⚔️ "From Small Fry to Sea King: Bibos Takes Down the MEGALODON!" (Feed and Grow Fish Part 1)!!
Автор: Dock Boys
Загружено: 2025-12-04
Просмотров: 27
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In today’s video, I jump into Feed and Grow: Fish as the mighty Bibos and take on the legendary Megalodon! 💥 Watch as I level up and survive the ocean chaos, and finally challenge the biggest predator in the sea. Did the Bibos stand a chance? Stick around to find out!
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💬 Comment below what fish you want me to play as next!
#FeedAndGrowFish #Bibos #Megalodon #BigD #Gaming #SurvivalGame
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Good Reads:
/ meaningless
Game has nice graphics and looks fun, though loses the appeal for me after watching this whole video.
1:28 I'm eating Tom Yum's Ho-Ya noodles.
So much for the edited video with copyright free music that you said you planned to do in this video, lol. YOUR WORD MEANS NOTHING, SIR.
May your attention and intelligence be in good shape to ace your exams! :)
You did a really good job keeping a good talking pace throughout this video!
Really pleasant mouse clicking sounds, mmm...
Since Good Reads won't allow me to post my review on Albert Camus's The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays, I'll post it here:
"Let's retry this review for a third time from scratch as a result of Good Reads deleting my reviews, this time I'll save them separately, and can finally have peace of mind. Though I doubt this will compare to the lavish rigor work I put into the last one.
Perhaps I should be thankful to Good Reads for doing this, as it's a valuable lesson taught in absurdity about repeating the same task over and over again, in a world without meaning. What matters is one's attitude in the face of futile work.
For years now I have been exposed to this author, most notably this seminal work in absurdist philosophy from countless YouTubers - from old Wisecrack, Philosophy Tube, Academy of Ideas, Sisyphus 55, and Crash Course. I even had a deeply religious friend who carried around this author's books. The last sentence had been spoiled to me for nearly a decade, to say the least. Even Northernlion has quoted it a couple of times in his Isaac videos.
That, however, hadn't spoiled much of the content in this superb treatise on absurdism. I've journaled about absurdism, the reasons for it, what it's been like to live with the belief, contemplating deeply about my own self-annihilation and infinite time, but even with all this "preparatory work" couldn't have prepared me for what this book had in mind.
I barely could scratch my head to what he was saying for about the first 40% of it, but afterwards, giving myself some time to reflect, it started to flow with ease. This is, in my opinion, a good introduction to some existential thinking and absurdist philosophy, or philosophy in general. It's pretty short, introduces many many authors and their ideas, and is written in mostly plain English, though you may need to look up terms like "exigence" "propound" and "a priori."
Like Plato's Symposium, this book brings together a bunch of literary figures according to the subject matter, and basically bounce their ideas off one another. Though A. Camus doesn't use it to the effect of a fictional story of them, he does invent strawmen, and propound his own conclusions or juxtapositions through them, like the Conqueror, or the actor. It really does feel like he's expressing the creative art of an erudite mind writing dead authors as if they're vivant on page.
As someone who is a huge fan of Friedrich Nietzsche, this was a huge delight talking to A. Camus about him.
What are the 3 logical paths an absurdist individual can choose? The question is like when Victor Frankl expressed the ways in which a person can find meaning through "immortality" in his Man's Search for Meaning. The answers and quotes found in here have been comforting, validating, and reassuring. He provides clear answers in the oft dark mind of absurdist thinking, showing the aloofness that can spring, that absurdism can be liberating rather than a burden; that lack of fidelity in a higher order and a belief in absurdism doesn't naturally always lead to self-annihilation - I really wish I had read this sooner when I struggled with those dubious thoughts.
... yeah, I'm not the most proud of this review, compared to the last iteration, but it's a serviceable summary to my parting thoughts on this masterful composition."
I do wonder if someone will one day stumble upon all these hidden vlogs I scatter in the depths of video descriptions and start binge reading them, or whether they'll be quoted in a eulogy of/for me? That'd be cool, the recognition. Someone having the fascination to comb through my thoughts presented to no one but myself and a few isolated internet sleuths.
Liam, December 4th, 2025.
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