We Broke Mario Golf
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- čas přidán 21. 06. 2023
- Hello
It is your boy
Sophist
Once again here to give the people what they've been clamoring for...
Fun facts about knives.
Ahem...............
There are three primary knives that every home cook should have in their kitchen: a chef's knife, a serrated knife (also called a bread knife), and a paring knife.
The most popular type of knife among professional chefs is the chef's knife. A chef's knife is a versatile all-purpose knife that can be used for everything from chopping vegetables to slicing meat. The blade is usually between eight and ten inches long and is made of high-carbon stainless steel.
The most expensive knife in the world isn’t something you can save up for. That is unless you can save $2.1 million in your lifetime. It didn’t belong to any king or royalty whatsoever; it was a stand-alone project of Buster Warenski, who was a custom knifemaker from Kimberley, Nevada. Warenski was all about knives with art. He created the Gem of the Orient as the second knife in his Legacy Series. It took him 10 years to finish this beauty. It incorporated 153 emeralds with 10 total karats and 9 diamonds with 5 total karats.
Teddy Roosevelt, in his book “The Wilderness Man,” named Confederate Cavalry Leader Wade Hampton III is someone who killed 80 bears with only a knife. What he would usually do was to corner the bear and provoke it to charge. He would then dart to the side before stabbing it in the heart.
Japanese knives are highly-sought out because of their quality. One factor contributing to its popularity is that it has deep roots in tradition. They use hagane, a type of carbon steel that can hold an extremely sharp edge. They can stay sharp for a longer time than Western knives. Because of its characteristics, it’s the same kind used in samurai swords. The creation of a Japanese kitchen knife also often includes traditional blacksmithing techniques. Aside from kitchen knives, though, the Japanese also have other cool knives, like the Hori Hori knife.
Knives are around 2.6 million years old if we’re counting any sharp-edged tool used by our ancestors. This makes them much older than us, the Homo Sapiens.
Finally the thrilling saga is complete. I have done what I set out to do. Until next time, random youtube viewer.
Check out the fellas here:
TCNick3: / @tcnick3
Vernias: / @vernias
Brent: / @kingofskill
Eevee: / @sophist - Hry
Guess is way easier to break every videogame over breaking Sophist.
Flashbacks to the game where nick wasn’t toxic
Breaking sophist the series where Walter white and eevee fused to go a adventure
You would sooner cure the Joker of his insanity before breaking Eevee.
Sophist is a lesser embodiement of Chaos, so I don't think he can be truly broken.
The closest I've seen to it is him doing a comical rant or him saying "to the surprise of absolutely nobody" in a somewhat defeated voice.
@@botmaster69420i was gonna say that
The leader of the Sophisticated Society has once again graced us with the knowledge of kitchen utensils.
I think maybe instead of Leader, Sophist might be the Head of this society. I mean we all just rethink what he thinks, therefore our brains are one.
@@problempixel-ian266321:33
Can we all just appreciate the editor and what he does please?
Yes. Appreciate the editor.
Actual MVP
yeah that editor guy is really cool and based and awesome
This is so true.
Editor, please insert a wet fart sound effect.
🤓☝️
After reading the description, I'd like to thank Sophist for teaching me information on knives.
Better be more "Sophist Says", or I riot
Some of his facts are very wrong, namely his statements on "Japanese steel" are completely wrong and read like kamikoto ad, which is a Chinese scam.
For a start, steel doesn't matter where it comes from in the modern day. It's all built to industrial standards with specific names like D2, 1080 ordnance, cpm-m4, 8Cr13MoV, etc. Steel advertised as "Japanese steel" just means "iron sourced from Japan" especially if it doesn't state what town it was made in, because if you're going to try to suggest a steel is better by location you'd use the town which was a way of suggesting quality prior to modern industrialization and lasted at least until the 1960's. If you want a good steel labeled in this way consider a Solingen, Germany knife from the 1940's and 50's, which were imported en-masse at that time following the end of WWII alongside quality knives from Japan, thus creating this perception because of the fact that it was premium knives being imported from very old and very well known knife-making cities. Everything that says "Japanese steel" though is a marketing ploy, usually a Chinese one aimed at western markets. Steel from Japan doesn't differ in quality from Western quality at all today. What you're instead going to get is cheap 3Cr13 or 420J2 crap. You'd be better off sharpening a steel ruler than most of these.
