Midway From The Japanese Perspective

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
3 261 570 Рет қаралды

Download World of Warships today wo.ws/49FEVlP and join the naval battle! Register now using code YARNHUB and receive a huge starter pack including 500 Doubloons, 1,000,000 Credits, 7 days Premium Account time, and a free ship!
It's June 4, 1942, the Battle of Midway - a decisive battle of the Pacific War. The Japanese fleet also known as the Kidō Butai prepare to strike the decisive blow to the American fleet. But an unexpected set of events leads to the loss of 3 out of 4 Japanese aircraft carriers. The Rear Admiral Tamon Yamaguchi has a task of changing the course of the battle. Leading the aircraft carrier Hiryū he is to destroy the US ships: Enterprise, Hornet and Yorktown.
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00:00 Kidō Butai is on its way to Midway
01:09 Hiryū is attacked by TBF Avengers
02:04 The planes are rearmed to charge Midway
03:01 The Americans are trying to destroy Hiryū
04:26 Zeros desperately try to stop TBD Devastators
05:11 World of Warships
06:05 Kidō Butai is making maneuvers to avoid torpedoes
06:43 SBDs’ severe attack on the Japanese fleet
08:38 The attack has been finished: only Hiryū survives it
09:32 It’s time for a Japanese revenge: dive bombers are on the go
10:10 Wildcats vs Japanese bombers
13:02 Tomonaga’s squadron attacks Yorktown
15:20 American planes bomb Hiryū to her bitter end
16:22 Yamaguchi’s last words to his men
17:33 Captain Kaku and Admiral Yamaguchi face their last sunrise
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  • Download World of Warships today wo.ws/49FEVlP and join the naval battle! Register now using code YARNHUB and receive a huge starter pack including 500 Doubloons, 1,000,000 Credits, 7 days Premium Account time, and a free ship!

    @Yarnhub@Yarnhub2 ай бұрын
    • Can you something about Charles Upham or WW2 New Zealand.

      @connoroneill7694@connoroneill76942 ай бұрын
    • You should definitely get Christopher Nolan and sabaton to do a 2 hour movie on a major historical event. Many including I would not only watch it but we would get the best cinema in history.

      @panthersherman453@panthersherman4532 ай бұрын
    • You should eventually, remaster The Ghost P-40. It's the video that started me with WW2. And it's how I found you guys

      @KENN2D2@KENN2D22 ай бұрын
    • Hello YarnHub can you do a video of a Netherlands ship pls

      @Lego_Godzilla_Studios@Lego_Godzilla_Studios2 ай бұрын
    • I download it too hub

      @Kaiser_Cheap1945@Kaiser_Cheap19452 ай бұрын
  • God damn the production quality is absolutely top notch and it's still as charming as the older style. 👍

    @Robbaz@Robbaz2 ай бұрын
    • Well well well, didn't expect my favorite youtuber from my teens to watch these kinds of video's. Explains the Pilkington tho.

      @Unwilledduck@Unwilledduck2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for your content

      @googs3589@googs35892 ай бұрын
    • Hey dad

      @ianmangiameli7712@ianmangiameli77122 ай бұрын
    • Upload more robban, I will find you if you dont.

      @yellomonky4272@yellomonky42722 ай бұрын
    • oh hi

      @Dial8Transmition@Dial8Transmition2 ай бұрын
  • I have been a barber for around 30 years, I only say this because my first job was at a Barbershop that had 3 WW II vets working. My boss had been a machine gunner in the 4th Marine Division, the other was on a destroyer in the South Pacific, and the 3rd was with those Rangers that went up that cliff on D-Day. Bearing in mind that most WW II Veterans were from 63 years old, to 67, and the shop was very popular, we had Vets in there all the time. One of my favorites was a guy named James Olsen, who was a carrier pilot duringvthe war. He was flying Wildcats at first, and was coming back to his carrier during the Coral Sea fight. He told me the carrier (cant recall which, sorry) was on fire. Procedure was to fly around so the gunners could see the stars on your wings, and wouldnt shoot you down. Then "ditch" the plane and hope for rescue! He did, and an hour later someone sent a launch out to get him. He was recovered, then got transferred to the Yorktown and had the same thing happen to him at Midway! He used to say his name was easy to remember because it was thevsame as "Supermans friend," Jimmy Olsen. He liked to kid around, and told me he was "the worst pilot the Navy ever put in the air." I asked him why, and he said "Because every time id get back to my ship, my plane was on fire, full of holes, etc." He told me he crash 11 planes, either on take off or landing under fire, on rough seas, etc. I said "dont you get in trouble for that?" He said "Hell yes, they put you in another plane and send you right back up!" He flew Wildcats, then Hellcats, then Corsairs, which he loved. He also told me that when the U.S. flyers first got out there, theyd go on patrols, and if they saw some Japanese fighters, theyd start climbing, and go to engage them. He said sometimes, if the Zero pilots saw them coming, they would spread out their flight pattern, and start doing tricks, rolls, etc, just to taunt the Americans before engaging. Crazy stories ive heard from hundreds of war veterans over the years.. Just thought id share his. R.I.P. Jimmy Olsen!

    @Skipjack7814@Skipjack78142 ай бұрын
    • Appreciate your story 👍👍👍Thx Rest in Peace Jimmy

      @alfrede.newman6626@alfrede.newman66262 ай бұрын
    • English fellow here I was about 20 when I was sat waiting for a blood test , I struck up a conversation with the old boy next to me & he told me that he had been a paratrooper in the war & told me all about his time during the failed operation Market Garden in Holland & the infamous bridge too far , I sat there & was mesmerised by his tale , 35 years later & I've never forgotten him , they were something else 🎉

      @garyk1334@garyk13342 ай бұрын
    • I consider it a great honor to have known so many Veterans, and i was worried my post was too "longwinded," so im glad people approve. Ive been reading War History since I was a kid (post-industrial, mostly WW I, WW II, Korea, and Vietnam) so when I started as a Barber, Id always have some books on my station. Our shop in North Tampa had so many guys, theyd say "Oh! I was with Marine Artillery on Corregidor!" Or "I was in the 309th, flying B-17s." We had this one little guy, Frank Douer, was a waist gunner through those big raids on Schwienfurt, Regensburg.. He said they were coming back from one mission, with engines all shot up, etc. The pilot decided they had to bail. Frank said "we got our chutes on, all of us got by the door, a couple of em looked down, we looked at each other and shook our heads, too scared to jump! So the skipper had us all 'tuck in,' and he ditched the ship in a field in Holland. We split up, and local people hid us in their attic for about 10 days, when some resistance guys could get us out to the coast and a sub picked us up." His plane was "Devils Mistress," and he even had his old leather jacket with the painting on the back!

