Subcontinent including much of Australia and Papua but less to do with Sinid specifically. I will brush up on this / go deeper though going forward.
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x It would be great to collaborate with a group of people on future videos covering these topics. Undoubtedly, many of you have deeper knowledge about specific regions. If we were to combine our expertise and create more focused videos (I’d handle the production), it could be something really special! That said, it would require a significant commitment from everyone, so who knows-it might be worth exploring one day. As this channel grows, it will undoubtedly serve as a platform for showcasing the immense genetic diversity of our incredible planet
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x Yes, the way you just explained that is aligned with my current understanding of the relatively separate routes these groups took in ancient history
Check out my Oceania Facial Attractiveness video in the description, it may provide more clarity as there are a ton of other phenotypes / ethnicities present in the Indonesian area
Congrats @chadify for this amazing video ! Quick question, at what percentile of the male general population would you put your ratings from 3-8 ? Thanks in advance
@@MalikDerder Thank you! I would argue from my rating analysis, that 99.9% of people fall into the 3-8 zone if were are talking people within the “fertile” age cohort of 18-45. I’ve never had anyone who’s scored above or below that as a client yet.
Why did you place Indid higher that Tungid in height when the average adult male height in india is 165cm, while the in Heilongjiang province, it's 178cm? Even my Grandfather
@@NickKerr-lu1ru Keep in mind a lot of the research on these groups initially are based in precolonial / preindustrial times. Certain characteristics have changed with the development of regions in the past couple hundred years. Thanks either way!
Haven't watched but did this video evem remember about SE Asians? Everyone seem to forget us when they say "Asians" Edit: OK, so where do Austronesians fit in this?
@@nunyabiznes33 I have many series on this topic. I cover much of the East Asian areas. If you want more on Malaysia & Indonesia however, my Oceania videos covers the Toalid phenotype which covers much of those areas (appearance wise).
@@chadify007OK TY, I'll check that out after this. Am Filipino and tho we might like some Thais, we definitely don't look Vietnamese, like we can identify them when they were here.
is it possible to be a mix? like lets say youre a chad but you got characteristics of two phenotypes like pretty light skin(indid) but also a medium nose width(indo melanid).
Absolutely true! Check out the part of the video at 48:08, where I explain how my software operates. I may not have done the best job explaining this in the past, but ultimately, most people today are mixed-and that’s absolutely a great thing! I apologize to everyone who thinks I came off in explaining this previously as a rigid classification framework, because it truly is not the case.
Bruh am an Indian Bengali but i look like a mix between Northeast Indians and Bengalis even tho both my father and mother are From Kolkata, Genetics are fascinating
I think you should start to analysis and rate celebrities like brad Pitt, chico, Sean Opry etc face as well. It could be either UA-cam shorts or long form in depth analysis both are fine.
@@jackjarate38 I use a lot of techniques. I’ve built quite a few morphing tools lately from the ground up using software engineering. When you blend faces together without enough landmarks it can appear more blurry around certain features, so the key is to have enough as well as introduce some artistic “painting” afterwards in order to add texture to the skin, hair, etc…
Like anything, there is a range, and remember that this applies to the Indo-Melanid phenotype. In reality, many Southern Indians are not solely Indo-Melanid in phenotype. Phenotypic appearance exists on a continuum or gradient (not in rigid boxes), meaning that some individuals can easily have medium brown skin tones, being half Indid and half Indo-Melanid. Ultimately, there is a range to every characteristic labeled here. I've tried my best to make this clear.
@chadify007 yes champ but u categories them with same as african skin tone.. one could easily able to see the difference between average south indian and african skin tone ..even u kept vedas & aboriginal people above south indians ..I think it is not correct..I accept some people have darker skin tone but the admixture in south is also higher u could easily find many light brown to fair skin people..why I asked this question is many data were again generalised (sterotyped) ..hope u will clear my doubt in upcoming vedios..also about the height south indians were medium stature ..
Totally normal! Genetics are so incredibly complicated and there is no reason to box ourselves in. These morphs simply resemble the typical Chadified appearance individuals of these given regions. Having a wide jaw is excellent!
@@bigheadrhino Which map are you referring to? The Sinid and South Mongolid ones? It’s hard to say “who was first”, but they did travel Northward before coming back down. Rather different from the Austroasiatic group which was purely located southward
East Asians descend from the ESEA clade of the East Eurasian meta-population. East Asians primarily derive from the Northern East Asians (ANEA) as well as Southern East Asians (ASEA) and in the case of the Japanese, the Jomon too.
@@suvradeepdutta5766 Like I’ve mentioned numerous times, this is only an oversimplification of a vastly diverse world ethnically. There are no clear borders in most cases where one ethnicity ends and another begins.
@@kronikandronic4686 Please refer to my Eurasia video for those regions: 🌍 Part 2: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Europe: ua-cam.com/video/Ps6HibWfx2E/v-deo.html
@kronikandronic4686 I never claimed the Middle East is part of Europe, nor did I group it as such. While the title may imply otherwise, I explicitly recognize the Middle East as part of greater Eurasia-a region that bridges Asia and Europe. The specific grouping of ethnicities in my videos is irrelevant to the validity of the information provided, which focuses on phenotypic traits, not arbitrary continental boundaries.