Any time you see a modern knife ask not where it was made, unless the purpose is to support a domestic business, but to name the specific industrial steel identification it was made with. When you see a knife from 1960 and earlier then maybe talk about where it was made and investigate the culture and reputation of that location at the time.
Samurai quality would be considered atrocious and massively underwhelming by today's standards. Our understanding of metal is incredibly more advanced to the steel of the Sengoku period and the techniques of folding used in the Tachi and Katana were done to compensate for poor quality steel as Japan lacked the ability to heat iron to where it melted and impurities could be removed, the folding technique was done to minimize and even out impurities.
Hori hori are also terrible for knife purposes. They're an example of someone making a multitool of things that shouldn't be multitools, it's like the shovel-axe-saw thing I've seen before. It's bad. Do not buy them. They have an entirely wrong profile for a knife. It's literally a hand shovel someone put a sharp edge on. It's, again, a marketing gimmick.
Next, edge retention is not the end all be all of a knife and isn't exactly accurate. What Sophist is referring to is hardness, but that's just one quality that makes good knife steel. A good steel for a knife has 4 factors: hardness, toughness, corrosion resistance, ease of sharpening. Hardness and toughness are very different things, hardness is how hard of a steel it is, how long it will retain an edge before dulling, dulling is when an edge rounds out. To be clear and to wipe away a misconception, you can make ANY material sharp, the quality of steel does not change how sharp you can make something, you can make wood or paper sharp, glass I'm sure you've noticed can be made quite sharp. The problem with hardness is that it can really damage the toughness of a blade, the ability to prevent chipping and snapping, because it can become brittle if too hard without leaving some spring to the steel. It needs to be able to return to form and take some bending exertion. Corrosion resistance is obvious, it's how resistant the steel is to rust, though you can just be more careful about cleaning and maintenance of the knife. The last, ease of sharpening, is also somewhat counter to hardness as a harder steel is usually more difficult to get sharp. You have to keep these in mind when making a blade along with blade profile and design.
I don't really blame Sophist for this misconception, but it needs to be corrected to prevent people falling to scams.
@@pubcle... and knowing is half the battle!
G.I. Joooeeee...
Really interesting info, though, thanks. For real.
@@TheOnlyDibbs I'm always happy to talk about steel and knives and such! My personal favorite designs are clip-points. I have this one bowie that I _really_ like. It's one of those old Solingens, got a thick, heavy spine, a very steep clip making the point maneuverable but backed by that heavy spine, and a long tip. There's a bunch of benefits and drawbacks to different designs. Serrations are useful for sawing but cutting, slicing, piercing they're detrimental so keep that in mind when buying a serrated knife, for example. A thicker blade makes something durable but harder to cut with, a thin blade profile with good tapering is what you want on something like a kitchen knife.
@@TheOnlyDibbs Oh! Also, NEVER USE A PULL-THROUGH.
Pull-through sharpeners are ATROCIOUS for your knife, they don't sharpen, they tear the blade, stripping it and damaging the material, and instead of a sharp edge you get a jagged mess which tears rather than cuts. Get a proper whetstone or similar.
Damn sophist just telling us every single fact he knows about knives
Some of his facts are very wrong, namely his statements on "Japanese steel" are completely wrong and read like komikoto ad, which is a Chinese scam. I copy-paste my response here because it is important to correct misinformation.
For a start, steel doesn't matter where it comes from in the modern day. It's all built to industrial standards with specific names like D2, 1080 ordnance, cpm-m4, 8Cr13MoV, etc. Steel advertised as "Japanese steel" just means "iron sourced from Japan" especially if it doesn't state what town it was made in, because if you're going to try to suggest a steel is better by location you'd use the town which was a way of suggesting quality prior to modern industrialization and lasted at least until the 1960's. If you want a good steel labeled in this way consider a Solingen, Germany knife from the 1940's and 50's, which were imported en-masse at that time following the end of WWII alongside quality knives from Japan, thus creating this perception because of the fact that it was premium knives being imported from very old and very well known knife-making cities. Everything that says "Japanese steel" though is a marketing ploy, usually a Chinese one aimed at western markets. Steel from Japan doesn't differ in quality from Western quality at all today. What you're instead going to get is cheap 3Cr13 or 420J2 crap. You'd be better off sharpening a steel ruler than most of these.