      @Skipjack7814@Skipjack78142 ай бұрын
    • If it weren't for men like James my 11 yo they/them wouldn't be going through with they's bottom surgery tomorrow, thank James for his service

      @eugenemurray2708@eugenemurray27082 ай бұрын
    • @@Skipjack7814 They were sure fascinating people weren't they , I'm glad they stepped up when they did , my grandad was a rear gunner in a Lancaster & survived the war but died in the 60's just before I was born so I never met him but my dad worshipped him & told me all about him but apparently he never talked about his time in the RAF , just too painful

      @garyk1334@garyk13342 ай бұрын
  • That WORLD OF WARSHIPS transition was absolutely insane.... LOL

    @pr1sm55@pr1sm55Ай бұрын
  • Imagine the feeling of desperately searching for hours for the Japanese fleet until you’re nearly out of fuel and told to turn around, only to accidentally find the entire fleet on your way back. Not only that, but you notice your boys in the other company right over the horizon, who have coincidentally stumbled upon the Japanese fleet at the same time your company has, where you both go on to pull off a victory when morale couldn’t have been lower. I get goosebumps and the hair stands on my neck every time I see a show about Midway.

    @BuckScrotumn@BuckScrotumnАй бұрын
    • I was just thinking I've seen the story enough now. Don't think I learned anything new this time around.

      @HappiestGnome@HappiestGnomeАй бұрын
    • Yeah plus the fact that finding the enemy fleet when you did, i.e. when you are almost out of gas meant you almost certainly would run out of gas.

      @Ben-zr4ho@Ben-zr4hoАй бұрын
    • The last Midway movie did far more than show the story as real as could be. It showed the real naval aviators in real air defense systems of that day that took more than skill if not nerves of steel. If one assumes you are dead when you join the Naval Air Arm, you will survive. The finest of fliers and bravest of military personnel and truly miracle workers my maintenance department were made my 24 years as a naval aviation officer a story that Top Gun barely can scratch. Flight of the Intruder did that far better (sorry Tom).

      @BorisBadenov1520@BorisBadenov152017 күн бұрын
  • Midway is the ultimate example of how luck and the fog of war have such a huge impact on the battlefield. This battle plays out as it does because of a series of errors and mistakes on both sides culminates into the eventual outcome. The fact that the one scout plane that WOULD have detected the American carriers was late in launching, that the American planes arrive in the pattern they did, that an American sub draws off a destroyer that would inadvertantly lead the American dive bombers to the carriers, and a dozen other small details all perfectly line up the battle to occur the way it does. Remove a single element and it completely changed the entire outcome.

    @TechLeafRanger@TechLeafRanger2 ай бұрын
    • Almost as if it was fate

      @fireraid2336@fireraid23362 ай бұрын
    • God wanted us to win. There - I said it.

      @moistmike4150@moistmike41502 ай бұрын
    • Oh boy we got us a historian here 🙄

      @MangoTroubles-007@MangoTroubles-0072 ай бұрын
    • @@MangoTroubles-007 Both my dad and I really enjoy studying WW2, especially th Pacific theater. He's former Navy, retired now, and I grew up visiting plenty of museum's and museum ships connected to both military aviation and warfare. So yes, I rather enjoy history. I'd hardly call myself a historian, but I do enjoy it.

      @TechLeafRanger@TechLeafRanger2 ай бұрын
    • No. Just delays it. US had air search radar, the Japanese did not. In fact it is surprising that the Japanese fared as well as they did with that handicap.

      @VersusARCH@VersusARCH2 ай бұрын
  • Can you do a video on the USS Enterprise? It was the only carrier to survive the entire war in the Pacific theater, saw more action than perhaps any ship today, and the government rewarded the ship with its astounding record by selling it for scrap.

    @psychobeam99@psychobeam992 ай бұрын
    • They tried to save it but could not raise the money to purchase it from the Navy.

      @kenheise162@kenheise1622 ай бұрын
    • @kenheise162 Yeah. Always teared me up seeing an old sailer on the TV crying over what to him was his home being tore apart for scrap.

      @psychobeam99@psychobeam992 ай бұрын
    • @@psychobeam99 what about the other old sailor saying he was glad there would never be any little kids running around the decks of the ship his buddies died on

      @BoxStudioExecutive@BoxStudioExecutive2 ай бұрын
    • @@BoxStudioExecutive I means they both had their fair arguments.

      @psychobeam99@psychobeam992 ай бұрын
    • I mean yeah War decorations are good but 5 million or 5 million dude.

      @anarchyandempires5452@anarchyandempires54522 ай бұрын
  • I am someone with substantive knowledge on the Battle of Midway. But your production value allowed me to feel the anxiety and action that I couldn't feel from history books.

    @silent4fail@silent4failАй бұрын
  • Really thought this was a live action or some kind of history channel documentary clip. Just goes to show the quality of your work and how much care was put into this! Well Done!

    @tagattackinglife@tagattackinglife2 ай бұрын
  • Adding actual photos of the people and ships involved is a great touch and adds a very sombering touch of realism to the video. Excellent job, Yarnhub!

    @junibug6790@junibug67902 ай бұрын
    • Now that was a perfect touch!

      @StephenLuke@StephenLuke2 ай бұрын
  • HOLY SHIT CAN’T WAIT! ! ! The Japanese voice actor is GOAT! ! !

    @THB1945@THB19452 ай бұрын
    • Obviously! A masterpiece!!!

      @StephenLuke@StephenLuke2 ай бұрын
    • 🎉ong ong

      @thegermanfool8953@thegermanfool89532 ай бұрын
    • GOAT?

      @plugs313@plugs3132 ай бұрын
    • @@plugs313 Greatest Of All Time.

      @StephenLuke@StephenLuke2 ай бұрын
    • Greatest Of All Time!

      @elmoelmo242@elmoelmo2422 ай бұрын
  • I am amazed at the quality of video that you produced with what relatively little resources you could muster up as a youtube channel. I love how the expressions on their faces seemed so human.

    @heroedeleyenda05@heroedeleyenda05Ай бұрын
  • めちゃくちゃ頑張って日本語で喋ろうとするの好き。

    @yuukimokobombangebifurai-umai0@yuukimokobombangebifurai-umai0Ай бұрын
    • Is ur favor to the creator or to TTS?

      @ucc930ml@ucc930ml7 күн бұрын
  • Having watched Midway as made by a studio in Japan, there is no comparison in graphics. But here the writing really told a story. No American point of view lets us think a little differently and in this, your team was superb.

    @rwarren58@rwarren582 ай бұрын
    • Which one did you watch?

      @bnooper@bnooper2 ай бұрын
    • you should watch Midway 2019. its almost entirely historically accurate and isn't biased towards America even though its from the American perspective

      @Zivorad0284@Zivorad02842 ай бұрын
    • @@Zivorad0284 Midway 2019 is terrible. Midway 1976 is the historically accurate one.

