I feel like a lot of his "smoothness" comes from the fact that he doesn't trust his own judgment in the game. He doesn't wanna be wrong so he second guesses himself, even though he was making those good points about recognizing the language and remembering it from before.
Holy shit, the Japanese spot is literally the same neighbourhood my grandmother lives in! Saitama is not a borough of Tokyo but lots of people who don't want to pay ridiculous rent in Tokyo live there (still over an hour commute though).
The Romance languages aren’t Germanic but they do come from the indo European language family which Germanic does too. So technically they share similar roots but the language groups branched off a very long time ago so there isn’t much similarities
Trottisan, Portuguese uses the letter x more than Spanish, they use the ç (with the accent, not used in Spanish) and they have more words with 'eir' and 'ao' in. If you see any words ending in 'cao' or 'çao', it's Portugal (or Brazil). Also Smoth, if the tip of a shadow is pointing to the south of where you are, you're almost certainly in the Southern Hemisphere and vice versa. Just be wary of photospheres (the 360 degree photos that aren't part of regular street view), they usually get the compass wrong when they're uploaded.
It's weird, I *thought* it was Saitama when they first started that one, but then I figured a lot of Japanese neighbourhoods probably look very similar. And then when Ross decided to ignore the giant green sign I wanted to shout at the screen lol.
Sign: “This water supply was made with the support of the Romanian government” Smith: “something about how the words are formed is making me think it’s Romania.” Well, you weren’t wrong smith.
Okay, this the second time they're getting Romanian mixed up with Italian and I really don't get how, yes they're both Romance languages but the difference between Italian and Romanian is as big as the differences between Italian and Spanish.
If you're struggling to identify Romania now, you're going to love the fact that the North and West parts of Romania have a large German population. Rumaniendeutsche. Transylvania, Banat and Bukovice mainly. I got that once, every sign written in German, so I went for the obvious choices. And it turned out to be Romania, and I cried a little. Some helpful clues: AO = Portugal or Brazil or one of the Portuguese Colonies (though it should be more obvious if your in Angola or Macau) IJ = Dutch so the Netherlands or the Flanders (North) region of Belgium Germany is only partly on Geoguessr, and will very likely have blurred buildings. If you see German its more likely your in Austria. Slavic Languages are split into the Cyrillic and Latin scripted languages. A quick Identification guide. (This wont help you read Cyrillic but it will help you distinguish which country your in from the language) Y with a little u shape above it = Belarus I with two dots or a weird curly capital E = Ukraine ATA at the end of a word, or a squashed b with a line coming off the top = Bulgaria - (also if the country is very snowy, dont ask why I don't know, either because of mountains or it was winter when google visited) h with a bar over it, or h with a bar and a hook at the bottom = Serbia sharp r looking letter with an accent, or K with an accent, or the letter s (only in cyrillic, s can appear in latin of course) = Macedonia Both Serbian and Macedonian use these letters : n and b smushed together, H and b smushed together, and a u with a vertical line coming from the middle down Russian is just a process of elimination because it has no distinguishing features, and you should probably learn what Steppe country looks like to be able to identify the -stans and Mongolia. I've been burned by that a lot. Now for the Latin Slavic languages. L with a diagonal line = Poland or Sorbia (East Germany, almost certainly not but don't know if impossible). Pronounced as a w. So Lodz is pronounced something like wudge, Wroclaw is pronounced something like vrotswav. a with two dots or r with an accent = Slovakia. u with an overring (a circle above it) or r with the little u shape like in Belarus = Czechia. D with a line through it = Croatia. Bosnia is indistinguishable from Croatia by script alone, but the vocabulary of Bosnia has a lot more unique words of Persian or Arabic origin. I don't know how easy that would be to tell though, probably don't worry about it. Czechia, Slovakia, Croatia, Bosnia and Slovenia all use these letters: c with a little u shape above it, s with a little u shape above it, and z with a little u shape above it. If you wanted to google them to look at them better here are their names. The little u shape is called a Breve. The two dots is called a Diaeresis, i think also known as Umlaut (but that could refer to the letter as a whole, im not sure) The squashed b with a line is called a Hard Sign or Er Golyam. Tshe and Dje are the H bars. Gje is Gamma (sharp r) with an accent, Kje is K with an accent, Dze is the s in cyrillic. Lje is n and b. Nje is H and b. Dzhe is u with a centre-stroke. You won't learn all of this, and thats okay. I haven't but I'm trying to. I know a fair bit of it by now but still have a way to go. But there is immeasurable pride directed at you from your viewers every time I hear those magic words - "I know this now". So if I can provide some resources for you or anyone watching, I'm happy to. I'll keep posting on your videos with more lessons and tips, everytime I learn something new. Good luck shitlords.