Any time you see a modern knife ask not where it was made, unless the purpose is to support a domestic business, but to name the specific industrial steel identification it was made with. When you see a knife from 1960 and earlier then maybe talk about where it was made and investigate the culture and reputation of that location at the time.
Samurai quality would be considered atrocious and massively underwhelming by today's standards. Our understanding of metal is incredibly more advanced to the steel of the Sengoku period and the techniques of folding used in the Tachi and Katana were done to compensate for poor quality steel as Japan lacked the ability to heat iron to where it melted and impurities could be removed, the folding technique was done to minimize and even out impurities.
Hori hori are also terrible for knife purposes. They're an example of someone making a multitool of things that shouldn't be multitools, it's like the shovel-axe-saw thing I've seen before. It's bad. Do not buy them. They have an entirely wrong profile for a knife. It's literally a hand shovel someone put a sharp edge on. It's, again, a marketing gimmick.
Next, edge retention is not the end all be all of a knife and isn't exactly accurate. What Sophist is referring to is hardness, but that's just one quality that makes good knife steel. A good steel for a knife has 4 factors: hardness, toughness, corrosion resistance, ease of sharpening. Hardness and toughness are very different things, hardness is how hard of a steel it is, how long it will retain an edge before dulling, dulling is when an edge rounds out. To be clear and to wipe away a misconception, you can make ANY material sharp, the quality of steel does not change how sharp you can make something, you can make wood or paper sharp, glass I'm sure you've noticed can be made quite sharp. The problem with hardness is that it can really damage the toughness of a blade, the ability to prevent chipping and snapping, because it can become brittle if too hard without leaving some spring to the steel. It needs to be able to return to form and take some bending exertion. Corrosion resistance is obvious, it's how resistant the steel is to rust, though you can just be more careful about cleaning and maintenance of the knife with oil. The last, ease of sharpening, is also somewhat counter to hardness as a harder steel is usually more difficult to get sharp. You have to keep these in mind when making a blade along with blade profile and design.
I don't really blame Sophist for this misconception, but it needs to be corrected to prevent people falling to scams.
*Addendum: Also never use a pull-through sharpener. Pull-through sharpeners damage the edge and leave it a jagged mess so the knife tears instead of cuts.
@@pubcle🤓
@@kbthegoatwAnd I respect them for sharing their knowledge with us. 🧐
@@pubcleI respect you for you knowledge but its 12:05 and I reading a party crashers comment section so I humbly don't care right now.
The first time an editor censored Nick's insult in Spanish, this video will make history
17:48
i just wanted to cover all my bases
@@s.c.m.r. That's awesome man, I love the work y'all do for editing
@@s.c.m.r.Nick is known to drop the “p” word in Spanish an awful lot…
@@ThePureSynergist this is the first time he's said it in a video I've worked on
@@s.c.m.r. Respect o7
14:51 Brent really put all of his brain cells into that one putt calculation and then immediately returned to monke
That’s how the King rolls.
I feel like just like Nick didn't want to let Vernias forget he fumbled the first shot, we should never let Nick forget the Raid Boss Chance Time fumble
15:52 It's the lost ancient tech of making weird ass sounds to make sure your ball does not go in the bunker,the drink, or Out of Bounds.
It's just too funny seeing the characters "celebrate" on bad holes, Baby Mario breaking into tears, Yoshi collapsing on the ground, Luigi curling up and hugging his knees. Also them looking so embarrassed on the scoreboard.
Man, so glad Vernias had that incredible hole-in-one that was shown multiple times within the first 3 minutes of the video. Truly a masterful shot by the GOAT
More Mario Golf, time to witness the incredible skill the Party Crashers have.
What skill?
I'm just waiting to hear "Imagine being in last place with zero Pars".
7:08 the comvined laugh is incredible
Can’t wait to see Sophist win every game.
@@speedman8365 no because Eevee’s white
@@zeke3620 it’s an ongoing joke, just go with it
@@THE__Legend_27 makes perfect sense
So happy this game has returned, I'm sure Vernias is ecstatic to be playing this again :)
If Nick brought up that fumble again, I think Vern would go as apeshit as Nick did on Wario's Battle Canyon.