      @Nachtsider@Nachtsider2 ай бұрын
    • @@Nachtsider how is midway 2019 terrible?

      @Zivorad0284@Zivorad02842 ай бұрын
    • @@Nachtsider how is midway 2019 terrible?

      @Zivorad0284@Zivorad02842 ай бұрын
  • May yarnhub animations be a movie.

    @manbha.marbaniang.3955@manbha.marbaniang.39552 ай бұрын
    • This was better than any Midway movie.

      @gmnotyet@gmnotyet2 ай бұрын
    • @@gmnotyet yeah so cool it make me play my old zero toy again.

      @manbha.marbaniang.3955@manbha.marbaniang.39552 ай бұрын
    • @@gmnotyet no stop it, that's BS. The 1976 movie and the one from a few years ago were outstanding.

      @Defender78@Defender782 ай бұрын
    • @@Defender78 That movie copied Storm over the Pacific

      @MangoTroubles-007@MangoTroubles-0072 ай бұрын
    • @@gmnotyet have you ever watched the movie Midway (2019). It's historically accurate while also being fuckin awesome.

      @Zivorad0284@Zivorad02842 ай бұрын
  • That was actually a very good and very well made video of the history behind Midway. Thank you for your expert work

    @mclary9808@mclary9808Ай бұрын
  • Congrats for hitting one million! I think this channel is super underrated and should be at atleast twice its current subscriber count! I have only recently discovered you channel, but you have become one of my favorite channels. The story telling is amazing and better than any other channel out there all while having super clean animations! Congrats!

    @that_scp_049_fan@that_scp_049_fanАй бұрын
  • Yamaguchi addressing his sailors was golden just like the movie. I like how they dedicated a whole minute to it. In the Midway movie and Storm over the Pacific I believe he said this too: "The loss of this battle falls upon your superiors, not you and for this reason I will remain on board" I think they are joined by a third sailor, but he refuses

    @jasonjiao7881@jasonjiao78812 ай бұрын
    • Storm Over the Pacific? I see you too are a man of wealth and taste.

      @Nachtsider@Nachtsider2 ай бұрын
    • The admiral and captain decisions to go down with the ship may show their bravery and honor, but is really self centered. The loss of a crewman or even a pilot is regrettable, but is not a strategic loss. The loss of an admiral or a captain is a different matter. Not just anyone has the training and experience to command a ship or a fleet. Japan couldn't afford to voluntarily lose its top officers. Honor should have required such officers to live to fight another day.

      @williamromine5715@williamromine57152 ай бұрын
    • @@williamromine5715I can’t blame them, their country’s society would have constantly mocked them if they didn’t do it and for Japanese of the time their sense of honor was above life

      @fel_zharost@fel_zharost2 ай бұрын
    • Yamaguchi fully realised all of his mistakes, and understood that the damage he had done to his fleet was not matched by greater damage to the enemy. If his carriers were lost destroying all three of the US carriers in the Pacific Ocean, things might have gone differently. He wasn't only preserving his own honour, but he was removing an obstacle to his nation's victory as well.

      @stevetheduck1425@stevetheduck14252 ай бұрын
    • @@williamromine5715 It was such a significant issue with the japanese naval command that it was pretty much outlawed because of midway. The japanese fleet never recovered not only from the loss of the ships, but also the loss of the experienced naval leadership.

      @ph1shstyx@ph1shstyx2 ай бұрын
  • Even with all the damage that she suffered the Yorktown still didn't sink right away. Even a couple days after the engagement she was under tug and headed back to Pearl to see if she could be repaired, again, since she had been rushed out after suffering damage at the battle of Coral Sea about a month earlier. While under tug and crew onboard working to drop weight (guns, aircraft, ordinance, ect...), and pump water to ease the tugging operation she was hit by two more torpedoes from a Japanese submarine, that same sub also sank the Hammann when it fired its torpedoes at the Yorktown. Still, even after taking heavy damage during the major engagement on June 4th and then getting hit by two more torpedoes in the afternoon on June 6th the Yorktown would stay afloat for 15ish more hours until finally sinking around 0700 on June 7th. Her wreckage was found in 1998 and pictures of it are posted on the internet.

    @samanderson7745@samanderson77452 ай бұрын
    • that ship was smashed lol

      @jinz0@jinz0Ай бұрын
    • My grandfather served on the Yorktown as a boiler engineer, he was able to get of the ship with most of the men, the next day it was listing but was still afloat,my grandfather was selected to go back on board and try to get the boilers going again, they actually got it going and righted the ship, the Japanese sub came the next day and hit the Yorktown with 4 torpedoes, my grandfather was able to get off alive for the second time. God bless him , he came from Ireland and loved America and was willing to die for our country, he was awarded the silver star for bravery under enemy attack. I am so proud to have his last name

      @jimmykelly4138@jimmykelly4138Ай бұрын
    • Quality back in those days, I'm confident the new ships we have aren't as durable.

      @googleifyouseekayu@googleifyouseekayuАй бұрын
    • ​@googleifyouseekayu They are much more durable. What are you even talking about? 😅

      @alansteel@alansteelАй бұрын
    • @@alansteel u I guess haven't been paying attention the quality issues. Where back in the day, things were made to last. Today things are made to break.

      @googleifyouseekayu@googleifyouseekayuАй бұрын
  • Fun little fact, i am related to James Doolittle, who led the initial raid on tokyo and other parts of honshu in april 1942, this sparked the battle of midway.

    @ParagonPKC@ParagonPKCАй бұрын
  • I’m impressed! I wish it was longer. I was really drawn in and boom the end. If this was 10 hours long i would have watched till the end

    @freedomlover3834@freedomlover3834Ай бұрын
  • I quite enjoy the narrative way of telling the story. It helps in imagining how the participants might have felt and experienced.

    @vincedodge321@vincedodge3212 ай бұрын
    • True. But I would also have loved to hear how some of the ordinary seamen on board either of the 4 carriers experienced the battle and the sinking. They were the ones doing the hard labour and suffering the worst consequences in the explosions and fires. Yet it is never their story that we hear.

      @Jens-Viper-Nobel@Jens-Viper-Nobel2 ай бұрын
    • There would be a lot more yelling. It's BS.

      @billlumbergh9251@billlumbergh9251Ай бұрын
  • I remember this story from Battle 360 years ago. But you make it look wayyyy better than their outdated animations ever did. Well done ladies and gents of Yarnhub.

    @psychobeam99@psychobeam992 ай бұрын
    • Battle 360 was one of the coolest History channel documentaries before they became super dumb

      @supercat4539@supercat45392 ай бұрын
    • @@supercat4539 Yep. Patton 360 wasn't too bad either.