@@chadify007 Caucasoid phenotypic traits are found in Indic peoples too. Hence, why did you not include Indians in that video? People often use the term "Asian" to identify Asians with "Mongoloid" features (excuse the archaic term). People with these features aren't just found in East and Southeast Asia, but also Russia, Central Asia and even in Turkey.
Well I'm surprised you know about the Indo melanid phenotype. A lot of people assume Indians all look the same but I'm surprised that you did your research.
Hello as someone with brunn phenotype with more preetyboy blend would you reccomend dying eyebrows and eyelashes. Mine are very blonde and while i noticed dying them gave me a lot of attention from random women, it didnt make that much diffrence as to sexual oppurtunities. As in its looks better but there is a tradeoff in natural beauty alligning with my phenotype, aswell as i remember just being at a club and some dude comes over saying my friend thinks you hot. Like he was sure i was gay so thats not a good thing (for me).
I remember reading blonde women are told to use a darker shade of eyebrow pencil so I assume it's the same aesthetics with blond men. If you're very white and the eyebrow is also very light blond, it kinda meld into the face and cuts into your facial expressiveness.
Get Facial Analysis, Self Improvement Advice, and Chadify Yourself at: chadify.me
0:00 Introduction
1:00 Check out Chadify.me!
1:15 Human Evolution Animation
1:55 Why Ethnicity (Phenotypes) Matters
2:35 Using Phenotypic Morphology Over Outdated “Race"
5:38 Veddid Phenotype (Vedda ethnicities of Sri Lanka and South India)
9:36 Indo-Melanid Phenotype (Southern Indian and Dravidian ethnicities)
15:29 Indid Phenotype (Northern Indian and Pakistani ethnicities)
20:05 South Mongolid Phenotype (Southeast Asian ethnicities such as Vietnamese, Thai, and Burmese)
26:23 Sinid Phenotype (Chinese, Korean, and some Japanese ethnicities)
32:52 Ainuid Phenotype (Indigenous Ainu people of Japan)
35:48 Turanid Phenotype (Central Asian ethnicities such as Kazakh, Uzbek, and Turkmen)
39:45 Tungid Phenotype (Mongolian and Manchurian ethnicities)
43:11 Sibirid Phenotype (Indigenous Siberian ethnicities)
47:10 Disclaimer (Personal Perspective, Rejection of Bias, Art & Science)
48:08 What Phenotype Are You? Check out Chadify.me!
50:24 Full Map Zoom Out!
50:35 Comparison of Morphological Phenotypic Traits
55:08 Closing Remarks
🌍 Part 1: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Africa:
ua-cam.com/video/C4_v781t4fs/v-deo.html
🌍 Part 2: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Europe:
ua-cam.com/video/Ps6HibWfx2E/v-deo.html
🌏 Part 3: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Oceania:
ua-cam.com/video/cuflOSyT5vk/v-deo.html
There's a group of people called Anglo-Indians in India that have come from their mixed heritage through connections and relations to various different coloniser populations.
One such in higher density apart from the name sake English-Indian ethnicity is the Luso-Indian ethnicity that formed out of connections to Portuguese during the occupation of Goa and Kerala etc.
Could an Analysis be made of them?
Love your videos, can you also do a series of phenotypes on women of the world?
I'm gradually developing the phenotype composites for women as well, will take a bit more time to complete though!
@@chadify007 Can't wait!
So the Chinese guy is the best looking Asian.
Learn to looksmax ❌
Learn history ✅
@@siyanawagaming5976 My favourite comment thus far. History is *fascinating*!
@@chadify007 as a history lover, you are sensational
The amount of effort put into making this video is mind-boggling. Great work !
Thanks a ton! It definitely took some time to create
As a string theorist I enjoy how things as looksmaxxing are finally analysed through a scientific approach.
@@skomants2997 That’s incredible, I only have a surface level understanding of that!
string theorist 😂 yeah very valid
Most people would just pair the entire South Asian sub continent and call it a day. But this man even talked about Veddas from Sri Lanka. 🐐
True. Like imagine clubbing 2 billion people together, in one of the most diverse region of the world, second only to Africa. Indian states have more diversity than European countries
he is the only looksmaxxing content creator who knows what he's talking about
@@rahulmohanty874 I really appreciate the compliment!
@@chadify007 I've been waiting for this for months
cope
@@ML-rs7wehow is that coping, lmao
And not coping about ethnicity
Best looksmaxxxing channel on UA-cam hands down
@@JoseCamposSegovia Thank you so much!
The 'Sinid' chad is pretty much the amalgamation of every Chinese male actor's phenotype into one composite facial type!
Pretty accurate in a way!
As a westerner, I personally think the best looking Asians are those that live to the north of the yellow river and below the Gobi desert plus Dongbei, Korea and Japan.
Interesting opinion! Honestly, we 100% all have our own unique preferences on these things. I personally am rather unbiased in many ways since I've studied each group (well many groups not all) extensively over the past year
I hate flat nose smalll slantt eye no eyelash nor line round fat face im Asian Chinese too. Why you black guy face all time seem bias report. We look best of moderate skin tone mean tan and features of nose lip head n face n smooth looking because human is evolved smooth look anyway n tan skin. Were going live in protect environment not too cold to have white pale orange pink skin tone nor we will have brown nor black skin tone because we don't live in hot bright climate anymore to have dark skin tone so look like black n white are outdated.