Honestly he improved quite a bit.
10:57 If Brent sees this comment, I just want to let him know that this quote is as immortal as "do it again."
9:00 Vernias fumbling his shots replay button for y'all
Thank you so much.
16:43 nice "rpg but math is the combat system" reference
You guys should unironically keep playing this. The later courses get pretty ridiculous and your dynamic can make even golf entertaining.
The fun facts about knives after the fun facts about spoons is the perfect sequel
It is definitely a great saga in this video. Sophist took the time to fully explain what knives are and provided several great examples of each knife. What a wonderful description to this video.
Some of his facts are very wrong, namely his statements on "Japanese steel" are completely wrong and read like kamikoto ad, which is a Chinese scam. I copy-paste my response here because it is important to correct misinformation.
For a start, steel doesn't matter where it comes from in the modern day. It's all built to industrial standards with specific names like D2, 1080 ordnance, cpm-m4, 8Cr13MoV, etc. Steel advertised as "Japanese steel" just means "iron sourced from Japan" especially if it doesn't state what town it was made in, because if you're going to try to suggest a steel is better by location you'd use the town which was a way of suggesting quality prior to modern industrialization and lasted at least until the 1960's. If you want a good steel labeled in this way consider a Solingen, Germany knife from the 1940's and 50's, which were imported en-masse at that time following the end of WWII alongside quality knives from Japan, thus creating this perception because of the fact that it was premium knives being imported from very old and very well known knife-making cities. Everything that says "Japanese steel" though is a marketing ploy, usually a Chinese one aimed at western markets. Steel from Japan doesn't differ in quality from Western quality at all today. What you're instead going to get is cheap 3Cr13 or 420J2 crap. You'd be better off sharpening a steel ruler than most of these.
Any time you see a modern knife ask not where it was made, unless the purpose is to support a domestic business, but to name the specific industrial steel identification it was made with. When you see a knife from 1960 and earlier then maybe talk about where it was made and investigate the culture and reputation of that location at the time.
Samurai quality would be considered atrocious and massively underwhelming by today's standards. Our understanding of metal is incredibly more advanced to the steel of the Sengoku period and the techniques of folding used in the Tachi and Katana were done to compensate for poor quality steel as Japan lacked the ability to heat iron to where it melted and impurities could be removed, the folding technique was done to minimize and even out impurities.
Hori hori are also terrible for knife purposes. They're an example of someone making a multitool of things that shouldn't be multitools, it's like the shovel-axe-saw thing I've seen before. It's bad. Do not buy them. They have an entirely wrong profile for a knife. It's literally a hand shovel someone put a sharp edge on. It's, again, a marketing gimmick.
Next, edge retention is not the end all be all of a knife and isn't exactly accurate. What Sophist is referring to is hardness, but that's just one quality that makes good knife steel. A good steel for a knife has 4 factors: hardness, toughness, corrosion resistance, ease of sharpening. Hardness and toughness are very different things, hardness is how hard of a steel it is, how long it will retain an edge before dulling, dulling is when an edge rounds out. To be clear and to wipe away a misconception, you can make ANY material sharp, the quality of steel does not change how sharp you can make something, you can make wood or paper sharp, glass I'm sure you've noticed can be made quite sharp. The problem with hardness is that it can really damage the toughness of a blade, the ability to prevent chipping and snapping, because it can become brittle if too hard without leaving some spring to the steel. It needs to be able to return to form and take some bending exertion. Corrosion resistance is obvious, it's how resistant the steel is to rust, though you can just be more careful about cleaning and maintenance of the knife. The last, ease of sharpening, is also somewhat counter to hardness as a harder steel is usually more difficult to get sharp. You have to keep these in mind when making a blade along with blade profile and design.
I don't really blame Sophist for this misconception, but it needs to be corrected to prevent people falling to scams.
*Addendum: Also never use a pull-through sharpener. Pull-through sharpeners damage the edge and leave it a jagged mess so the knife tears instead of cuts.
@@pubcleEevee moment
@@pubcle🤓
@@pubcleyou should be the commander of the sophisticated society
The thumbs up rat from the editor is my new favorite thing!
