@PrimerBlobs

Love it!

@samuelmackey7081

You can code, you’re funny, can animate, and you’re studying neuroscience. You’re going to be something special in the future.

@Scrumboiling

Legend has it, in an old simulation, a single gooblet wanders, eating, drinking, wandering and nothing more, content with its tiny digital life.

@batsmonster5874

PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE MAKE THE GOOBLET SIMULATION INTO A WALLPAPER ENGINE BACKGROUND OR SOMETHING I NEED TO HAVE A LIL GUY AS MY OWN I DONT CARE HOW BAD CONSTANTLY RUNNING A SIMULATION LIKE THIS WILL COOK MY PC I NEED IT

@cocosupercell

this guy just tricked me into watching a 40 minute documentary about evolution, classic.
Edit: Thanks for all the likes! ❤

@levymgc8401

I just wanna point out I didn’t even realise this video had no music in it. You were THAT interesting.

@Iuigi_t

Seing everything I've learned in my entire first semester of second grade high school biology in the 40 minutes this video lasts is crazy.

@patatespatates2247

Here's what I think you can add:

1. You can add creatures that live in different places like in water, near bushes etc.
2. A creature that is an apex predator or like an eagle that flies and catches it's prey.
3. You can add nests that the same type of creatures build together and make a base where they can store food.
4. You can add some sort of enviromental hazards like earthquakes, floods etc.

@nejlacaglayan7563

please continue on this project i want more scrunkly goobers, more mechanics, this is just too good.

@swipefounddead

If you ever make an update to this thing (which I highly think you should), I’d like to see more development on their brains. Randomly picked personalities that affect when they eat. and randomly picking how attracted they are to different traits like personality and color. Make them fear predators, travel in packs, make friendships, and pretty much every unused idea mentioned in the video, they were all great. I do know, however, as a professional lazy person, thinking of these ideas is MUCH EASIER than implementing them, but if you can find the time, I’d love to see this happen. Also, if you aren’t already, start writing your ideas down the moment you get them so they don’t slip away. I guess that could go for any creative hobby.

@3MB3Rx134

My favorite thing about this video is that you could put it in a biology or a computer engineering class and it would fit in at both

@BlueScreensMods

The reason the species thing didn't work as you were expecting was because the goblets don't run away from the wombos

@spacesqueakers7393

i love you how you slowly intergrated so much teaching of biology into this video, it brought me back to year 10 when i was learning DNA and obsessed over making trihybrid and tetrahybrid punnet squares for fun. this has to be my fav video this year. love it

@sabrina0013

Hh x Hh = Hh being "half right" was excellent foreshadowing. I knew the distribution table was coming soon afterwards! Sure, I usually use them for dice rolls and stat blocks, but same difference :)

@RKIOrbMage

As a big primer enjoyer as well, Wow, i wasn't expecting for you to do smth like this, this vid is awesome!

@user-xs9ow2kd7y

I love this! So as an animal behavior student, I HIGHLY recommend looking into stable strategies and the animal behavior game theory. U struggled to make multiple species stable bc u missed cost vs benefit! Sooo I recommend having it so that at a given bush, there is an interaction depending on the species. If it’s two gooblets, they fight (up to chance who wins). Winner takes the food and loser is injured. If the injured one loses again they die. The winners can continue to reproduce. If there is a Wombo and a Goober the Wombo always wins and the goober is now injured. If an injured goober and Wombo interact the Wombo always wins. If two Wombos interact they fight, one is injured by two stages and the other is injured by one. IF they interact with another Wombo and reach a 3rd stage of injury, they die. If a Wombo eats 3 goobers they can create a new Wombo no matter of injury status. This will make it so that the Number of Wombos is limited by the number of Goobers and vise versa. We simulated this in class by pretending to be doves and hawks and fighting by playing rock paper scissors and found that after a couple of interactions there is an equilibrium that is reached. That equilibrium changes depending on the cost! (more or less Injury stages in this case). If u want to dive deeper, look into animal Interactions game theory.  hope this helps!

@icoso

goober

first person who comments why the A T C G are coloured the way they are gets a cookie

@dudeman9007

as a person who likes animal history/evolution, i fucking love this.

@koaya730

This video is absolutely incredible! I don't know how else to put this, but I relearned so much from this than I did in school and in a much more fun scenario. I NEED a sequel to this, this is top-tier studying material you've made!

@teally-bop

This one video is 80% of biology. Honestly, I'm impressed