Attractive white guy= chad, attractive black guy= tyrone, attractive asian guy = chang, attractive arab guy= saphir
Wang to make it funny
Arab is abdul
What about attractive South Asian guy 😢
Chadpreet @@niccolopaganini1782
@@niccolopaganini1782 asian in general it’s Chang bro
Been waiting for one about south Asian phenotypes. Great video as always.
Glad you enjoyed it!
i love how you're actually taking the science into account
Awesome video, I am half Indian (Gujurati) and half Taiwanese. I am indeed an average of Indid(some Indo-Melanid) and Sinid phenotypes. I've got a lot of thinking to do. Growing up it was reinforced socially I was ugly but according to the comparison chart at the end I might be just less ugly? Not entirely sure. Keep up your work.
Beauty is so much more complicated (yet also more measure-able) than we tend to think intuitively!
HUMAN PHENOTYPES ARE INCREDIBLY INTRIGUING
EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS VIDEO IS AMAZING
Thank you so much for watching!
I have seen these Chad like guys in south India a lot. Most of them work as some manual labor like situations. However, These jobs are considered low by indian females, so they are never considered attractive .
Because these facial type are associated with such work and also for not having proper education , they are generally considered unattractive.
My point is culture plays a way more important role on who the most attractive is inside a community.
I’m from northeast Bangladesh and I believe there may be some SE Asian admixture as there are numerous people with squintier eyes from the region. I’m surprised you didn’t note this tbh but it was a very insightful video!
@@ssjluffy135 Great point! The dilemma is that it’s tough to cover every single detail. At some point I’d like to address these admixture regions , rest assured!
@ Sounds awesome can’t wait!
@@ssjluffy135brother where do you live in Bangladesh
@@chadify007 hey i am from southern bangladesh . which phinotype would i be?
@@alitur1712kanglu phenotype
Been waiting for this one
Same
There are 1.43 billion Indians in the world, so why wait? Just do it. Not a shock that people of European descent would focus on their own culture.
18:23 True most the people in my area that I have seen (north india specifically himachal pradesh) have light brown eyes but there are people with other eye colour that you will find pretty frequently like I have greenish eyes with light brown hair, I have also seen two people with completely blue eyes one of them is my relative and one was a random person I saw on the street.
@@AnandBhadouriya3 Exactly!
This content is high quality, damn
@@ryusuki9151 The amount of time and energy I’ve spent creating this series is insane, not to mention the research and development of all the faces/ phenotypes. Anyways, thank you so much!
as an Indian guy , I can say that Indic features coincides with almost every feature of stereotypical chad .
which actually gives a good base-line for looksmaxxing .
Btw , really appreciate your video . the amount of research and work went in must be mind blowing .
Keep it up bro .
There’s likely some truth to this! The Indid phenotype (often called Indic) generally exhibits features-such as shapes and proportions-reminiscent of Middle Eastern and even European phenotypes to some extent. I believe this can be traced back to the Proto-Indo-Iranian influence from ancient times, though it’s a point of debate for many. However, the genetic evidence supports this connection, and morphologically, the similarities are undeniable.
Every country has attractive people in its own way.✅✅✅
Exactly!
Basically we're equal regardless of race but when it comes to jawlines and cheekbones, one is an Ubermensch and the other is an Untermensch, sounds familiar!
I'm Indo-Caribbean, originally from Trinidad, which is an island on the east voast of Venezuela, but I look strikingly similar to the Indo-Melanid Chad shown in the video. My hair is also straight, but when I went without shampoo for a while, I noticed my hair was wavy. I think that wavy hair is my natural hair, but Im not sure. My hair type might be 2a. But on the humanphenotypes website, it shows the Indo-Melanids with darker skin. My dad looks like the Indo-Melanid shown from the website with dark brown skin that's darker than the website image, almost black, and he has curly to wavy hair. My mom has the same skin color as me or a little lighter. She gets mistaken for Pakistani or Mexican. There are Pakistanis that have very dark skin like dark brown, but the media shows only fair skin for Pakistan. There is overall diversity in Indian phenotypes. For me, I consider the chad in the video who is Indo-Melanid his skin color to be brown. Mine is stightly lighter brown, but my lip color is the same as his. For me, I have a higher protrusion of the nose like the Indid phenotype. Also, people have mistaken me for some ethnicities or countries outside of India like Pakistani, Mexican, and Bengali. I got Afghani and Middle Eastern, particularly Iraqi once, but I dont see it. But there is an Iraqi Mizrahi Jewish youtuber who I look similar to, and he has been mistaken for Bengali also. I've been mostly mistaken for Bengali, but Bangladesh is very diverse overall. I do have distant ancestry on my mom's side from Tamil Nadu and Kashmir in India, but I think it's mostly Kashmiri or North Indian on her side. But for the Kashmiri ancestry, my ancestor she looked European with light blue eyes and pale skin, but the Pashtun people of Afghanistan also look like that. I think this video did a great job of showing the phenotypes in Asia and I understand that it must be very time consuming with the research but I think that India and the South Asia region with Afghanistan and Pakistan is diverse overall and needs a seperate video on it's own but I do know the different ethnicities from that region.
some indians migrated to the carribean and islands in central america in history
The only scientific looksmaxxing content creator
Much appreciated!
