STORI3D PAST Productions
STORI3D PAST Productions
  • Видео 32
  • Просмотров 1 478 405
Skinned Armor for Medieval Engineers
A quick video spot showing more of what I'm up to when not recreating Roman worlds -- recreating Roman armour! Thanks to a very, very kind and patient soul who goes by the nickname of "Equinox" in Keen Software House's community, I am learning how to rig and skin armour like this lorica segmentata, to bring it slowly into the Medieval Engineers game. I am not good at this. By any means. But just seeing the beginnings of it maybe helps show a little more what this game & software can potentially do.
Просмотров: 2 141

Видео

Coming Soon: The Roman FrontierComing Soon: The Roman Frontier
Coming Soon: The Roman Frontier
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.5 лет назад
Been a while since my last video, but I haven't been sitting still. My latest work takes me away from Mt. Vesuvius, and back to grounds familiar & dear. A lot has happened in the past couple of years. Let's see what this game software can do now to bring the Roman frontier to life! Special huge thanks to my friend shad (ruclips.net/channel/UCB1H06NZ1WaKzh9e_tsm3Cgvideos), who took the world and...
Pompeii 3D Reconstruction: Theres No Place Like HomePompeii 3D Reconstruction: Theres No Place Like Home
Pompeii 3D Reconstruction: Theres No Place Like Home
Просмотров 72 тыс.6 лет назад
While in Pompeii few could reach the elite, many tried to recreate "the good life" in their own ways. Some more successfully than others. From grand urban villas, to small private homes, to smaller apartments, see all the different things "home" could mean in ancient Pompeii. This build created with "Medieval Engineers" software and a number of mods. If you own Medieval Engineers, you can downl...
Pompeii: Upper Class Meets Working ClassPompeii: Upper Class Meets Working Class
Pompeii: Upper Class Meets Working Class
Просмотров 86 тыс.6 лет назад
In ancient Pompeii, the richest and poorest lived amid each other, often separated only by a thin partition wall. Their lives & worlds also mingled on the streets. The smell of bakeries, the din of smithies, the hustle and bustle of taverns and shops. Take a short tour of the various industry & commerce, patronage & charity one could find within steps of the elite House of Sallust. Source of ma...
Pompeii and the House of Sallust - 3D ReconstructionPompeii and the House of Sallust - 3D Reconstruction
Pompeii and the House of Sallust - 3D Reconstruction
Просмотров 1 млн6 лет назад
The House of Sallust at Pompeii was discovered more than 200 years ago, and still is one of the best-preserved elite homes in the city. In it, you can see both continuity & modification both reflecting the tastes and styles of Roman life over time. I have used the "Medieval Engineers" software engine with many mods to create this walkable, playable, explorable version. This introduction will sh...
The Roman Frontier in the East -- Qasr Bashir Fort ReconstructedThe Roman Frontier in the East -- Qasr Bashir Fort Reconstructed
The Roman Frontier in the East -- Qasr Bashir Fort Reconstructed
Просмотров 25 тыс.6 лет назад
Qasr Bashir in the Jordanian desert, is an incredibly rare survivor a Roman fort with walls still standing 20 or more feet high. Yet it has been surprisingly neglected by archaeology. Using the "Medieval Engineers" software and many of my own 3D models, I have attempted to recreate the fort to give an idea of what it would have looked like in its 4th century heyday. The Endangered Archaeology i...
Romanizing a Medieval Game -- Arms and Armour in Medieval EngineersRomanizing a Medieval Game -- Arms and Armour in Medieval Engineers
Romanizing a Medieval Game -- Arms and Armour in Medieval Engineers
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.7 лет назад
The Medieval Engineers software is amazing for any gamer/lover of history. With some time & patience, its whole basic engine can be modified to the shape of whatever era or culture you want. This video shows my ongoing efforts to create a sort of "Roman Engineers" within the M.E. framework. It also highlights some of the power already in the game's core mechanics, and how that power can be harn...
Catching Up - New Skills, New PossibilitiesCatching Up - New Skills, New Possibilities
Catching Up - New Skills, New Possibilities
Просмотров 3 тыс.7 лет назад