      @psychobeam99@psychobeam992 ай бұрын
    • Yoo I remember, that and Dogfights 2006

      @zipsexe@zipsexe2 ай бұрын
    • Ya i also watched it

      @Playlost@Playlost2 ай бұрын
    • @zipsexe Oh man, Dogfights was so good.

      @psychobeam99@psychobeam992 ай бұрын
  • I wish we had more of this in school -- this is amazing in regards to remembering and sharing history.

    @user55890@user55890Ай бұрын
  • Excellent video! Amid the turmoil that was midway, you fairly reported on both sides, both equally heroic. Nice work

    @robertgoss4842@robertgoss484213 күн бұрын
  • The real loss for the japanese that day wasnt the destruction of the Kido Buti, but the loss of so many experienced airmen and the loss of competent leaders. While the material loss was never something the japanese could hope to replace, the personal loss completely crippled the japanese in very short order

    @trinalgalaxy5943@trinalgalaxy59432 ай бұрын
    • This is false: the Japanese lost surprisingly few pilots at Midway (the majority were recovered and reassigned). It was the Guadalcanal Campaign that gutted their pilot corps.

      @bkjeong4302@bkjeong43022 ай бұрын
    • The Japanese lost a lot of skilled aircraft mechanics, but they lost surprisingly few pilots at Midway.

      @Rocketsong@Rocketsong2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bkjeong4302i think he meant officers, not pilots.

      @pedrofelipefreitas2666@pedrofelipefreitas26662 ай бұрын
    • Believe me, losing 4 out of their 6 fleet carriers hurt the most. The japanese never managed to recover that quality of carrier, all the cvs built after were smaller ones, the last true fleet carrier was taihou.

      @pedrofelipefreitas2666@pedrofelipefreitas26662 ай бұрын
    • 100名以上が戦死してるので決して少なくはないですが、空母4隻喪失にしては少ない損害です。 操縦士を本格的に損耗するのはソロモン方面の戦いですね...

      @scarlet_squadron@scarlet_squadron2 ай бұрын
  • The Yorktown deserves her own video. Amazing turnaround in short order prior to Midway and damage control.

    @Kelvin71@Kelvin712 ай бұрын
    • The incredible turnaround by Yorktown had fooled the panicking Japanese airmen. God's plan was like a swiss cheesed mouse trap. The Japanese had never thought that was a piece of reused cheese.

      @francistam9501@francistam95012 ай бұрын
    • Anticipation of enemy strikes by shipbuilders and damage control by USN personnel is a story as profound as code breaking. The IJN believing the Yorktown was a different carrier … two hours after they stuck it and left it dead in the water … is an incredible feat, it deserves more credit than it gets. Only the fact the carrier sank prevents that from getting the recognition it deserves.

      @pgrant7688@pgrant76882 ай бұрын
    • The Yorktown (CV-5) was sunk 4 times, according to Japanese pilot reports. Once at Coral Sea , then by Hiryu's dive bombers at Midway, then again by Hiryu's torpedo planes, and then finally (and for real) by the Japanese sub I-168.

      @seanbryan4833@seanbryan4833Ай бұрын
    • Like the new(er) ship sent to escort/protect Kuwaiti oil tankers in the Gulf from Iran in the 80s. It was the ships first mission and they hit an Irani mine in international waters and it destroyed the hull of the ship. Apparently it was only being held together by the deck. BUT they had the navy’s best repair crew and had actually won a few competitions. They were able to save it and limp it back to UAE for repair. Actually it’s fascinating how the US managed to salvage ships when for someone else it was a total loss.

      @marquisdelafayette1929@marquisdelafayette1929Ай бұрын
  • I just found your channel yesterday and I was instantly fallen in love already, this is beyond amazing, I love every video you made, also as an new fan of World War 2, I wish I can see more, this is just awesome. ❤❤❤

    @byl1997@byl199721 күн бұрын
  • Im a Veteran ABH & Have served multiple deployments with CVN 71 USS Theodore Roosevelt, Its interesting to see The difference and similarities in prepping Aircraft & how the timing and pacing works in this Battle. Even the Recovery of planes was gone over in this video, that is absolutely the Longest process of Launch & Recovery and it's hard to imagine fighting a war at the same time as trying to catch and re-fuel aircraft! Respect to All fallen soldiers in this battle! Very interesting to see it from this point of view having done the same work, Our Aircraft carriers are never under attack like this in Todays Military but the readiness & Preparedness is the same!

    @Medisaneman@MedisanemanАй бұрын
  • Yes! Yarnhub has a new video. When the Japanese attacked Midway Atoll they thought it was going to be their own Battle of Trafalgar. They destroyed the Russian fleet in the Russo-Japanese War in one decisive victory and they thought they could do it again. They had their Battle of Trafalgar but they were on the losing side. Great job as usual.

    @derkaiser420@derkaiser4202 ай бұрын
    • If only they engaged broadside to broadside with the Americans. Then they would certainly have their trafalgar.

      @sanjithd3343@sanjithd33432 ай бұрын
    • yeah, too bad the americans went all on pussymode and let their planes do all the work for the majority of the war.@@sanjithd3343

      @imperialraijin@imperialraijin2 ай бұрын
    • the foolishness of the japanese was comparing the russians to the americans at all. I wrote a basic study of the development of both states and they were essentially on par by ww1 and in fact russian development slowed considerably with their second revolution (often touted as a necesary evil by "commieboos" in truth the russians differed greatly from the japanese in that they tried to integrate into the european market relying on foreign investment and development, the japanese only allowed minimal foreign investment and development, just enough for them to understand it and do it for themselves. the russian imperial navy had been a joke to booth, they would have lost against fishin trawlers if those had had a couple torpedoes on board then their flagship nearly blew up and was also filled with madagascar animals, alcoholism was rampant, that all despite having a competent commander but he couldn't make up for the rot that had set in and remained to engrained in a system where the rank and file were treated with disdain by the nobles in command, probably trying to mock the brittish system but there the crew actually got treated with respect though being held to strict hierarchy. the japanese however were a naval power by design and the meiji restoration (and short civil war) took out most dissent against the new imperial regime. they had great incentive for functionallity ass well, they had been humiliated by the americans under commodore Perry (the start of american gunboat diplomacy) and realised that they would either adapt or face western dommination like china. the russians had just faced the humiliation of the crimean war. failing to effectively supply it's own troops and facing enormous losses against foes that had to send their forces all the way around europe trough the mediteranean to even get their men in place, remember it is easier to fight a deffensive war against a distant opponent but they still lost the japanese grew emboldened after beating the russians and this grew ever more after taking down large portions of the brittish and dutch forces in the pacific theatre. had they stuck within their lane they would have likely been pushed out eventually but on more favorable terms, perhaps even getting some of the conquered teritory in the process, but they lacked fuel and the US had cut them off and supplied their enemies, Japan could have tried to make a treaty with the soviets for oil which they would have likely been happy to grant given that they benefitted from weakening the western powers. but that would mean negotiating after defeat which means losing face. they could have bitten the bullet and slowed their war trying to get as much as they can out of their conquered teritories (which would never be enough in terms of oil) in the end they decided that the US posed to much of a treath and wanted to take them out of the war in one major strike, top government and population seemingly believing the US would cut their losses and come to the negotiating table (like japan in fact had after their brush with superior naval power) but anyone with the most elementary knowledge of the US realises that these SOB's could hate eachother but if any other state decided to attack them their reaction would be near universal, "revenge" hit them back twice as hard, today the US seems to have lost much of that mentallity with the growing wealth divide, corporatism and political divide tarnishing the view of their nation and making even those that are as red white and blue as they come, unwilling to risk life and limb for a government they hate more than any foreign power no matter who is in charge, if attacked domestically that would change, and the US is certainly the strongest militairy power on earth but a serious question to ask is whether that would carry over in an existential conflict (rather than minor interventions and "peacekeeping" missions) most wouldn't want to serve, certainly not against an enemy that could be classes as peer or near peer and certainly not for the benefit of an elite that is hated by both sides.