KEEP IT UP 💝🌟🫂 LOVE FROM INDIA 🇮🇳
Welcome brother
You know alot about these different ethnicities and their history too. Came in expecting a racist video as that's how most people are in the looksmaxing community but I was surprised and can tell you just got a passion doing what you do as this video is literally an hour long. Fair play man, finally a decent person in the community
Thank you so much for your respectful comment, really motivational hearing these kind words!
As I finished the video I was surprised and expected this video to be viral its really interesting
Hopefully someday!
13:03 Peasants(and cattle herders) are not Shudras, they are Vaishyas according to ancient Indian(Hindu) law
Interesting! I knew what I said was overly simplified, but I hope it at least explained the basics
YOU CAN FIND LOADS OF CHINESE CHAD IN THE CITY OF Chongqing....EVEN THE CHINESE MEDIA HAS RECOGNIZED THAT THE CITY PRODUCED THE MOST HANDSOME MALE MODEL IN WHOLE OF CHINA. I know many westerners who been there were shocked at how many attractive men they can see all over the street there xD
This was very entertaining.
I have Austric/Asiatic Australoid type from the Munda tribal people that is not discussed in this video. Neat video.
@@PaulKapow Fascinating! Have you seen my video “The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Oceania”? This is the link:
ua-cam.com/video/cuflOSyT5vk/v-deo.html
I don’t cover that specific ethnicity but it may be helpful to watch nonetheless!
While I've always known that I am from India, It's actually taken a very long time for me to figure out why I look so different. I was adopted by an Irish American family.
The tribe I come from is called Kharia and is located in Chota Nagpur Plateau in Eastern India (Jharkhand).
In your video, I found the most similarity with the Toalid segment. It's not a complete surprise as there are theories that Munda arrived from Southeast Asia approximately 4,000 to 3,500 years ago.
There are some differences. I am 5'10, 155 lbs with a a relatively light frame, long bone structure. I my eyes do have epicanthic folds. My skin in quite dark with a purple undertone. My hair very black and straightish with a loose wave.
Thank you @chadify007 for your videos and having this conversation with me as most people really don't know talk about beauty in a global sense. It feels nice to be acknowledged and seen. Most Americans tell me that what I am saying isn't even real!
You can see me in my parkour/dance/movement videos on my channel like here for reference: ua-cam.com/video/T90cDFMOQNw/v-deo.html
As a gay man from the northwestern European diaspora, I am very happy that I am almost exclusively attracted to Asian men!
💀
Nothing wrong with having preferences!
So basically the Southeast Asian(Thailand Cambodia Myanmar ) Phenotype is a mixture of The Australoids and East Asian Phenotype Sinid / Tungid
@@vk311z8 Sorta! Though, I wouldn’t entirely attribute it to mixing since the Austro groups likely were pushed down southward
this is amazing
Thank you so much!
The History and evolutionary biology knowledge in this video is awesome ..really puts into perspective how much of attractiveness is just functionality based on the sorroundings.
Really well presented and explained ...and the disclaimer was very clear.
Earned a sub from me for sure.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you so much!
I'm a Sri Lankan Moore I don' look like a typical South Asian. I don't know about other Asian countries but Sri Lanka is a very diverse country because we have strikingly different looking people with in the family
@@Decki777 100%, sadly it’s difficult to cover all the variations in physical appearance from a specific region. At the end of the day these are approximations, but still hold merit in general sense in my perspective. It’s also worth noting we all have TONS of admixture and unique variations resulting in exactly that, strikingly different looking people! It’s the beauty of human ethnic diversity.
@chadify007 you have described average South Asians very well. I'm a Sri Lankan Moor western coast of Sri Lanka we mostly have Arabian, Turkish , North African and Native Sri Lankan DNA for example the Turks came to Sri Lanka to sell horses and they settled here. Eastern coastal Muslim Sri Lankans have higher Malaysian DNA and etc. you are doing I can't wait to see your next video.
@@Decki777 Thank you so much! I really appreciate your detailed explanation. I’d love to eventually create full cultural videos for each ethnicity or phenotype around the world, focusing on their rich histories (like in extensive detail). There are so many fascinating ideas to explore!
43:41 Great you even refer to ancient pheno's great work!
@@MichaTheLight The Ainu people still exist, but their numbers are simply a lot lower in comparison to historic time periods. Very fascinating group of people for sure! It’s good to bring awareness to them in my opinion
In this series, we embark on a journey to explore the unique beauty of the human species across the globe. In this episode, our focus shifts to the vast continent of Asia. Every phenotype in the world is capable of Chadification, although their Chadified states may vary based on differences in the expression of morphological phenotypic traits.
This video focuses solely on observable morphology-what is visible to the eye-and does not address genetic differences beyond the observable level. It should not be misconstrued as a classification system, as such systems have been misused by harmful individuals in history. Instead, the goal is to foster a deeper appreciation for the vast diversity in human appearance. Without this nuanced approach, discussions often resort to textbook, cookie-cutter answers that fail to account for ethnic specificity, ultimately resulting in greater discrimination. It is unfortunate that today’s world has embraced such oversimplifications. My goal is to take a step in the right direction by fostering awareness and pride in our unique differences-both physical and cultural-while promoting unity in the discussion. I believe we should celebrate these differences while coexisting harmoniously as one incredible equal human species.