a good way to tell portuguese from spanish is there are more O's used, specifically the ao with an accent on the end of words, Spanish doesn't have this
Smith, the earth's axis is tilted at an apex point in june when the sun shines directly on a point somewhat north of the equator. It then gradually tilts for half a year until reaching an opposite apex in december, when the sun shines south of the equator. Reverse the motion from december until june, and repeat annually. This is why the northern hemisphere's summer climaxes shortly after june, winter shortly after december, and vice versa on both for the southern hemisphere. It's also why the sun will always be south of you on most of the northern hemisphere, north of you on most of the southern hemisphere, and either depending on the time of year in regions close to the equator, as Trott was trying to explain. Time of day makes no difference, as the earth's main rotation is only on the west-east -axis, and this gradual shift to the north and south only happens in that very long timeframe around the year. Also, tip on foreign sign reading (mostly also for Smith, since he seems to have the most trouble with this): if the language is incomprehensible, always pay closest attention to the last word. Most European languages (and likely many non-European ones too) are structured in a way that pushes country or place names to the end of the sentence/phrase, and those are often recognizable even if you don't understand the message itself. It's not infallible by any means, but still a lot more efficient than trying to decipher the whole message from the beginning and giving up before getting to the end (which seems to be happening a lot to you).
The absolute easiest way to tell the difference between Spanish and Portuguese in Geoguessr is whether you see the word "e" (Portuguese) or "y" (Spanish). Both mean "and" so there's a good likelihood you will see it around on signs. It's a good little trick for people who know very little about either language.
@@LeonardoJimenezHerrera Also true! I was going to use this example, but in my experience English speakers' eyes glaze over when they see accents on letters haha.
On this episode we learn the lads have no knowledge of Latin and its roots in many modern languages, and Smith forgets the sun travels East to West, not North to South... The GeoGuessr episodes are some of my favourites currently. Keep 'em coming, bois
As a Romanian, I immediately spotted the difference and I wanted to give them credit after they got there themselves...and then they literally read "Romaniei" on a sign and pass it off as Estonia.
As a native English speaker with a little experience in Spanish and none in Portuguese, it definitely depends on what you read. It's undeniable that the languages share some words, so when Ross passed by "restaurante" I immediately read that and thought "Oh, this could be a Spanish-speaking country." Although, seeing other signs, I noticed there were words and letters I didn't recognize (that said, my vocabulary is weak, so I also sometimes chalk it up to "Maybe it's a word I just don't know"). Much like how many slavic languages share words and even a majority of alphabet sometimes. As a non-native speaker you'd probably have a hard time distinguishing between Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian, Bosnian, and other such languages.
@@imjust_a This is exactly how I feel about it; write out a word or a couple tricky words in Portuguese and I might confuse it with Spanish, but you can usually tell if given a full sentence.
You boiks think Japan is tourist friendly and Tokyo especially would have English everywhere but in reality Japan isnt known to be tourist friendly. It's only recently they added more English around Tokyo for the Tokyo Olympics :S
tbf people should try and learn some basic words and phrases before they go someplace like Japan. Or carry an easy to understand book with basic guides on the different characters they're gonna encounter in the wild. Whole countries don't owe native English speakers shit.