      @istoppedcaring6209@istoppedcaring62092 ай бұрын
    • lol You are talking about the battle of Tsushima but that was a different time where carriers didn't exist. The battle of midway was sorely fighting with aircraft. It would not make sense why they were expecting for the same result if there was no ship vs ship battle.

      @i_nameless_i-jgsdf@i_nameless_i-jgsdf2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@i_nameless_i-jgsdf Безусловно. Цусима была слишком давно. И даже тогда флот России был устаревшим. А авиация уже в начале второй мировой стала мощным оружием. В битвах на Тихом океане самолёты использовались и при налете на Перл Харбор , боях за Мидуэй . Гуадалканал . Палау. Обе стороны сражались отважно.

      @to1tu_sr7_34b@to1tu_sr7_34b2 ай бұрын
  • Oh, Yarnhub. Transitioning back and fourth from animation to a photo of Yamaguchi was such a flex.

    @javierpatag3609@javierpatag36092 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. Another subtle/overt way to convey that THIS STUFF REALLY HAPPENED, AND THAT THERE ARE STILL A FEW COMBATANTS FROM THAT BATTLE STILL ALIVE. Oops, sorry, got real there for a moment.

      @jimheimerl1637@jimheimerl16372 ай бұрын
    • @@jimheimerl1637absolutely big agree on this. What a beautiful production.

      @jetpilott2420@jetpilott24202 ай бұрын
  • So well done. Love the side by side pictures and their characters in the video. Good job

    @ernestogarcia2393@ernestogarcia2393Ай бұрын
  • So the first time I've ever seen any of your videos - I am absolutely amazed! I've never hit the subscribe button faster! I am blown away by this,! Great work everyone and thank you

    @johnavast5939@johnavast5939Ай бұрын
  • This was the smoothest ad transition I’ve ever seen

    @wyattchiordi5132@wyattchiordi51322 ай бұрын
    • Copying the laughable Cerveza beer Ads in Star Wars

      @bwatson7586@bwatson7586Ай бұрын
  • This reminds me of Montemayor's videos on the Midway Japanese perspective, and it was profound

    @IAmTheAce5@IAmTheAce52 ай бұрын
    • Yes. His are the best, much better than this.

      @davidphillips6803@davidphillips68032 ай бұрын
    • @@davidphillips6803 Room for all content.

      @KasFromMass@KasFromMass2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@davidphillips6803 You sat that as if this is a bad video

      @conservativedemocracyenjoyer@conservativedemocracyenjoyer2 ай бұрын
    • @@davidphillips6803 Not neccaserily, you can only tell so much in 20 minutes

      @labbadah3379@labbadah33792 ай бұрын
    • I also saw that video too

      @The_whales@The_whales2 ай бұрын
  • I was born in 1955. Both my dad and father in law were in the US Navy and in the Pacific. I have had roommates from Japan, China and Russia. Realize Midway was 80 years ago and embrace the peace that we have. It has provided us ALL a lot of advancements that has benefited us all.

    @billknudson2236@billknudson2236Ай бұрын
    • 😂 Vcs não tem paz!

      @user-yn4bv5kn9x@user-yn4bv5kn9x12 күн бұрын
  • This was truly an epic production. I’m definitely going to search your channel for more!!

    @nathanfranks1476@nathanfranks1476Ай бұрын
  • As a former USAF airman, I enjoyed this video because it shows how far we’ve come. The American public believes we are now invulnerable but there’s been a lot of sweat, tears and especially blood to make things that way. There were a LOT of brave men on both sides at Midway, who understood their fate. The U.S. torpedo bomber crews knew their efforts were futile, and the Japanese bomber pilots knew they were making a one way trip to the American vessels. I love reading and watching depictions of Coral Sea/Midway events because the level of desperation is so high on both sides, it brought out heroic efforts from ordinary men, just doing their duty.

    @pgrant7688@pgrant76882 ай бұрын
    • WW2 was unreal. It's very tempting to say we just don't make men like that anymore, but I suspect there's more a measure of what you touch upon in it, that we just aren't tested like that anymore. There are still crazy feats of arms that happen today, but the regularity and scale of WW2 is just so beyond, you'd have to be deluding yourself to think what we deal with today or produce is the same. It's just truly unreal.

      @commotiocordis1037@commotiocordis10372 ай бұрын
    • I hope America people stay in their own land and not disturb other people land.

      @userrrrrxx135@userrrrrxx1352 ай бұрын
    • ​@@userrrrrxx135 we will. Just don't touch our boats.

      @Scudboy17@Scudboy172 ай бұрын
    • @@Scudboy17 He said, not thinking about how the US has not been staying in their own land for years.

      @requiemlul3140@requiemlul31402 ай бұрын
    • ​@@userrrrrxx135i believe that's what most Americans were saying about ww2 until the Japanese decided to make it a world wide war

      @rancher12121@rancher121212 ай бұрын
  • The fact that three aircraft carriers got sunk within mere minutes within each other is absolutely insane. Great animation!

    @kl9181@kl91812 ай бұрын
    • They weren't actually sunk by the bomb hits. They were all scuttled to prevent the Americans from getting a trophy.

      @sillyone52062@sillyone520622 ай бұрын
    • "Ackshually" they remained afloat for several hours, but yeah, they were as good as a raft because of how damaged they were. Souryu went down first in the afternoon after being scuttled. There was an attempt to stop the fire on Kaga, but they later abandoned the idea and scuttled her at night. There was an attempt to try to get Akagi back afloat and back to Japan, but it was the same as other carriers. Her crew probably gotten off at night and she was scuttled earlier in the morning, just hours before Souryu went down.