That said, human ethnic diversity exists as a gradient or along clines; there are no clear boundaries where one ethnicity begins and another ends. Human phenotypes, therefore, are approximations based on visual similarities among nearby or closely related ethnicities, rather than strict geographical divisions. They offer a general representation of the "average" appearance of humans in a region. This is why historic research, even if considered outdated from a strictly biological or genetic perspective, can still hold value in a visual context. In today’s world, most people are of mixed heritage, embodying multiple “phenotypes” or ethnicities, which adds complexity.
Some people may be unfamiliar with the term "Chad." While traditionally a male name, it has evolved in recent internet culture to symbolize a good-looking, often charismatic man. Today, we are expanding that definition to include all ethnicities-simply put, anyone can be a Chad!
In my opinion, "Chadifying" oneself can boost confidence, ultimately leading to an improved quality of life. This belief motivates my intention to conduct studies and research on facial attractiveness in the future. If this pursuit weren’t valuable, this channel wouldn’t exist.
Where is the Middle East? Isn’t it in Asia
@ I covered it in my Europe video. Eurasia served as a more convenient grouping for that video! Otherwise this one would've been hours long
South Mongolid looks good. Good part for mixing. especially with very pale "Pheno's" it brings a bit healthier color and at the same time preserves good features see Simeon Pham (Mother Half Baltic - father Half Vietnamese)
This channel has so much information that I can't get anywhere.
Thank you! I spend an extensive time these days researching this stuff. Granted there is an artistic component to it too
wow great work, amazzing🎉
@@andrew33933 Appreciate it Andrew!
Great content as always
@@austinrauoh5197 Thank you Austin!
It would be interesting to look at the chadification of Tajikistan, Pamir, Afghanistan, Pakistan, where there are mountainous regions, there are a lot of fair-haired, light-eyed people. Nuristanis, Dardas, Pashtuns, the Kalash tribe. And the chadification of the Middle East, Iranians, Tajiks
ua-cam.com/video/gwQ6o_nLpKE/v-deo.html
@@МихаилЗубенко-ф8ф I’m thinking of doing morphs for each specific country in these regions. I’ve already completed one directly for Armenia (granted that’s a bit away from that general area). I realized every country may have a slightly unique convergence in terms of it’s facial appearance. I still think phenotypes, tend to do a decent job for highlighting main morphological differences - but doing a country by country basis would be even more accurate no doubt
@@chadify007 yes, thank you bro, good luck!😎
@@chadify007 In Kazakhstan there are also lots of bright coloured hairs and eyes. Originally we were Europeoids before mixing with Mongols
@@kingjames9773 It’s a very unique region, I have multiple friends from Kazakhstan. I can recognize a Kazak accent so easily now!
Of all the attractive features you talked about, you left out two things, bo and voice!
Those are secondary / tertiary features. They do matter of course!
in china, people moved around so much in the past 100 years - sometimes you can't even tell what region someone is from. people from Sichuan tend to have sharp features and foxy faces, but you can find someone in the south with the same features. people from the north are tall af and have bigger jaws but you can find someone with those kinds of features in the south, and all their parents and grandparents are from the south too lol
Few historical inaccuracies when talking about population migration in Indian sub-continent, but overall well-researched and well-presented video.
Thank you very much! If you have the time, please let me know the areas to research further, so I can make improvements for when I create an Indian Subcontinent focussed video
24:55 while it's true that some SE Asians have epicanthic folds, many of them have very weak or no apparent folds as well. I think those people need to be represented too, not sure why you selected an individual with rather strong epicanthic folds as their representative. And moreover based on my knowledge about East and SE Asian phenotypes, I think Far South Chinese (people from Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, and Yungui regions) should also be included in this SE Asian phenotype.
Lookism ❌
Biology, evolution & history ✅
A good and interesting video ❤❤❤❤
32:40 when I first saw the Feminine variant I immediately thought of Cha Eunwoo, who is regarded as the most handsome man in South Korea.
I’ll check him out! Yes, he’s incredibly attractive. Wish I included him
Actually the feminine variant looks more like Jaehyun from the group NCT but more feminine
Great video bro ! I wanted to ask have you ever had any client that had the stereotypical chad phenotype just crossed through my mind ❤
Not too many honestly! But it does happen sometimes where someone is rather mixed across Europe
Bro nice video and analysis, however I think you should have included Tibetid phenotype which is an unique Asian phenotype with it distinctive features.
@@barguttobed I will be covering the Tibet region in the future!
@@chadify007 Nice bro, we would love to see that 👍🏽
THANK YOU SO MUCHHH!!!!!!!!
The Veddid map is incorrect because according to Human Phenotypes, Arabia is shaded but only because some of the phenotypes there bear resemblance to Veddid features found in South and Southeast Asia. According to the website, the Arabian phenotypes are "Veddid-like" but not actually Veddid. Genetically speaking, they derive West Eurasian lineages that mixed with African lineages while the Veddid represent an early East Eurasian phenotype with no West Eurasian or African input.
The Veddid phenotype followed a more Austroasiatic migratory path compared to the Sinid phenotype, which predominantly originated from a higher East Asian migratory route that traveled through Central Asia, as opposed to the southern routes like the Indian subcontinent, which the Veddid group traversed. That said, I agree that the South Mongolid phenotype may have had some interaction with the Veddid group. Additionally, there are points regarding the Indid group being influenced by Proto-European and Middle Eastern lineages far back in time. Of course, these models simplify the true complexity of human genetics and ancestry, but they are still useful for understanding morphological and physical characteristics.