@@lin90210 I used to get lost in my old highschool, back in the day, so I definitely wouldn't be able to manage navigating a non English speaking country on my own. XD
Japan has certain rules for city cars, or "kei" cars, regarding overall dimensions, engine size, etc. Vehicles that meet these standards are taxed lower than "normal" cars, and are very popular because of that. Most japanese car manufacturers make special japan-only models built specifically to meet these standards, That's why there are so many cars/trucks/vans that are look like they're squished into a tiny footprint
Germany and France have been one country multiple times actually. Starting (to my knowledge) with the franks in the 5th to 7th century conquering the northern gauls at least. So that one isn't even too far fetched. I can't say the same for Spain and Portugal but I would assume they might have a similar history.
It takes a trio of smooth as hell brains to see a sign for ikebukuro and have no idea what that means. Especially considering trott is literally the captain of Japan.
I really wanted Ross to mention the obvious "Saitama" on the sign he was looking at, Trott would have probably realized where they are just based on that.
Can't really explain it, but the way Brits butcher Japanese words and names really irks me. Like, it really isn't that hard; it only has 5 vowel sounds.
0:10 Sideshow _Pob_ !? Jesus christ Smaffy Pob is such an old tv series! Starts the episode by spitting all over the screen and repeating his own name, instead of a creepy laugh, eh?
On the topic about would you recognise Own hand; suddenly my dumb decision to have hand tattoos isn’t so dumb. I will easily be able to tell my own hand 😂
I don't know if it's possible, but would be neat to have Hat Films fans send their coordinates to Craig or someone, to make a custom geoguessr map of Hat Films fans for you to play.
Ross and Smith must've been their own record of mispronounced words in a given duration right there. Fukukoa, kakagawa. I see a pattern there almost...
why the hell would the neighborhoods of tokyo outskirts have highrise buildings on the horizon? you don't go to fuckin surrey and see skyscrapers littered about, do you?
Before the pandemic they bought/rented a warehouse to do lots of Vlog and skit stuff. Since YT's algorithim hates mixed content channels they mean to put out regularized content. Vlog stuff on the main channel, gaming on the gaming channel. Covid kinda got in the way of that though.
I like it when they work together, it’s much quicker to call them all idiots rather than type the names out individually.
4:11 Trott legitimately thinks there's a reasonable chance that he's found the right bridge... out of all the bridges in Russia. Lol
It beats guessing somewhere NOT on a river.
Surely there can't be more than 4 bridges in Russia, the odds were good.
Smith looking at the sign that has Romanie on it. "Probably Estonia or something."
I feel like a lot of his "smoothness" comes from the fact that he doesn't trust his own judgment in the game. He doesn't wanna be wrong so he second guesses himself, even though he was making those good points about recognizing the language and remembering it from before.
Was suprised by that, our country is pretty north
He got it right, though.
Even someone with basicly no geografic knowledge, who doesnt even know where romania is, saw that sign and thought ''huh Romanie sounds like Romania''
Also Trotts "northern Hemisphere" should have helped him...
The last time I saw something as smooth as their collective brain was a gunge-covered slope on Get Your Own Back
SMITH DOESNT KNOW HOW THE SUN WORKS AAARRRGGGHHHH
With Dave Benson Phillips?
Go help them simon
Brilliantly specific reference, captain PhD
@@oliht3472 he can't help them. No one can.
Kumamoto "Where is my car" fuck that made me chuckle.
_Kumamoto, dude?_
trott: thinks is brazil or portugal
also trott: speaks in italian accent
a lot of people dont know that portugese sounds almost slavic
The amount of respect I have for Ross really fluctuated wildly with that intro
It’s amazing how they were all completely fluent in Ukrainian by the end of the video!
especially given they were geoguessing in Russia! Next level!
Holy shit, the Japanese spot is literally the same neighbourhood my grandmother lives in! Saitama is not a borough of Tokyo but lots of people who don't want to pay ridiculous rent in Tokyo live there (still over an hour commute though).