After several months away, I wanted to do a catch-up video. Medieval Engineers software has changed and grown so much over the past several months, much of my old work has now been left behind. This has created headaches, but also endless opportunities to stretch, learn more, and create even bigger and better historical reconstructions in the future. In the meantime, I have been learning how to...
Medieval Engineers "Utumno" - A Physics/Puzzle ProjectMedieval Engineers "Utumno" - A Physics/Puzzle Project
Medieval Engineers "Utumno" - A Physics/Puzzle Project
Просмотров 8998 лет назад
Using the world-building and set-design tools of Medieval Engineers to create a physics/puzzle game (or set of mini-games). This brief intro shows off the game's stackable items, physics systems (like drawbridges held up by "tearable" rope), and interactivity (throwing stones, using torches, etc.)
Roman Forts - Building Stories from Stones (featuring "Medieval Engineers")Roman Forts - Building Stories from Stones (featuring "Medieval Engineers")
Roman Forts - Building Stories from Stones (featuring "Medieval Engineers")
Просмотров 99 тыс.8 лет назад
When what's left of most Roman forts are just a few stones in the ground, how do we know what they looked like, how they worked? Take a look! This video runs you through the basic parts found in most any Roman fort from Scotland to Jordan, and uses "Medieval Engineers" software to show something of how they may have looked in real life. To see more Roman fort rebuilds, check out my other RUclip...
Archaeology and 3D Software: What It Can and Can't Tell Us About Our PastArchaeology and 3D Software: What It Can and Can't Tell Us About Our Past
Archaeology and 3D Software: What It Can and Can't Tell Us About Our Past
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.8 лет назад
Archaeology can do so much to put stories & lives back on the ruins of the ancient past. But its limits can be much more "limiting" than some would like to admit! Watch as I use "Medieval Engineers" gaming software to show what we know and more importantly don't know about Hadrian's Wall, and Roman forts in general. To see more of my rebuilt Roman forts, please check out my other videos, and vi...
Hadrian's Wall - Vindolanda Walkthrough - using "Medieval Engineers" softwareHadrian's Wall - Vindolanda Walkthrough - using "Medieval Engineers" software
Hadrian's Wall - Vindolanda Walkthrough - using "Medieval Engineers" software
Просмотров 64 тыс.8 лет назад
Vindolanda Roman fort sat just behind Hadrian's Wall, and was occupied from the late 1st century until well after the Roman Empire had faded away. It's a remarkable place with a long and remarkable history. It's also one of the best-excavated & best-understood Roman forts & towns anywhere. Using the Medieval Engineers software, and 85 years of archaeological reports, I have put together a recon...
Hadrian's Wall - Housesteads Fort Walkthrough - Medieval EngineersHadrian's Wall - Housesteads Fort Walkthrough - Medieval Engineers
Hadrian's Wall - Housesteads Fort Walkthrough - Medieval Engineers
Просмотров 44 тыс.8 лет назад
My latest build takes you up onto Hadrian's Wall itself. Housesteads Fort is one of the Wall forts, and one of the most famous Roman forts in the world. Its dramatic setting at the top of a long ridge makes it an imposing sight, even today. I wanted to re-create what it would have looked like in the 3rd Century, based on archaeology done in 1898, the 1930s, and the 1970s-80s. A Roman fort wasn'...
13th Century Murder & Justice -- Medieval Engineers13th Century Murder & Justice -- Medieval Engineers
13th Century Murder & Justice -- Medieval Engineers
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.8 лет назад
After the murder of the town's nightwatchman is discovered the next morning, the attacker is found. How did a 13th century town deal with murder? Watch and find out. The entire town of Greymantle is available as a download from the Steam website workshop at: steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles.... All you need is the Medieval Engineers software to open and explore it for yourself. Music credits: "Ra...
13th Century Life After Dark - Medieval Engineers13th Century Life After Dark - Medieval Engineers
13th Century Life After Dark - Medieval Engineers
Просмотров 11 тыс.8 лет назад
When the sun sets, a different kind of life takes hold on the incredibly dark & barren streets of a Medieval town. Come see how 13th Century Greymantle handles the dark hours. The entire town of Greymantle is available as a download from the Steam website workshop at: steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=508036654. All you need is the Medieval Engineers software to open and explore it...