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x Technically though the Veddid group evolved from an early out of Africa migration which travelled through Southern Arabia and then across the Indian Subcontinent (and continued onwards to Australia). So I tend to think the map is simply indicating that this is the case here versus just bare resemblance. That said, I appreciate you highlighting the potential nuance here.
@@chadify007 Thanks for your comments. Humans originated in east Africa and one of these lineages moved out into Asia where it genetically split into East Eurasian and West Eurasian. The Veddid phenotype is associated with the East Eurasian lineage which went on to cover most of Asia and Oceania and basically represents the oldest East Eurasian phenotype typified by ancient groups like the Andamanese, Vedda and the now extinct AASI and Hoabinhian hunter-gatherers. The Sinid and South Mongolid phenotypes derived from a separate yet related East Eurasian lineage known as ESEA. The West Eurasian lineages went on to cover Europe and the Middle East (hence its name West Eurasian as in Western Eurasia), these West Eurasian lineages also made their way into Central Asia and South Asia (which were originally inhabited by East Eurasian lineages) where they developed into the phenotypes we know today. It's hard to understand ancient physiognomy but genetically speaking, the different West and East Eurasian lineages developed modern Asians.
Never expected someone from my country (Myanmar) be used as an example (talking about Paing Thakon) in these types of videos
I think it’s good practice to cover virtually every region imaginable!
Brother for the indian category you missed out northeast india 😢, you'd be surprised how they look
They are Asians genetically
I'll cover the entirety of the Indian Subcontinent one day. I apologize for keeping it brief.
@chadify007 It's okay, i'm looking forward to your videos 🫡
@@KusakaMusō Thanks for the support
They're mostly mix of South Mongolid, Indid, and Sinid
Can you please do a Native American/ Latino/ Hispanic chadify video? I know most are mixed and you already did a European phenotype looksmaxxing video but the Native American phenotype present in north and South America is a common one but I can’t find one on Native American phenotypes. I’m looking one but can’t find anything on it.
@@exposingtruth600 Working on that next, I’ll likely being doing solely a Native American video before I get to the Hispanic one!
@@chadify007 thank i wanted for a long time one video about native ameircan phenotypes, since is rare to see native american models also are mestizos, but still there are a great varierity between no mix native american
Bro ur channel is awesome i subscribed ur channel
I really appreciate your support! Thank you!
great vid
Thank you!
Your caste system explanation is completely wrong and very general publicized information and not based on recent research. Especially aryan migration has been rejected by many modern historians and archaeologists. That being said good facial feature comparison
Can you name some of those historians bro?
Exactly.
This started because Europeans wanted to take credit for the Hindus valley civilization. Hitler helped to push the “Indian” migration theory, saying that Europeans invaded the subcontinent and created the Hindus Valley civilization. He then proceeded to steal the swastika and Europeans stole the name Aryan.
@@AnjelLee-f8c H1tl3r pushed the Indian "migration" theory, saying that Europeans "invaded"? Source please.
Bro i am brazilian primarly portuguese and native and some lebanese and black (youruba). The funny thing is that with the much mixing here the ranges you can born are big
@@guilalves Exactly, that’s the primary reason why my unity continuum model works well for phenotype / ethnicity analysis. No clear boxes, just a 45 (and counting) dimensional approximation!
Wow thx😮
I am actually amazed by the quality of this channel,❤
The phenotypes of Asia derive from different ancient West Eurasian and East Eurasian lineages. The Veddid phenotype is a predecessor to the Sinid and "South Mongolid" phenotypes that cover a large part of Asia while the phenotypes of South Asia and Central Asia like Indid developed from different West Eurasian lineages that mixed with different East Eurasian lineages that produced phenotypes like Veddid and South Mongolid.
The Veddid phenotype followed a more Austroasiatic migratory path compared to the Sinid phenotype, which predominantly originated from a higher East Asian migratory route that traveled through Central Asia, as opposed to the southern routes like the Indian subcontinent, which the Veddid group traversed. That said, I agree that the South Mongolid phenotype may have had some interaction with the Veddid group. Additionally, there are points regarding the Indid group being influenced by Proto-European and Middle Eastern lineages far back in time. Of course, these models simplify the true complexity of human genetics and ancestry, but they are still useful for understanding morphological and physical characteristics.
@@chadify007 Oh I what I said is a simplification as Asians (exclude Middle East) derive from the Ancient East Eurasians. The first East Eurasians had darker skin and Veddid-like features, they migrated through to India. In India, the Ancient East Eurasians genetically split into four main lineages during the Palaeolithic in which they spread out across Asia. One of these lineages was known as the ESEA which further divided into several different lineages in southern China and included the Northern East Asian (ANEA) and Southern East Asian (ASEA) lineages. The Sinid and South Mongolid phenotypes can be said to have developed from these two lineages. All of the lineages of Asia (exclude Middle East) derive from the Ancient East Eurasians with the Veddid phenotype being the oldest East Eurasian phenotype while the Sinid phenotype developed later on with the development of the EDAR gene and is now the most widespread East Eurasian phenotype. The Indid phenotype and those in Central Asia developed from the mixing of East Eurasian lineages with West Eurasian lineages that came from the Middle East and northern Eurasia.