Smith talking about the similarities between Italian and Romanian and just totally blinded the sign said Romaniei
That was so frustrating. If he had actually bothered to read the sign he was looking at for 30 seconds, he would have figured out it was in Romania.
The Romance languages aren’t Germanic but they do come from the indo European language family which Germanic does too. So technically they share similar roots but the language groups branched off a very long time ago so there isn’t much similarities
Instructions unclear, I actually forgot most of my native language over the course of 5 minutes. Thanks boiks
Smith: "Do it like Sideshow Bob's signature laugh"
My brain: *rake in face* "neeuughhhHHhhhrru"
These team Geoguessr games are a lot more enjoyable I think. They can crack jokes with eachother without worrying about giving away info
Trottisan, Portuguese uses the letter x more than Spanish, they use the ç (with the accent, not used in Spanish) and they have more words with 'eir' and 'ao' in. If you see any words ending in 'cao' or 'çao', it's Portugal (or Brazil).
Also Smoth, if the tip of a shadow is pointing to the south of where you are, you're almost certainly in the Southern Hemisphere and vice versa. Just be wary of photospheres (the 360 degree photos that aren't part of regular street view), they usually get the compass wrong when they're uploaded.
18:00 - Perhaps some kind of union of monarchies? Not sure what we should call it though. Unity of Kings? Unknitted States of Dumps? Tough one!
loving this series, please keep it up!
Woah, never seen one that's on a train before. Pretty cool actually
ross was looking at a big sign that said saitama on if for about 2 mins, and didnt even register it
and ikebukuro
It's weird, I *thought* it was Saitama when they first started that one, but then I figured a lot of Japanese neighbourhoods probably look very similar. And then when Ross decided to ignore the giant green sign I wanted to shout at the screen lol.
I'd like to see them do country streak, either solo or as a group.
My hands and fingers are covered in tattoos so I'm pretty certain I could pick them out in a lineup
Sign: “This water supply was made with the support of the Romanian government”
Smith: “something about how the words are formed is making me think it’s Romania.”
Well, you weren’t wrong smith.
Loved trotts confidence in his hemisphere knowledge, and then immediate back tracking as soon as he was asked to confirm it
"Completely unremarkable area" says Smith, when they literally have an entire city filled with signs telling them what city it is
Love when smith is looking at a sign that says Romania, "It could be Estonia!" lol Good video guys, very entertaining.
No, you have to get OUT of the kiln, boys.
GET OUTTA THE KILN!
Why in the Burt Newtons didja get in the kiln?!
i definitely would be able to pick the back of my hand out from loads of others. they're quite dry and also covered in burn scars
Okay, this the second time they're getting Romanian mixed up with Italian and I really don't get how, yes they're both Romance languages but the difference between Italian and Romanian is as big as the differences between Italian and Spanish.
more world combined brain eps these are great
If you're struggling to identify Romania now, you're going to love the fact that the North and West parts of Romania have a large German population. Rumaniendeutsche. Transylvania, Banat and Bukovice mainly. I got that once, every sign written in German, so I went for the obvious choices. And it turned out to be Romania, and I cried a little.
Some helpful clues:
AO = Portugal or Brazil or one of the Portuguese Colonies (though it should be more obvious if your in Angola or Macau)
IJ = Dutch so the Netherlands or the Flanders (North) region of Belgium
Germany is only partly on Geoguessr, and will very likely have blurred buildings. If you see German its more likely your in Austria.
Slavic Languages are split into the Cyrillic and Latin scripted languages. A quick Identification guide. (This wont help you read Cyrillic but it will help you distinguish which country your in from the language)
Y with a little u shape above it = Belarus
I with two dots or a weird curly capital E = Ukraine
ATA at the end of a word, or a squashed b with a line coming off the top = Bulgaria - (also if the country is very snowy, dont ask why I don't know, either because of mountains or it was winter when google visited)
h with a bar over it, or h with a bar and a hook at the bottom = Serbia
sharp r looking letter with an accent, or K with an accent, or the letter s (only in cyrillic, s can appear in latin of course) = Macedonia
Both Serbian and Macedonian use these letters :
n and b smushed together, H and b smushed together, and a u with a vertical line coming from the middle down
Russian is just a process of elimination because it has no distinguishing features, and you should probably learn what Steppe country looks like to be able to identify the -stans and Mongolia. I've been burned by that a lot.