Комментарии

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 4 дня назад

    I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL. PLEASE CONTINUE TO SHARE YOUR TRUTH!!!

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 4 дня назад

    THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! THAT IS A TOTALLY AWSOME EDUCATIONAL TOOL!!!! WE NEED MORE TECHNOLOGY LIKE THAT TO UNDERSTAND OUR PAST BETTER.

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 4 дня назад

    ROMAN LIFE 101

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 4 дня назад

    SUGGESTION: PLEASE RECONSTRUCT OTHER FAMOUS HOMES IN POMPEII AND HERCULAINUM. TO GIVE US A BETTER IDEA OF WHAT THE FINISHED PRODUCT LOOKED LIKE. THIS HELPS US OUT ALOT!!!!!

  • @JSUKyrks69
    @JSUKyrks69 25 дней назад

    No storage for the hoover or ironing board 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @a24-45
    @a24-45 Месяц назад

    Thanks for helping us understand better how these villas looked. What I find so off-putting about Roman villas: 1. Virtually no windows in the bedrooms and dining rooms. Just one small high one with heavy bars, no view. To be inside in any of these rooms with the door closed --- i.e. at bedtime, or at any time of day or night during winter (to keep out the cold coming in through the atrium and off the pool), would have felt to me like being in a prison cell. I understand why the Romans did not risk putting any windows on the perimeter walls -- they had no choice but to make their homes high security compounds. But no wonder they painted pictures on the walls. Anything to fill the blankness... 2. The rooms were so dark! due to the before-mentioned lack of windows. Even if the walls were painted all white, it would have been very difficult to do any meaningful work inside, even during the daytime, and overcast days would have been worse. I understand that lamp oil was expensive, so Romans probably didnt use lamps in the daytime. Whether writing, sewing, cleaning or repairing, I imagine every household task that could conceivably have been carried out in the atrium or garden took place in those in those open areas -- weather permitting -- as they were the only places with natural light sufficient to see properly what you were doing. And with so much of one's day spent in these verandah-like outdoor zones, and not actually inside, living in such a residence must have felt rather like living in a campsite. OK in summer -- but brutal in the colder months.

  • @fieracarmen4713
    @fieracarmen4713 Месяц назад

    Atâta eleganță stil și rafinament la o civilizație de acum două mii de ani!Romanii au fost cea mai avansată civilizație din istoria omenirii.

  • @binabina4445
    @binabina4445 2 месяца назад

    This is the first time I've ever heard someone talking about the life of normal people in pompeii. I didnt even know about the upstairs apartments. Thanks.

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 2 месяца назад

      Your comment made my day, thanks for it! These videos were a lot of fun to do.

    • @binabina4445
      @binabina4445 2 месяца назад

      @@Stori3d_Past keep it up! I've watched all your Roman videos. I would love to see one about villa san marcos and the other villas in stabiae.

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 2 месяца назад

      @@binabina4445 I wanted to make so many more of these! Sadly 5 years ago the developers updated the whole game, broke most of my mods, then released & abandoned it. So I wasn't able to do anymore. A real shame, even today there's still no software that can do what Medieval Engineers was getting close to being able to do.