      @SirHellNaja@SirHellNaja2 ай бұрын
    • Some hard lessons where learned about securing your ordnance aboard ships.

      @davidbrenner5806@davidbrenner58062 ай бұрын
    • @@SirHellNaja three aircraft carriers forcibly decommissioned within mere minutes of each other* hows that

      @kl9181@kl91812 ай бұрын
    • The Japanese stole aircraft technology, and was gifted parts of it from the British during and post-WW I, but what the British and the Americans learned and the Japanese never did and what allowed the Yorktown to survive is crew training on how to keep their ships alive despite what could be considered catastrophic damage. Alongside the multiple redundancies and internal fire fighting systems the Allies ships had made them into formidable foes in naval warfare. Arguably Japan couldn't afford the same level of redundancy on their ships due to them having restricted manufacturing materials, which was one of the core reasons for the Japanese expansionism movement. It's also a reason that Zeros was so vulnerable as they didn't have any fuel tank protection so if a tank was hit it was often good night Vienna whereas the Allies aircraft had several layers of protection around their fuel and core areas at a cost of speed and agility. Japanese culture, doctrine and training was at the the core for the loss of the IJN despite their early advantages. Of course there is other factors at play but Japan saw Sacrifice as honourable, whereas the Allis tried to protect their men which led to clear distinctions when it came to designing ships, planes and their tanks.

      @ThirdEnvoqation@ThirdEnvoqationАй бұрын
  • Ive watched the actual film of the battle a few times; WW2 in color. This was a great 3rd person perspective and recreation in the battle for Midway. I relly liked the actual photos overlayed. This is exactly how the actual battle played out. Amazing! Thanks for sharing this perspective.

    @Jehoshua.J.A.K.@Jehoshua.J.A.K.Ай бұрын
  • Didn't know your channel before, but your work is amazing. Thanks a lot for the stories your make alive!👏

    @ericbertrand2386@ericbertrand2386Ай бұрын
  • The quality on that trailer was So damn good my god

    @felexl32@felexl322 ай бұрын
  • What a epic story of Hiryu last battle I can’t wait for the story of USS Hornet last battle at the Santa Cruz.

    @Spitfiresammons@Spitfiresammons2 ай бұрын
  • from Japan with deep respect. I appreciate to Yarnhub for really beautiful movies & always giving me the opportunity to think about human nature, which remains same regardless of nationality or era. Such stories in WW are rarely treated in Japanese education because of past mistakes. Young people in Japan will never know about Yamaguchi from textbooks of japanese social studies alone. However, I think, if these kind of stories are treated as a essence of human beings, without political, historical good and evil etc.., they can become extremely useful moral textbooks. Ironically, today foreigners have a better understanding of this country's forgotten virtue 'Bushido' than Japanese..

    @wada.piano1206@wada.piano12067 күн бұрын
  • Brilliant... That was riveting... Amazing CGI amazingly scripting and narration.. you can tell some people worked very hard on this. ❤

    @MrMickthemonster@MrMickthemonsterАй бұрын
  • Bro if you ever do like a full ass 3 hours documentary I'll watch all of it in 1 sitting

    @YouDontChibai@YouDontChibai2 ай бұрын
    • Too many ads interrupting

      @TeoZMuff313@TeoZMuff3132 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the story! All those matching historical photos were chilling indeed!!

    @LancelotChan@LancelotChan2 ай бұрын
    • It’s also interesting to witness contemporary Japanese carrier Kaga equipped with American jets.

      @drewaworld6790@drewaworld67902 ай бұрын
  • Okay yarnhub this is so amazingly well put together, from the people and transitioning to their real photos to the ships and aircraft. You guys are seriously amazing, Do you guys even sleep???

    @Anomaly26_@Anomaly26_Ай бұрын
    • Explain sleep?

      @Yarnhub@YarnhubАй бұрын
  • That World of Warships transition was so effortless it was almost disrespectful 😂

    @TraphouseTCG@TraphouseTCGАй бұрын
  • The history book, Shattered Sword, deals with the Japanese side of Midway, using Japanese sources previously unavailable in English. It changed some of the decades old narratives that were based on the now discredited personal recollections of Mitsuo Fuchida. It also goes into the reasons, including IJN doctrine, that explains why some decisions were made.

    @seannordeen5019@seannordeen50192 ай бұрын
    • Yes one of the failures of japans policy

      @paulrasmussen8953@paulrasmussen89532 ай бұрын
    • Among the oh so many myths created by Fuchida were the "if only we had used a 2 phase search instead that day. Why did Nagumo not do this!?!" When in June of 1942 there was no such thing as a 2 phase search in Japanese naval doctrine. Search was exclusively done by the escorts float planes. This never really changed. After it was mauled at Midway, the Cruiser Mogami had its back half turned into a half deck float plain carrier to carry more scouts. Fuchida is also the source of "we were just minutes from launch!" And "Damn Nagumo ordered everything rearmed" plus "Yamamoto gave Nagumo verbal orders to reserve half his planes to attack the americans when they showed up" These are all pure bullshit. Nagumo's only mission on June 4 was to neutralize Midway's defenses. Yamamoto was certain the Americans would not appear before June 6th. But his landings needed to begin on the 4th. His landing barges needed a Lunar High Tide to get past the reef. So his invaders had a roughly 2 hour window each day over three days to invade. And they were already running a day late. That's how idiotic the Midway plan was. Nagumo's actual official written orders were to neutralize midway. Nothing about reserving his forces armed for anti ship. He began arming for ground attack when it became clear a second strike was needed. The Japanese did not expect the insanely massive amounts of accurate AAA that had been installed on Midway. That should have been one of their first red flags. Nimitz had put as many guns as he could find and given them the newest fire directors. Nagumo exactly followed his orders and Japanese Carrier Doctrine that day. The biggest idiot that day was Yamaguchi. Who sent his last carrier charging with the Battleships to try and get into gun range. That might be a contender for single biggest unforced error of the war. Or at least tied with Halsey's Samar screw up.

      @andrewtaylor940@andrewtaylor9402 ай бұрын
    • @andrewtaylor940 except that this was a knlwn pattern of Nagumo. During the indian ocean campaign he made similar mistakes. And nagumo was not Yamamotos choice but a choice by seniority

      @paulrasmussen8953@paulrasmussen89532 ай бұрын
    • @paulrasmussen8953 its not a "pattern" it was IJN Doctrine. Nagumo was a strict Doctrinarian. He did what the manual said. Much of the historic record of Nagumo was poisoned by Fuchida and Genda. Who had their own reasons post war for doing so.

      @andrewtaylor940@andrewtaylor9402 ай бұрын
    • @andrewtaylor940 sorry but if every single csptain and advisor told him to atrack now and he refused. Then it is his fault.