14:35 good to know when I have sleeping problems I can just listen to Brent explaining game mechanic's.
plum will forever be my favorite super mario character
17:50 good job editor, that word is a curse in spanish so yeah, good work
real
If you guys wanted to play different characters, there's a cheat code from the original N64 version that still works on this version.
"On the title screen, press Down, Down, Left, Left, Left, Right, Right, Right (all on the D-Pad), then C-Down, C-Down, C-Left, C-Left, C-Left, C-Right, C-Right, C-Right. A jingle will play if you entered the code correctly. This will unlock all characters and courses, except for the Mario's Star course."
7:02
Eevee: This will definitely not be the most replayed part of the video!
Me: (Proceeds to spend the next 5 minutes clicking on this part) 🤣
Thank you editor for all of the one piece references. You truly are my favorite one. And also at 22:16 you should’ve put room shambles since he said the funny word
ima be honest. I had it in my notes but I forgot to add it
U gotta love Evee's commitment to bring us information about knives
5:40 "Maybe you should start frubaboobgap" -Vernias
Man, I love learning fun facts about knives. Haa Haa Haa...
CUT MY LIFE INTO PIECES!!!
7:15 omg their reaction to the monkey made me laugh so hard XD
I am really enjoying the series fellas! I hope the more you learn the more you enjoy golf games! Theyre one of my favorite chill games to relax to
I've been waiting on the second part. Glad it got made
You boys are hilarious, as always! I look forward to every video!
Can we have a moment to appreciate all the hard work the Editors are doing, to cut everything together and doing on behalf around 50 replays the second, with a short plain crash sequence in between, takes really effort and time.
Good Job.
thank you sophist for the fun facts about knives in the description. truly appreciate it.
Some of his facts are very wrong, namely his statements on "Japanese steel" are completely wrong and read like kamikoto ad, which is a Chinese scam. I copy-paste my response here because it is important to correct misinformation.
For a start, steel doesn't matter where it comes from in the modern day. It's all built to industrial standards with specific names like D2, 1080 ordnance, cpm-m4, 8Cr13MoV, etc. Steel advertised as "Japanese steel" just means "iron sourced from Japan" especially if it doesn't state what town it was made in, because if you're going to try to suggest a steel is better by location you'd use the town which was a way of suggesting quality prior to modern industrialization and lasted at least until the 1960's. If you want a good steel labeled in this way consider a Solingen, Germany knife from the 1940's and 50's, which were imported en-masse at that time following the end of WWII alongside quality knives from Japan, thus creating this perception because of the fact that it was premium knives being imported from very old and very well known knife-making cities. Everything that says "Japanese steel" though is a marketing ploy, usually a Chinese one aimed at western markets. Steel from Japan doesn't differ in quality from Western quality at all today. What you're instead going to get is cheap 3Cr13 or 420J2 crap. You'd be better off sharpening a steel ruler than most of these.
Any time you see a modern knife ask not where it was made, unless the purpose is to support a domestic business, but to name the specific industrial steel identification it was made with. When you see a knife from 1960 and earlier then maybe talk about where it was made and investigate the culture and reputation of that location at the time.
Samurai quality would be considered atrocious and massively underwhelming by today's standards. Our understanding of metal is incredibly more advanced to the steel of the Sengoku period and the techniques of folding used in the Tachi and Katana were done to compensate for poor quality steel as Japan lacked the ability to heat iron to where it melted and impurities could be removed, the folding technique was done to minimize and even out impurities.
Hori hori are also terrible for knife purposes. They're an example of someone making a multitool of things that shouldn't be multitools, it's like the shovel-axe-saw thing I've seen before. It's bad. Do not buy them. They have an entirely wrong profile for a knife. It's literally a hand shovel someone put a sharp edge on. It's, again, a marketing gimmick.