Now for the Latin Slavic languages.
L with a diagonal line = Poland or Sorbia (East Germany, almost certainly not but don't know if impossible). Pronounced as a w. So Lodz is pronounced something like wudge, Wroclaw is pronounced something like vrotswav.
a with two dots or r with an accent = Slovakia.
u with an overring (a circle above it) or r with the little u shape like in Belarus = Czechia.
D with a line through it = Croatia.
Bosnia is indistinguishable from Croatia by script alone, but the vocabulary of Bosnia has a lot more unique words of Persian or Arabic origin. I don't know how easy that would be to tell though, probably don't worry about it.
Czechia, Slovakia, Croatia, Bosnia and Slovenia all use these letters:
c with a little u shape above it, s with a little u shape above it, and z with a little u shape above it.
If you wanted to google them to look at them better here are their names.
The little u shape is called a Breve.
The two dots is called a Diaeresis, i think also known as Umlaut (but that could refer to the letter as a whole, im not sure)
The squashed b with a line is called a Hard Sign or Er Golyam.
Tshe and Dje are the H bars. Gje is Gamma (sharp r) with an accent, Kje is K with an accent, Dze is the s in cyrillic.
Lje is n and b. Nje is H and b. Dzhe is u with a centre-stroke.
You won't learn all of this, and thats okay. I haven't but I'm trying to. I know a fair bit of it by now but still have a way to go. But there is immeasurable pride directed at you from your viewers every time I hear those magic words - "I know this now". So if I can provide some resources for you or anyone watching, I'm happy to. I'll keep posting on your videos with more lessons and tips, everytime I learn something new. Good luck shitlords.
Smith reading a big sign that says Romania “Could be Estonia.”
I don’t think I’ve seen an Early Learning Centre in like 20 years !
Really enjoying watching these GeoGuesser videos!
a good way to tell portuguese from spanish is there are more O's used, specifically the ao with an accent on the end of words, Spanish doesn't have this
Smoothest intro I’ve seen in a while
obligatory PORTUGAL CARALHO
Smith, the earth's axis is tilted at an apex point in june when the sun shines directly on a point somewhat north of the equator. It then gradually tilts for half a year until reaching an opposite apex in december, when the sun shines south of the equator. Reverse the motion from december until june, and repeat annually. This is why the northern hemisphere's summer climaxes shortly after june, winter shortly after december, and vice versa on both for the southern hemisphere. It's also why the sun will always be south of you on most of the northern hemisphere, north of you on most of the southern hemisphere, and either depending on the time of year in regions close to the equator, as Trott was trying to explain. Time of day makes no difference, as the earth's main rotation is only on the west-east -axis, and this gradual shift to the north and south only happens in that very long timeframe around the year.
Also, tip on foreign sign reading (mostly also for Smith, since he seems to have the most trouble with this): if the language is incomprehensible, always pay closest attention to the last word. Most European languages (and likely many non-European ones too) are structured in a way that pushes country or place names to the end of the sentence/phrase, and those are often recognizable even if you don't understand the message itself. It's not infallible by any means, but still a lot more efficient than trying to decipher the whole message from the beginning and giving up before getting to the end (which seems to be happening a lot to you).
Rocky Mountain Power immediately gave me 4 states it could be 😂
Yeah our smooth crazy Hats are back. smoooooottttttthhhhhhhh as silk
The absolute easiest way to tell the difference between Spanish and Portuguese in Geoguessr is whether you see the word "e" (Portuguese) or "y" (Spanish). Both mean "and" so there's a good likelihood you will see it around on signs. It's a good little trick for people who know very little about either language.
Alternatively, ç exists only in Portuguese (if we're just talking about Portuguese vs. Spanish obviously) while ñ is found only in Spanish.