      @paulrasmussen8953@paulrasmussen89532 ай бұрын
  • 4:20 "spicy fish from the US navy" got me laughing for a full 40 minutes, I'm playing world of warship rn.

    @bl1t7theprotogenhybrid72@bl1t7theprotogenhybrid722 ай бұрын
  • God I love that yall really blew up for real, way to go yarnhub I’ve always loved the vids

    @quinn311nd@quinn311ndАй бұрын
  • Spicy fish written on the torpedo is chefs kiss 🤌

    @insoman1ac@insoman1acАй бұрын
    • Ye beat me to it 😂😂😂

      @unachavez6491@unachavez6491Ай бұрын
    • @@unachavez6491 😂🤣😂🤣 was surprised I hadn't seen the comment yet

      @insoman1ac@insoman1acАй бұрын
  • I hope you guys have a long successful career making these. I never want them to stop and look forwards to them so much. Appreciate the care you take to make them historically accurate. The greatest generation will live eternally in our hearts and minds.

    @Vector-bh8qc@Vector-bh8qc2 ай бұрын
  • I was lucky enough to once see a AAF vet next to a Navy vet. The AAF vet flew B-17s over Europe, including on big week. The Navy pilot was a dauntless pilot who eventually flew the hellcat. Both were amazing, but mad respect for the Navy vet. These people flew straight into heavily defended destroyers and cruisers with so many anti air guns, and enemy aircraft too. That is a diferent type of brave and service, to day after day mission after mission charge head on into enemy ships. Respect to all who served. On both sides.

    @peppapig9987@peppapig99872 ай бұрын
  • The change in the animation that has taken place is amazing. The animation looks serene. It's good to see how much effort you guys put in to portray such marvelous stories.❤️

    @abhimanyunegi8034@abhimanyunegi8034Ай бұрын
  • One of the best videos I’ve seen amongst the countless. Superb production 🙏🏼

    @rohandrummer@rohandrummerАй бұрын
  • I must admit, when you first switched from classical animation to more 3D animation I was sceptical and did not support that but now you got me convinced again.

    @Pioneer_DE@Pioneer_DE2 ай бұрын
  • I'm 53 and 3rd generation U.S. Navy. My grandfather served in the Pacific during WW2 and my father served on the Enterprise during Vietnam. I served in the 1990's as an FMF Navy Corpsman with the Marines and Seabees. I can only imagine how hardcore WW2 Naval battles were.

    @allenmetzger9922@allenmetzger99222 ай бұрын
  • I love how the scene from the Midwat movie aligns with 8:27

    @marloweelijahpatria3505@marloweelijahpatria3505Ай бұрын
  • Okay that subscribe was clean at 8:45 lol

    @JimBobe@JimBobeАй бұрын
  • Holy moley, the graphics in these reenactments are just spectacular! Hats off to everybody involved in putting this together.

    @AppliedCryogenics@AppliedCryogenics2 ай бұрын
  • One of the best channels on YT. keep the great animations coming !!! Love learning military history with them !!!

    @catdaddy57@catdaddy572 ай бұрын
  • This is by far the best video on midway I’ve seen these animations are sweet I know what I’m watching all night

    @Ambushw23@Ambushw23Ай бұрын
  • It’s amazing to me how the difference between a hit and a miss is subtle arm movements on a control column.

    @KC_Smooth@KC_SmoothАй бұрын
  • This was Epic. I love how you cover both sides of the story just like Montemayor!

    @jiyuhong5853@jiyuhong58532 ай бұрын
    • I liked his Japanese perspective video on the Midway battle.

      @nikkolodian9517@nikkolodian95172 ай бұрын
  • The combination of animation, voice acting, the swelling and empathetic musical score bring history to life in your videos. Masterfully done.

    @grandadmiralzaarin4962@grandadmiralzaarin49622 ай бұрын
    • What's the name of the music used?

      @biorop638@biorop6382 ай бұрын
  • 5:30 game effects so good. You can almost feel the sea spray on your face lol.... Subscribed to the Channel lok

    @BuyingDaDip209@BuyingDaDip209Ай бұрын
  • You really need to seek out Monteymayor and his 6 part series on Midway. 3 from the Japanese view and 3 from the US view - absolutely brilliant!

    @rg20322@rg203222 ай бұрын
    • 6 videos? There are only 3 - two from the Japanese and one from the American perspective. And yes, they are absolutely brilliant videos.

      @orderoftheyawgmoth@orderoftheyawgmoth2 ай бұрын
  • Loved the transitions to the real photos of the people & ships of the war, the voice acting & writing was superb! Well done! I look forward for more to come!

    @skullsaintdead@skullsaintdead2 ай бұрын
  • So funny fact. The USS Yorktown scared the Japanese really bad. They called it the Ghost ship since after they would sink it, it would appear in the next battle.

    @Sethdarunner@SethdarunnerАй бұрын
  • It's great that you now have audio tracks in Spanish Excellent work as always I love watching the animation improve video after video! A big hug from Bolivia Es genial que ahora tienen pistas de audio al español! trabajo excelente como siempre! me encanta ver la animación mejorar video tras video Un gran abrazo desde Bolivia!

    @carloperedo4443@carloperedo4443Ай бұрын
  • One thing to note the torpedo bombers were the obsolete Devastators not Avengers as shown in the very beginning. Other than that pretty good.

    @martonpapp269@martonpapp2692 ай бұрын
    • To be correct. Six TBF Avengers were sent to Midway to give them a combat test. Only one of those six planes survived to land back at Midway

      @newjersey9035@newjersey90352 ай бұрын
    • @@newjersey9035 is far as I know they were just short on participating in combat operations in Midway. Nice Musashi PFP though.

      @martonpapp269@martonpapp2692 ай бұрын
    • ​@@newjersey9035that's how they got their name avenger. Fucking badass

      @ryanmarquez9404@ryanmarquez94042 ай бұрын
    • Midway operated six TBM Avengers used in the initial attacks.

      @JonathanLundkvist@JonathanLundkvist2 ай бұрын
    • TBFs were used by VT-8 detached from Hornets CAG and placed on Midway. They were part of the first attack from Midway about 7:00am along with B-26s.

      @Squirrelmugger@Squirrelmugger2 ай бұрын
  • When you guys released the Midway video I didn't think it could get any better, it just did

    @asdfg2941@asdfg29412 ай бұрын
  • I really enjoyed the production and storytelling here. Thank you for sharing. Good job good job ❤❤

    @makaveli2tt@makaveli2ttАй бұрын
  • amazing production quality. never seen anything like it on youtube. subbed

    @lsuman8883@lsuman8883Ай бұрын
  • I hope this video finally takes you to a well deserving million subscribers.