Next, edge retention is not the end all be all of a knife and isn't exactly accurate. What Sophist is referring to is hardness, but that's just one quality that makes good knife steel. A good steel for a knife has 4 factors: hardness, toughness, corrosion resistance, ease of sharpening. Hardness and toughness are very different things, hardness is how hard of a steel it is, how long it will retain an edge before dulling, dulling is when an edge rounds out. To be clear and to wipe away a misconception, you can make ANY material sharp, the quality of steel does not change how sharp you can make something, you can make wood or paper sharp, glass I'm sure you've noticed can be made quite sharp. The problem with hardness is that it can really damage the toughness of a blade, the ability to prevent chipping and snapping, because it can become brittle if too tough without leaving some spring to the steel. It needs to be able to return to form and take some bending exertion. Corrosion resistance is obvious, it's how resistant the steel is to rust. The last, ease of sharpening, is also somewhat counter to hardness as a harder steel is usually more difficult to get sharp. You have to keep these in mind when making a blade along with blade profile and design.
I don't really blame Sophist for this misconception, but it needs to be corrected to prevent people falling to scams.
*Addendum: Also never use a pull-through sharpener. Pull-through sharpeners damage the edge and leave it a jagged mess so the knife tears instead of cuts now.
@@pubcle🤓
@@kbthegoatwbro shut your mouth your not funny at least I read it and don't get scammed I'd rather be a nerd than get scammed
YEEEAAAAAH BABYYY MORE N64 PARTY CRASHERS
I’ve never seen them so relaxed, this is surreal
Did I mention how bad I am at Golf? I tried it on Wii Sports. Could not get a 🕳️ in 1.
OH! Sophist at it again, educating us about utensils! You love to see it, as Feralinape would say. Thank you, once again Sophist, for I have now learned about the one-pronged sharp fork!
Fun fact! Knives were originally also used the way forks are, by stabbing the food to move it. Forks are an off-branch of knives.
Also, to correct some of the things sophist said:
Some of his facts are very wrong, namely his statements on "Japanese steel" are completely wrong and read like kamikoto ad, which is a Chinese scam. I copy-paste my response here because it is important to correct misinformation.
For a start, steel doesn't matter where it comes from in the modern day. It's all built to industrial standards with specific names like D2, 1080 ordnance, cpm-m4, 8Cr13MoV, etc. Steel advertised as "Japanese steel" just means "iron sourced from Japan" especially if it doesn't state what town it was made in, because if you're going to try to suggest a steel is better by location you'd use the town which was a way of suggesting quality prior to modern industrialization and lasted at least until the 1960's. If you want a good steel labeled in this way consider a Solingen, Germany knife from the 1940's and 50's, which were imported en-masse at that time following the end of WWII alongside quality knives from Japan, thus creating this perception because of the fact that it was premium knives being imported from very old and very well known knife-making cities. Everything that says "Japanese steel" though is a marketing ploy, usually a Chinese one aimed at western markets. Steel from Japan doesn't differ in quality from Western quality at all today. What you're instead going to get is cheap 8Cr13MoV or 420J2 crap. You'd be better off sharpening a steel ruler than most of these.
Any time you see a modern knife ask not where it was made, unless the purpose is to support a domestic business, but to name the specific industrial steel identification it was made with. When you see a knife from 1960 and earlier then maybe talk about where it was made and investigate the culture and reputation of that location at the time.
Samurai quality would be considered atrocious and massively underwhelming by today's standards. Our understanding of metal is incredibly more advanced to the steel of the Sengoku period and the techniques of folding used in the Tachi and Katana were done to compensate for poor quality steel as Japan lacked the ability to heat iron to where it melted and impurities could be removed, the folding technique was done to minimize and even out impurities.
Hori hori are also terrible for knife purposes. They're an example of someone making a multitool of things that shouldn't be multitools, it's like the shovel-axe-saw thing I've seen before. It's bad. Do not buy them. They have an entirely wrong profile for a knife. It's literally a hand shovel someone put a sharp edge on. It's, again, a marketing gimmick.
Next, edge retention is not the end all be all of a knife and isn't exactly accurate. What Sophist is referring to is hardness, but that's just one quality that makes good knife steel. A good steel for a knife has 4 factors: hardness, toughness, corrosion resistance, ease of sharpening. Hardness and toughness are very different things, hardness is how hard of a steel it is, how long it will retain an edge before dulling, dulling is when an edge rounds out. To be clear and to wipe away a misconception, you can make ANY material sharp, the quality of steel does not change how sharp you can make something, you can make wood or paper sharp, glass I'm sure you've noticed can be made quite sharp. The problem with hardness is that it can really damage the toughness of a blade, the ability to prevent chipping and snapping, because it can become brittle if too tough without leaving some spring to the steel. It needs to be able to return to form and take some bending exertion. Corrosion resistance is obvious, it's how resistant the steel is to rust. The last, ease of sharpening, is also somewhat counter to hardness as a harder steel is usually more difficult to get sharp. You have to keep these in mind when making a blade along with blade profile and design.