    • @binabina4445
      @binabina4445 2 месяца назад

      @@Stori3d_Past oh man what a loss. Maybe you need to take up game design yourself lol

  • @billyboasiako1775
    @billyboasiako1775 2 месяца назад

    Revelation 22:16 Jesus Christ is EROS Lucifer morningstar POMPEII Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain Vesuvius erupt end,sin City 😮😅😊

  • @billyboasiako1775
    @billyboasiako1775 2 месяца назад

    Revelation 22:16 Jesus Christ is EROS Lucifer morningstar POMPEII Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain Vesuvius erupt end, sin City 😮😅😊

  • @Chris.Davies
    @Chris.Davies 2 месяца назад

    30 skull-breaking frames per second. This is a slideshow, not a video.

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 2 месяца назад

      Yeah it was made with an extremely unoptimized game that was still in Alpha early release. My hope was always that the game would grow & that my video skills would improve. But the game got updated, broken, and abandoned. A bum deal.

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 2 месяца назад

      The devs did improve one thing, they later made it possible to set camera flyover paths, so that turns wouldn't look so jerky & horrible. I wish they'd been able to do more.

  • @niyanair7275
    @niyanair7275 3 месяца назад

    Currently doing ocr gcse latin and this was so helpful!

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 3 месяца назад

      Thanks much for letting me know, that made my day! I'm glad you found it helpful.

  • @denvercolorado811
    @denvercolorado811 3 месяца назад

    Very fucking cool man!!!!

  • @rogerdevero8726
    @rogerdevero8726 4 месяца назад

    So much easier to understand Pompeii thru what you've done. Love archaeology, but barren ruins just don't give a clear picture. Kudos - John 3:16

  • @tlowenbraun
    @tlowenbraun 4 месяца назад

    Awesome!

  • @1979Heyjude
    @1979Heyjude 4 месяца назад

    I don't understand. The rich residents would keep their front doors open?

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 4 месяца назад

      That's right. During daylight hours, most rich homes considered the atrium inside their house like a semi-public space. People could come in, wait to meet with the owner about business. Maybe even have a look around at artwork, like a museum. A rich house was a public statement about the wealth & power of the family. So they liked showing that off. These households always had a number of servants and slaves keeping an eye on things to make sure that nobody went where they shouldn't, or took something they shouldn't.

  • @lawrieflowers8314
    @lawrieflowers8314 5 месяцев назад

    Very impressive and very interesting! However, I can’t help thinking that living in virtually unheated stone buildings, especially with the climate up in the North of England, can’t have been much fun for the majority of the occupants there. It would be just bearable today with modern hi-tech clothing, so how they managed to endure it is a bit of a puzzle…

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 4 месяца назад

      One thing I wish I had been able to show off better was the hearths and probably also the braziers. There was probably always a fire going somewhere inside, or if not inside then a fire outside and stone or copper vats inside -- braziers -- to hold red-hot coals brought inside to give off their heat. It was probably a smoky environment with itchy noses & watery eyes & sooty cheeks. And I bet could be pretty miserable on the worst days. But livable.

    • @lawrieflowers8314
      @lawrieflowers8314 4 месяца назад

      @@Stori3d_Past Yes, they would have had fires somewhere, but I wonder about the fuel they used? Presumably it wasn’t coal, so that leaves wood. Apart from the great labour involved in cutting, transporting, splitting, then storing it to season for at least a year etc. they would have quickly denuded the countryside around them, which anyway looks rather bleak & bare.

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 4 месяца назад

      @@lawrieflowers8314 I think this is part of where the famous Roman logistics comes in. In addition to a granary shipping system (one of the huge forts on the east coast was at one point *all* granaries!), they must have been shipping other things like fuel. Because you're right, there weren't a ton of trees even 2000 years ago. They probably also used local peaty earth, and horse dung. A part-cavalry fort like Vindolanda would have had 120 cavalry horses (plus pack animals), producing multiple tons of dung every day.