@@LeonardoJimenezHerrera Also true! I was going to use this example, but in my experience English speakers' eyes glaze over when they see accents on letters haha.
Smith still struggling to see why you cant just google ares codes in a guessing game
Jokes on you lads. I have both my hands and knuckles tattooed
On this episode we learn the lads have no knowledge of Latin and its roots in many modern languages, and Smith forgets the sun travels East to West, not North to South...
The GeoGuessr episodes are some of my favourites currently. Keep 'em coming, bois
Powerful smoothness today. The shine off those brains is brilliant sight to behold.
tbh the japan one was pretty easy. lots of sporting events happen at the Saitama Super Arena
What good is a scar on the INSIDE of you hand when you are supposed to know the BACK of you hand, Smith? Very smooooooth xD
Cracked me up as usual, tyvm for content boiks
Estonia was a smooth moment for sure
Pro tip! road numbers is key. Japan is often okey whit road numbers
OH MY GOD FINALY WYOMING!
Psh. Everyone knows that Wyoming isn’t real. Can’t believe the boiks are buying into that conspiracy theory.
@@shrimpisdelicious I live in the US, and I constantly forget it exists. XD
@@em_birch I always forget about the ones on the mississippi
Would love to see you guys travel Japan someday that's like my dream
As a native spanish speaker, it always amuses me how some people confuse spanish with portuguese.
it's more like they confuse portuguese for spanish, if the person even knows that Portugal exists
I'm very white and only took two years of mandatory Spanish, like, a decade ago but the differences are still pretty obvious.
As a Romanian, I immediately spotted the difference and I wanted to give them credit after they got there themselves...and then they literally read "Romaniei" on a sign and pass it off as Estonia.
As a native English speaker with a little experience in Spanish and none in Portuguese, it definitely depends on what you read. It's undeniable that the languages share some words, so when Ross passed by "restaurante" I immediately read that and thought "Oh, this could be a Spanish-speaking country." Although, seeing other signs, I noticed there were words and letters I didn't recognize (that said, my vocabulary is weak, so I also sometimes chalk it up to "Maybe it's a word I just don't know").
Much like how many slavic languages share words and even a majority of alphabet sometimes. As a non-native speaker you'd probably have a hard time distinguishing between Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian, Bosnian, and other such languages.
@@imjust_a This is exactly how I feel about it; write out a word or a couple tricky words in Portuguese and I might confuse it with Spanish, but you can usually tell if given a full sentence.
You boiks think Japan is tourist friendly and Tokyo especially would have English everywhere but in reality Japan isnt known to be tourist friendly. It's only recently they added more English around Tokyo for the Tokyo Olympics :S
Definitely wasn’t my experience 5 years ago...
tbf people should try and learn some basic words and phrases before they go someplace like Japan. Or carry an easy to understand book with basic guides on the different characters they're gonna encounter in the wild. Whole countries don't owe native English speakers shit.
@@christinemoore7321 you did well then :) there are a lot of places to eat where English is not on the menu
@@em_birch I agree. We shouldn't expect every country to speak English. I just get a bit clueless and fear getting lost in translation kakaka
@@lin90210 I used to get lost in my old highschool, back in the day, so I definitely wouldn't be able to manage navigating a non English speaking country on my own. XD
This episodes themes were learning that countries are actually quite big, language is easy and Twottys small
I will never get over how squished some Japanese vehicles are.
Japan has certain rules for city cars, or "kei" cars, regarding overall dimensions, engine size, etc. Vehicles that meet these standards are taxed lower than "normal" cars, and are very popular because of that. Most japanese car manufacturers make special japan-only models built specifically to meet these standards, That's why there are so many cars/trucks/vans that are look like they're squished into a tiny footprint
@@Mesder13 Don't they only make cars to order too? I think that's really neat.
@@em_birch huh, i'm not sure about that actually, but I wouldn't doubt it! I'll have to look into it
19:25 does that sign say romania?