I don't really blame Sophist for this misconception, but it needs to be corrected to prevent people falling to scams.
*Addendum: Also never use a pull-through sharpener. Pull-through sharpeners damage the edge and leave it a jagged mess so the knife tears instead of cuts.
@@pubcle🤓
@@pubcleWhat incredible knowledge!😮
loving the knife facts sophist!
we need more fun facts from sophist in the descriptions
Thank you Sophist for your pills of knowledge. I shall get a high grade in the kitchen items test for tomorrow. God bless you man
You guys make golf fun to watch. I hope this series continues.
With so many editor replays, we end up watching the video again
I've always liked that the others never made fun of Eevee's stutter. I usually get put on blast by friends and family. It's nice to see others not be harsh or annoying
Thanks to Eevee I’ve started using “my brother in Christ” in casual conversation and people look at me funny 🥺
There’s a subtle One Piece motif to this video. Epic
I've learnt so much about knives, thanks Sophist
Me binge watching Party Crashers for the last 4 hours and then making a new video
The descriptions keep getting better and better. Also thank you editor :)
Thanks for the info on the knives sophist!
I got reccomended a knife ad and then i read the description... thanks sophist 🤦🏽♂️
adore the editors work on this one
much appreciation to the editor. ❤
Just wanna say whoever is their editor is amazing. Pumping out videos on a decent upload schedule with consistently great edits? My man 👍👍
I love the one piece editing so much
Sophist is a total mood.
The Ultra Instinct theme is the official theme when they play Mario Golf.
Heyy new video. I really had a very Bad day and these video always cheer me UP. I'm exicted to watch it.😁😁😁.
Perfect.
I needed the knife lore.
damn that editor sure is cool and awesome. I wonder who could've edited this video
I gotta say. The editing….. is on point 👌
i try
Yes, knives are importaint to know your information on. Thanks Eevee for teaching us the ways of the knive
The abrupt Ultra Instinct sfx got me everytime 😂 Full points
Thanks Sophist for the cool knife facts!
cant wait for them to play the gamecube version, the perfect shots are so cool
That “doki doki plum club” glitch edit messed me up the first time around
20:49 Bro, editor is making fun of Nick when he's right.
I'm sorry to say that I am swapping legions from the TCNation to the Vernation solely because he referenced Bugsnax in this video.
14:45 Brent being the first one to figure out how to adjust power lol. I played that shit as a kid I been yelling at them all and now I applaud breent
You guys aren't taking into account that it's raining, which makes the greens slower.
Love this series; if we get another video, we need a "Party Crashers go ACTUAL golfing"
I think the party crashers should play Dead by Daylight, Brent has already so he can teach them the ropes.
also the vern nation temptation 11:22
Good round! This game has one of the steepest learning curves of any Mario game. The Mario Golf games after this add many more quality of life enhancements to be a little more forgiving.
Someone please tell Vern to stop putting from the rough! 😅
It was great that kind of started to get putting right as the rain started so it add some changes to how to guess the power since rain slows the ball faster
Sophist is a GOD for actually making that detailed information about knives in the description
The most replayed part ended up being Eevee asking the editor to insert the green screen plane crash every time the game lagged. All four of them failed to predict it.
I learned something today Sophist. Maybe you can teach us more about kitchen utensils like spoons or forks.
Thank you Sophist for teaching us about knives.
Some of his facts are very wrong, namely his statements on "Japanese steel" are completely wrong and read like komikoto ad, which is a Chinese scam. I copy-paste my response here because it is important to correct misinformation.