  • @likeicare300
    @likeicare300 6 месяцев назад

    Incredible

  • @philm6722
    @philm6722 6 месяцев назад

    Must have been cold in the winter

  • @gowanhewlett745
    @gowanhewlett745 7 месяцев назад

    One of the most agreeable presentation styles ( re Pompeii) which l have ever seen. THANKYOU

  • @charlesmichaelschmitt6412
    @charlesmichaelschmitt6412 7 месяцев назад

    3:25 in the left corner is a bust of, at first I thought Hannibal Barca, but must be Pericles!

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 7 месяцев назад

      I honestly can't remember which ones I found and used. If the game software had survived, I had hoped to build up a big collection of these for later videos. I do remember that I used a Caracalla one in a Pompeii build coz I didn't have another one of the right time period!

  • @cezarykoodziej4248
    @cezarykoodziej4248 9 месяцев назад

    It seems to me, after visiting Herculaneum myself, that Roman urban buildings were at least 1floor taller than animations would suggest with wooden constructions on the top

  • @monkeysa43
    @monkeysa43 9 месяцев назад

    Oh is Romans were very clever people well the Saxons were living in poverty. If you was a commander of a thought, do you live the life of luxury? Carpenters, blacksmiths, allsorts of people the commander would’ve probably had his own or definitely had his own cooks fine wines and very good food. Interesting computer images thank you

  • @robertmartinez4174
    @robertmartinez4174 9 месяцев назад

    I like The US flag in that ancient home. nice touch.

  • @kathleenrowan
    @kathleenrowan 10 месяцев назад

    This is great! Thanks, Chariovalda!

  • @josephchandler8358
    @josephchandler8358 10 месяцев назад

    Playing they Hurrian Hymn in the background? Nice touch

  • @raulx8007
    @raulx8007 10 месяцев назад

    Is still available to download? I subscribed but i can not played

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 10 месяцев назад

      No sadly. They made a huge update to the game in 2019, and it broke almost all of the mods. I was never able to put the Pompeii world (or any of the other worlds) back together again. A real disappointement! Thank you for trying though.

    • @raulx8007
      @raulx8007 10 месяцев назад

      @@Stori3d_Past Is there any method to save offline those mods? I bought this shit 2 hours ago only for this pompeii mod and what a mess. I find an old version of game 0.6. How can add those mods to this?

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 10 месяцев назад

      @@raulx8007 The Pompeii build was built for 0.6.4. When they updated to 0.7 in early 2019, and everything broke, I tried to update as many mods as possible so people could keep using them. But a lot of the stuff was hopeless. After weeks of trying I had to quit. The game no longer played right on my computer, and most of the developers had been laid off so I couldn't get their help. So I don't know if the Pompeii build will still work if you download the old version. I think it probably won't, because some of the mods it uses are the old ones for 0.6.4 and others were updated to 0.7.

    • @raulx8007
      @raulx8007 10 месяцев назад

      @@Stori3d_Past download steam workshop mods without game----youtube tutorial I managed to download your pompeii mod offline and i have a game version 0. 7 I am sure there is way to fix this But how the hell i can luad the mod on my offline version 0.7?

  • @Zodroo_Tint
    @Zodroo_Tint 11 месяцев назад

    Repeated fade to black is the tool of the talentless. Don't use it!

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 11 месяцев назад

      There's plenty I'd do differently now, 5 years later, than I did then, no doubt.

  • @braddo7270
    @braddo7270 11 месяцев назад

    Im British and see hadrians wall a lot, but never seen it rendered like this... its crazy, looks like skyrim. Love the story of hadrian too, with antinous.

  • @rocker76m88
    @rocker76m88 11 месяцев назад

    This is fantastic. Thank you for showing how the different classes lived. Ruins do not give you any idea of how the homes really looked. Your recreation allows us to look back in time.

  • @giorgiodifrancesco4590
    @giorgiodifrancesco4590 11 месяцев назад

    The roofs were rebuilt with an excessive and unnecessary slope. Roman tiles do not require that slope, partly because the rainwater regulation system is very efficient. The roofs could only have that slope in the early days, when the buildings were still temporary, with wooden walls and the roofs equally made with shingles. "Medieval Engineers" offer advantages and limitations, in this case.