    @iffipifi1@iffipifi12 ай бұрын
  • I love that bomb explosion and the Zero going flying reference in Akagi from the movie Midway, I love your videos so much Yarnhub, keep up the good work and the cool references ❤

    @BlazingLucario@BlazingLucario2 ай бұрын
  • No idea why this popped up in my recommendations, but after watching this. instant sub for me. Well done!

    @BeezerMN@BeezerMNАй бұрын
  • as a historian who studied this event maticulusly, this is by far the most accurate video I have seen of this event, you deserve my sub.

    @BasedGrandmasKitchen@BasedGrandmasKitchen2 ай бұрын
  • Already know a ton about Midway but the graphics here are absolutely incredible. Awesome job, man. Unreal.

    @RD24LFG@RD24LFG2 ай бұрын
  • 素晴らしい動画をありがとうございました。日米両国の戦死者の方のご冥福を心よりお祈りいたします。また、日米両国の今後の平和を心より祈ります。 Thank you for the wonderful video. I sincerely pray for the souls of the war dead in both Japan and the United States. Also, I sincerely pray for future peace between Japan and the United States.

    @user-uf5wc1uc8i@user-uf5wc1uc8iАй бұрын
  • As an ordnance man on the Midway, I can tell you that 3 men are not going to be able to lift any bombs or torpedoes and walk with them any distance especially on a ship during battle. But I understand it's more exciting and to the point.

    @anacowa221@anacowa221Ай бұрын
  • I just finished watching midway on Netflix and now I have to watch another one but on youtube😂😂😂

    @Hansbloxia_official@Hansbloxia_official2 ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @Tanknuggets217@Tanknuggets2172 ай бұрын
  • First, I want to say "Thank-You" and "Great Job" making All of your episodes!!! I really appreciate just how much research and work that you put in making these Great productions!! I mean absolutely no disrespect, or "one-upsmanship" when I volunteer a little information. The U S Navy was still operating the obsolete 1.1" anti-aircraft guns in quad mounts at the time of the Midway battle. The quad bofors 40mm didn't start entering service on warships until later that month, I believe it was June 22nd. Also, the Aichi " Val" divebombers depicted show the D3A2 variant instead of the earlier D3A1 variant. The "D3A2" didn't enter service until autumn of 1942. The easiest way to differentiate the D3A2 from the D3A1 is the more streamlined, or curved shape of the rear gunner's position, and, generally the D3A2 had a propeller hub or spinner, while the D3A1 did not. There are other less-noticeable visual cues that I won't mention. Again, I mean absolutely NO disrespect or one-upsmanship nor am I attempting to disparage your Fine work!!! I'm only trying to contribute a little of information to your Outstanding Work! Thank-You so much!!

    @kevingosko4119@kevingosko41192 ай бұрын
    • Good eye on the Vals, i didnt notice that. My personal information nitpick is how closely together the japanese fleet is displayed, but i can understand that from a cinematic perspective. Another one i saw was that Makigumo's torpedo launcher looks like a mutant triple than a quad.

      @hurricano471@hurricano4712 ай бұрын
  • for some reason I've watched this video over 5 times and I can't stop

    @Max78912@Max78912Ай бұрын
  • Your graphics are better than ever, particularly the faces and emotions. These are truly human beings we can admire and respect. Brave men, one and all, on both sides..

    @JohnDavies-cn3ro@JohnDavies-cn3ro12 күн бұрын
  • The references to Midway are fantastic, as always your animations are something magical.

    @claove@claove2 ай бұрын
  • Holy shit, coming from the Last Great Tank Battle to this, i love how you improved on the talking animations and characterizations!! Amazing stuff i cant stop watching

    @BlunterSales@BlunterSales2 ай бұрын
  • This is the most sane episode of Xavier Renegade Angel ever

    @LemThurdy420@LemThurdy420Ай бұрын
  • Haha that plane flying through the subscribe sign was dope!

    @jokerrhe@jokerrheАй бұрын
  • Small mistake but the Soryu’s island was on the Starboard side. Akagi and Hiryu were the only carriers in history with the Island on the Port side.

    @xiaoxin2859@xiaoxin28592 ай бұрын
    • It was very uncanny watching the hiryuy

      @jameshailerthepostmaster4389@jameshailerthepostmaster43892 ай бұрын
  • Not saying Japan was good in WW2, but it’s amazing and equally interesting to see the other side of Midway from narration surrounding the Japanese personnel involved. I’ve seen a lot of the US side or third person limited side of Midway, this was a good change of pace.

    @captain_commenter8796@captain_commenter87962 ай бұрын
    • check out the channel "Montemayor". He has a superb analysis of the Battle of Midway, also from the japanese perspective. He goes for a more documentary style approach, and focuses on WHY certain decisions were made the way they were, and why those decisions were correct at the time. He basically dispels a lot of myths regarding japanese decision making ("They lost because they did X"), and puts the viewer in place of the japanese admirals, giving the viewer only the information the japanese admirals had at the time.

      @xxnightdriverxx9576@xxnightdriverxx95762 ай бұрын
  • I remember watching this channel and growing fondly with it. Always commenting on how the animation was improving. I stop watching for a while and holy fuck what the hell is this!? How!? This is things you find in a subscription service. God tier production guys, I'll support in any way I can for your good work.

    @radicalcat4942@radicalcat4942Ай бұрын
  • Funny how the two ships are named "Hear You" (Hiryu) and "Saw you" (Soryu) and after the battle, no one SAW YOU and we cant HEAR YOU! 🤣🤣

    @onlinebills9169@onlinebills9169Ай бұрын
    • Terrible and disrespecting joke.

      @skorpion7132@skorpion7132Ай бұрын
    • @@skorpion7132 When I give a damn about your feelings and opinions, I'll let you know. But don't hold your breath.

      @onlinebills9169@onlinebills9169Ай бұрын
  • its criminal how underrated this channel is. they deserve more subs imo

    @theegunpro4561@theegunpro45612 ай бұрын
  • just here to say, your animations are amazing. Keep the good work up.

    @IStoleYourToast-315@IStoleYourToast-3152 ай бұрын
  • I've only ever really heard from the US/allied perspective. So this was really cool to watch. The bravery of the US and Japanese fighters is without question. Though you must admit the Japanese take it up a notch in the honor department.

    @sirarnie9837@sirarnie9837Ай бұрын
  • That was done very well. Looking forward to see more like this.

    @microusb42069@microusb42069Ай бұрын
  • I would love it if Yarnhub did a video on the Monchy 9 of Newfoundland. 9 men of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment positioned at Monchy-le-Preux during the Battle of Arras in 1917 hid behind shrubbery and defended the town from a German force anywhere from 200 - 300 men strong for 11 hours to prevent a German break through. I think it is a very cool and very underrated battle that sounds like the plot of a movie.

    @AppleHistoryGuy@AppleHistoryGuy2 ай бұрын
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