For a start, steel doesn't matter where it comes from in the modern day. It's all built to industrial standards with specific names like D2, 1080 ordnance, cpm-m4, 8Cr13MoV, etc. Steel advertised as "Japanese steel" just means "iron sourced from Japan" especially if it doesn't state what town it was made in, because if you're going to try to suggest a steel is better by location you'd use the town which was a way of suggesting quality prior to modern industrialization and lasted at least until the 1960's. If you want a good steel labeled in this way consider a Solingen, Germany knife from the 1940's and 50's, which were imported en-masse at that time following the end of WWII alongside quality knives from Japan, thus creating this perception because of the fact that it was premium knives being imported from very old and very well known knife-making cities. Everything that says "Japanese steel" though is a marketing ploy, usually a Chinese one aimed at western markets. Steel from Japan doesn't differ in quality from Western quality at all today. What you're instead going to get is cheap 8Cr13MoV or 420J2 crap. You'd be better off sharpening a steel ruler than most of these.
Any time you see a modern knife ask not where it was made, unless the purpose is to support a domestic business, but to name the specific industrial steel identification it was made with. When you see a knife from 1960 and earlier then maybe talk about where it was made and investigate the culture and reputation of that location at the time.
Samurai quality would be considered atrocious and massively underwhelming by today's standards. Our understanding of metal is incredibly more advanced to the steel of the Sengoku period and the techniques of folding used in the Tachi and Katana were done to compensate for poor quality steel as Japan lacked the ability to heat iron to where it melted and impurities could be removed, the folding technique was done to minimize and even out impurities.
Hori hori are also terrible for knife purposes. They're an example of someone making a multitool of things that shouldn't be multitools, it's like the shovel-axe-saw thing I've seen before. It's bad. Do not buy them. They have an entirely wrong profile for a knife. It's literally a hand shovel someone put a sharp edge on. It's, again, a marketing gimmick.
Next, edge retention is not the end all be all of a knife and isn't exactly accurate. What Sophist is referring to is hardness, but that's just one quality that makes good knife steel. A good steel for a knife has 4 factors: hardness, toughness, corrosion resistance, ease of sharpening. Hardness and toughness are very different things, hardness is how hard of a steel it is, how long it will retain an edge before dulling, dulling is when an edge rounds out. To be clear and to wipe away a misconception, you can make ANY material sharp, the quality of steel does not change how sharp you can make something, you can make wood or paper sharp, glass I'm sure you've noticed can be made quite sharp. The problem with hardness is that it can really damage the toughness of a blade, the ability to prevent chipping and snapping, because it can become brittle if too tough without leaving some spring to the steel. It needs to be able to return to form and take some bending exertion. Corrosion resistance is obvious, it's how resistant the steel is to rust. The last, ease of sharpening, is also somewhat counter to hardness as a harder steel is usually more difficult to get sharp. You have to keep these in mind when making a blade.
I don't really blame Sophist for this misconception, but it needs to be corrected to prevent people falling to scams.
*Addendum: Also never use a pull-through sharpener. Pull-through sharpeners damage the edge and leave it a jagged mess so the knife tears instead of cuts now.
@@pubcle🤓
Like the editor. Always happy to see a fellow One Piece fan.^^
With all the one piece usage by the editor i thought when Nick said he was in Shambles I imagined a piplup being flung around in Law's Room.
They’ll never let go Vernias’ fumble, will they? 😁
The first Vern shot was insane
Yessssss!!! Another party crashers video!!!!!!
Fun fact guys. Rains affects drag on putts. Gotta add like 10% for rainy putts
Now we need Vern to write the descriptions
Editing super funny and smooth this time around 👌
thank you thank you
@@s.c.m.r. no problem, keep it up! :D
7:08 thanks for the trust given😒
Any time sophist is just in the video I bet there is just chaos 🤭
THE PEOPLE DEMAND MORE GOLF! I desire the four of you to play more, and to perhaps suffer through unlocking characters and stages.
*Wario; bane of my progress*
At 16:43 if you look at Luigi’s head icon, the tree makes it look like he has a really long neck
That was a fun video, Also the Fun Facts from Sophist were very enjoyable, Thanks for that Guys. =]
I love the censor parry edit
The thumbnail tells me that we’re going in for a wild ride
You can taunt in game by moving the joysticks when it’s not your turn
How very RNG of you, Sophist, to put the entire history of the kitchen knife in the description.
Came for the Party Crashers, stayed for the Plum Gaming
This Editor doing most of the edits One Piece Edits I like
Gotta love all the One Piece memes/reaction images in the video
I like the Sonic and One Piece edits as a fan of both😊❤