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past 11 месяцев назад

      If you see my later videos, I spent a lot of time reconstructing & using a complete set of lower-pitched roofs to take that into account. But it may or may not have been accurate to do that. In the northern provinces, especially on Hadrian's Wall, winter snows could have been sufficient to need a steeper sloped roof. If you look at all the reconstructions by experts in the field, some have the more Mediterranean low-sloping roofs, some have a more "medieval" high-sloping style. Over the centuries the Romans seem to have adjusted some of their building styles on Hadrian's Wall to take account of local conditions. For example by the 3rd Century roofs were made of slate instead of tile. So maybe they changed slopes too. We'll probably never know for sure.

  • @billymccartney3307
    @billymccartney3307 11 месяцев назад

    please stop adding background noise/music. its very annoying...at least when you're speaking

  • @standingbear998
    @standingbear998 Год назад

    more fake pictures, wonder why people confuse history with fiction?

  • @billyboasiako1775
    @billyboasiako1775 Год назад

    Mathew 10:14_15 Sodom and Gomorrah Revelation 22:16 Jesus Christ EROS Lucifer morningstar Pompeii Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain vesvui erupt end 😢

  • @PortsladeBySea
    @PortsladeBySea Год назад

    Excellent presentation. I recently joined a guided tour of Chichester, attended their excellent Roman reenactment day in Priory Park and visited the site of the Chichester amphitheatre 🏛️🤺🗡️🩸

  • @joaobatistadeoliveiraolive5316

    Very Good from Brazil

  • @charity2275
    @charity2275 Год назад

    SLOW THE CAMERA DOWN! You move it so fast, it's annoying.

  • @emadoraadgeorgeos1282
    @emadoraadgeorgeos1282 Год назад

    wow very fancy houses! ❤️

  • @michaelkitchen4174
    @michaelkitchen4174 Год назад

    who got to eat the stamped bread piece was 5hat a good or bad piece.the thought of having a outside garden study that would be fantastic e ven a emperor did have that.

  • @michaelkitchen4174
    @michaelkitchen4174 Год назад

    I think they had some kind of canvas or tent sail material. door as a makeshift privacy screen entrance on the garden kitchen loo.sometimes called a garden

  • @michelemandrioli4720
    @michelemandrioli4720 Год назад

    I hope they had latrines for the horses, too.

  • @ValMartinIreland
    @ValMartinIreland Год назад

    Are any of the spring wells that supplied water still running.

  • @ijazmunsif
    @ijazmunsif Год назад

    Iwash i borind 1000 2000 3000 yer be4 i dont lik taknolji

  • @Diegogr08
    @Diegogr08 Год назад

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @donadams5094
    @donadams5094 Год назад

    Great human and social details. They were so like us, and so unlike us at the same time.

  • @karashea7823
    @karashea7823 Год назад

    When the narrator said “combination kitchen/latrine, my nose literally wrinkled, just as he suggested. Thought it was kinda funny. So I thought I’d report it 😂

    • @Stori3d_Past
      @Stori3d_Past Год назад

      Ha! Thanks! Yeah it still gets me too.

  • @iamgermane
    @iamgermane Год назад

    Never understood why the Allies bombed Pompeii. So there might have been Germans in there. So what? Just go around them.

  • @qigeoi565fdssfe
    @qigeoi565fdssfe Год назад

    one plan each seven seconds, really?

  • @beckyecklund5773
    @beckyecklund5773 Год назад

    Very interesting thanks

  • @asapumasidum2722
    @asapumasidum2722 Год назад

    Good work. Obviously the statues were colored. Ancient people colored everything, including the statues. Modern people think current colorless buildings and statues were colorless even in the past. No. In the past they were colored. In Egypt, India, Mexico, Italy, Greece, etc. there were no buildings or statues that were colorless.