Big fan of the group work ones, keep it up! Smoother than a fucking neutron star
How many times do they need to play this to remember to click on locations? *desk flip* lol
"We're in Russia!" Nice, we've narrowed it down to the largest country on Earth.
Germany and France have been one country multiple times actually. Starting (to my knowledge) with the franks in the 5th to 7th century conquering the northern gauls at least. So that one isn't even too far fetched. I can't say the same for Spain and Portugal but I would assume they might have a similar history.
It takes a trio of smooth as hell brains to see a sign for ikebukuro and have no idea what that means. Especially considering trott is literally the captain of Japan.
I really wanted Ross to mention the obvious "Saitama" on the sign he was looking at, Trott would have probably realized where they are just based on that.
Before I learned Cyrillic this would be very entertaining. Now it is even more so ;)
You guys should do the daily challenges
SMITH. The sign that "didn't leap out at [me]" said Romaniei - as in Romania.
Can't really explain it, but the way Brits butcher Japanese words and names really irks me. Like, it really isn't that hard; it only has 5 vowel sounds.
I bet they would've won that Japan round if they had a certain Captain of the NSA helping them
There was definitely a large obvious red and white landmark during the Japan one that Smith ignored
Does Ross dye his beard but not his hair? Intersting contrast
I knew it was Romania because I’m pretty sure that sign Smith looked at said Romania
I love Smooth Films
"guvernului romaniei" yeah reckon that could be estonia
Don't being Hackney up again. Too soon.
"Frermany", hahaha, what a name, I love that name too much XD
0:10 Sideshow _Pob_ !? Jesus christ Smaffy Pob is such an old tv series! Starts the episode by spitting all over the screen and repeating his own name, instead of a creepy laugh, eh?
Imagine how manic our politics would be if we were to suddenly merge all primarily English countries together.
On the topic about would you recognise Own hand; suddenly my dumb decision to have hand tattoos isn’t so dumb. I will easily be able to tell my own hand 😂
I'd scrape a nail across the back, and the one to get a big ole allergic reaction from the pressure against the skin would be mine. Easy.
Niceeee!
Never thought I'd see my home state of Wyoming on the hat boik's channel 😅
O baby yes! More daddies, more!
It’s funny listening to them obliterate the pronunciation of the Japanese cities and towns
Very good
Taskmaster did a challenge where they have to find a photo of the back of their hand out of hundreds of other photos of hands on the walls.
Gernce
I don't know if it's possible, but would be neat to have Hat Films fans send their coordinates to Craig or someone, to make a custom geoguessr map of Hat Films fans for you to play.
It's also that the signboard said Romania in its own language, but smiffy probably missed it, still, well done lads
Ross and Smith must've been their own record of mispronounced words in a given duration right there.
Fukukoa, kakagawa. I see a pattern there almost...
They should do the Geoguesser map that has all the weird shit ( the horse people in china ect )
pog champ
why the hell would the neighborhoods of tokyo outskirts have highrise buildings on the horizon? you don't go to fuckin surrey and see skyscrapers littered about, do you?
sweet love burger
F me, first fuked building i was like ah seems like romania , it was...
The sign Smith was looking at said Romanians :)
ONE PUNCH!!!!
Trot meant south weast.
DON'T GET IN THE KILN
English boys complaining about tiny little streets in another country.
Have you traveled your own country?
Frermany and the Romkraine.
Does anybody remember why they made a second channel? Seems like an odd way to split their subscribers
Main channel is for vlog type videos and them doing real life stuff, Hat Gaming is strictly gaming videos.
I think it's because the algorithm doesn't favour mixed-content channels as much as single content ones.
Adding to what's mentioned above: They decided to create the gaming channel just before the pandemic, so the timing was a bit unfortunate.
Before the pandemic they bought/rented a warehouse to do lots of Vlog and skit stuff. Since YT's algorithim hates mixed content channels they mean to put out regularized content. Vlog stuff on the main channel, gaming on the gaming channel. Covid kinda got in the way of that though.
That would mean you'd have to join up with the US again though.
Ew...
It is russia