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x I agree with a ton of what you are saying here; however, based on my understanding while both share distant roots in the Ancient East Eurasians (AEE), their evolutionary paths diverged early. ANEA followed a northern trajectory through Central Asia, evolving separately from the southern Veddid lineage that migrated through India and Southeast Asia. From what I understand the Veddid have immense implications across the entirety of the Indian Subcontinent including much of Australia and Papua but less to do with Sinid specifically. I will brush up on this / go deeper though going forward.
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x It would be great to collaborate with a group of people on future videos covering these topics. Undoubtedly, many of you have deeper knowledge about specific regions. If we were to combine our expertise and create more focused videos (I’d handle the production), it could be something really special! That said, it would require a significant commitment from everyone, so who knows-it might be worth exploring one day. As this channel grows, it will undoubtedly serve as a platform for showcasing the immense genetic diversity of our incredible planet
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x Yes, the way you just explained that is aligned with my current understanding of the relatively separate routes these groups took in ancient history
me as indonesian black : i don't recignize that face.
Check out my Oceania Facial Attractiveness video in the description, it may provide more clarity as there are a ton of other phenotypes / ethnicities present in the Indonesian area
Because you are Melanesian?
@rippydodoonokmu no i am java
@@chadify007 my origin is sumatra currently living in jakarta/java
@rippydodoonokmu no, i am from java
bro thx that was realy cool, bro could do north africa : moroco,alg, egypt etc
It’s coming for sure! Takes some time to create but I definitely want to cover those areas!
can you make this for (native) americans
It’s coming!
I love to see the diversity and inclusion of Asia’
you are smartest youtuber ever
Thank you so much, wouldn’t say I’m the smartest ever, but I’m constantly working on developing my knowledge
One of the Attributes of Male attractiveness is the voice.
@@DC-pm9lc For sure, this video is specifically addressing phenotypic morphology
Make a video about eye color and their shades
I really love ur scientific way to describe looks keep up the good work🔥🔥🔥
Great suggestion, and this could directly tie into something fascinating, the role of eyebrow thickness / darkness in relation to eye colour
@@chadify007 Thanks brother
Congrats @chadify for this amazing video ! Quick question, at what percentile of the male general population would you put your ratings from 3-8 ? Thanks in advance
@@MalikDerder Thank you! I would argue from my rating analysis, that 99.9% of people fall into the 3-8 zone if were are talking people within the “fertile” age cohort of 18-45. I’ve never had anyone who’s scored above or below that as a client yet.
@ Nice, so I guess a 7 would be top 10%, 8 top 1% and 9 one in thousands or something like that ?
Why did you place Indid higher that Tungid in height when the average adult male height in india is 165cm, while the in Heilongjiang province, it's 178cm? Even my Grandfather
who's Manchu is 182cm.
But aside from that, very informative and helpful video👍
@@NickKerr-lu1ru Keep in mind a lot of the research on these groups initially are based in precolonial / preindustrial times. Certain characteristics have changed with the development of regions in the past couple hundred years. Thanks either way!
@@chadify007 That's fair enough
Haven't watched but did this video evem remember about SE Asians? Everyone seem to forget us when they say "Asians"
Edit: OK, so where do Austronesians fit in this?
@@nunyabiznes33 I have many series on this topic. I cover much of the East Asian areas. If you want more on Malaysia & Indonesia however, my Oceania videos covers the Toalid phenotype which covers much of those areas (appearance wise).
@@chadify007OK TY, I'll check that out after this. Am Filipino and tho we might like some Thais, we definitely don't look Vietnamese, like we can identify them when they were here.
TY I'll check that out after thus. Am Filipino and tho we say we can probably hide among Thais, we definitely can't among Vietnamese. 😅
does anyone remember us west asians we weren’t even included in the video and we’re the most misunderstood region on earth💔💔💔
@ pakistani? Technically the Indid phenotype spans those regions as well
I'm waiting for the video. ❤😊
But, I'm still confused ! 😅
Great work ❤
Thanks! Confused about what?
Good Analyze… How about for women? How do they look different in Asia?
Good video
this is so entertaining lol
is it possible to be a mix? like lets say youre a chad but you got characteristics of two phenotypes like pretty light skin(indid) but also a medium nose width(indo melanid).
Absolutely true! Check out the part of the video at 48:08, where I explain how my software operates. I may not have done the best job explaining this in the past, but ultimately, most people today are mixed-and that’s absolutely a great thing! I apologize to everyone who thinks I came off in explaining this previously as a rigid classification framework, because it truly is not the case.
@ lol I prolly missed that cuz I just skipped to the parts with my phenos to read the chart. You explain things well
@ No worries at all! Glad I was able to clarify it for you
Bruh am an Indian Bengali but i look like a mix between Northeast Indians and Bengalis even tho both my father and mother are From Kolkata, Genetics are fascinating
I agree, it’s an incredibly area of research both biologically and physically
I think you should start to analysis and rate celebrities like brad Pitt, chico, Sean Opry etc face as well. It could be either UA-cam shorts or long form in depth analysis both are fine.
Yeah, I likely need to do this to get up the views. These highly technical videos don't always perform the best
one of the chad in the thumbnail is directly where my hometown is🗿
That’s awesome
Please do Native Americans next!
It's coming!
Im asian chad
Excellent
FINALLY!!! You are the GOAT, man... but I have a question, how do you make the chad faces? What programme do you use to make and edit the faces?
@@jackjarate38 I use a lot of techniques. I’ve built quite a few morphing tools lately from the ground up using software engineering. When you blend faces together without enough landmarks it can appear more blurry around certain features, so the key is to have enough as well as introduce some artistic “painting” afterwards in order to add texture to the skin, hair, etc…
Putting south indians in dark brown skin tone cannot be acceptable..they were medium to dark brown as like as ethiopian & yemeni peoples..
Like anything, there is a range, and remember that this applies to the Indo-Melanid phenotype. In reality, many Southern Indians are not solely Indo-Melanid in phenotype. Phenotypic appearance exists on a continuum or gradient (not in rigid boxes), meaning that some individuals can easily have medium brown skin tones, being half Indid and half Indo-Melanid. Ultimately, there is a range to every characteristic labeled here. I've tried my best to make this clear.
@chadify007 yes champ but u categories them with same as african skin tone..
one could easily able to see the difference between average south indian and african skin tone ..even u kept vedas & aboriginal people above south indians ..I think it is not correct..I accept some people have darker skin tone but the admixture in south is also higher u could easily find many light brown to fair skin people..why I asked this question is many data were again generalised (sterotyped) ..hope u will clear my doubt in upcoming vedios..also about the height south indians were medium stature ..
It’s funny lol, I’m Northern Indian but my eyes are medium set but my lower third is wide, my jaw is my strength 😭😭
Totally normal! Genetics are so incredibly complicated and there is no reason to box ourselves in. These morphs simply resemble the typical Chadified appearance individuals of these given regions. Having a wide jaw is excellent!
@ thankful for you content, such high quality informative content
Does that map mean that East Asians descended from the first people to cross over the Himalayas?
@@bigheadrhino Which map are you referring to? The Sinid and South Mongolid ones? It’s hard to say “who was first”, but they did travel Northward before coming back down. Rather different from the Austroasiatic group which was purely located southward
East Asians descend from the ESEA clade of the East Eurasian meta-population. East Asians primarily derive from the Northern East Asians (ANEA) as well as Southern East Asians (ASEA) and in the case of the Japanese, the Jomon too.
@ Yes I agree with that exactly
@@chadify007this part: 1:46 the line that heads towards China
Don't skip Chadifology class
Yes, a prerequisite!
@chadify007 I won't drop out this subject
I'm sure you will score very well! I'll keep you interested in it!
Bengal region has indo aryan, Dravidian and mongolied faces
@@suvradeepdutta5766 Like I’ve mentioned numerous times, this is only an oversimplification of a vastly diverse world ethnically. There are no clear borders in most cases where one ethnicity ends and another begins.
Amazing
Thank you!
You forgot to include Turks Arabs and Persians in this video. They're Asians too !
@@kronikandronic4686 Please refer to my Eurasia video for those regions:
🌍 Part 2: The Ultimate Map To Male Facial Attractiveness In Europe:
ua-cam.com/video/Ps6HibWfx2E/v-deo.html
@@chadify007 The Middle East is NOT a part of Europe. They should have been placed into the Asian video.
@kronikandronic4686 I never claimed the Middle East is part of Europe, nor did I group it as such. While the title may imply otherwise, I explicitly recognize the Middle East as part of greater Eurasia-a region that bridges Asia and Europe. The specific grouping of ethnicities in my videos is irrelevant to the validity of the information provided, which focuses on phenotypic traits, not arbitrary continental boundaries.
@@chadify007 Caucasoid phenotypic traits are found in Indic peoples too. Hence, why did you not include Indians in that video? People often use the term "Asian" to identify Asians with "Mongoloid" features (excuse the archaic term). People with these features aren't just found in East and Southeast Asia, but also Russia, Central Asia and even in Turkey.
Some of my friends look like this Asian Chad but they're far far away from the word 'Attractive'. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I am from South India.
Well I'm surprised you know about the Indo melanid phenotype. A lot of people assume Indians all look the same but I'm surprised that you did your research.
India is amazing. A fascinating country with so many ethnic groups. It deserves a full video of its own someday
CHAD is in all of us along!.!. LOL!.!.
Exactly!
Chadify is chad that's it
@@gmotivation8286 Thank you ❤️
This is like beautiful man overload 😂😂😂
Why does the masculine Veddid look so much more African?
You don’t know?
@@nickb839 Know what? I don't think it's suppose to change race when chadified haha
All look Australoid but I thought it is well known whites have smaller more feminine features
It's more similar to Latin American phenotypes..
Very good. Rip jeffrey gao
Rip Jeffrey Gao, very sad situation
Hello as someone with brunn phenotype with more preetyboy blend would you reccomend dying eyebrows and eyelashes. Mine are very blonde and while i noticed dying them gave me a lot of attention from random women, it didnt make that much diffrence as to sexual oppurtunities. As in its looks better but there is a tradeoff in natural beauty alligning with my phenotype, aswell as i remember just being at a club and some dude comes over saying my friend thinks you hot. Like he was sure i was gay so thats not a good thing (for me).
I remember reading blonde women are told to use a darker shade of eyebrow pencil so I assume it's the same aesthetics with blond men. If you're very white and the eyebrow is also very light blond, it kinda meld into the face and cuts into your facial expressiveness.