Yeah, this feels like it had to be staged in some way. I know there are examples of people who do shit like this, but it doesn't seem like it's a thing that would ever happen regularly.
Probably wasn't that high regularly, but people have an astounding knack for balance. I can definitely see a pre-modern deliveryboy carrying 50% of that monster pile at once on a busy day.
When bicycles did come into the picture around the turn of the century, they revolutionized the industry. By that time, Tokyo was sprawling, so there was more ground for demae to cover. “You want the noodles to still be hot when you arrive, so speed is of the essence,” says Kapur. “In a lot of cases, they would be carrying lunch to one entire company, so that’s why they’re carrying maybe 20 or 30 portions together.”
Interesting - it all being one delivery instead of several makes more sense!
this is a lot more believable for 2 reasons - I have seen them (not in person, but you get the point), and they have this base, in which all the tiffins(lunchboxes) are kept, so all this essentially acts as a very large single body, unlike noodle carrier, who had them all in a vertical - stacked setup, with the dabbawala setup, the center of gravity is much easier to be aligned across their head, but with noodle guy, that is genuinely hard, even balancing one long stick that way would be hard, it would just tip over, although in motion it would be comparatively more stabler
Is Death Stranding worth picking up on PC this late in the game? Does it still have a decent player population? From the way I understand it, the stuff you do in the game world has an impact on other players (like building a bridge to make an area easier to reach, for example). Are there still things to do?
You only ever see a small portion of what others built. They get copied into your world so you can remove them without affecting others. Constructions also degrade over time, but I think only while you're playing.
It's on you to build things linking them up. You might get a few bits of road, or a few pylons or the odd vehicle lying about, and then need to put another pylon on a mountain to link them together.
It's kind of cool, but certainly not a game for everyone. It's very Kojima.
I would imagine it’s staged. The street is wet and the tires don’t seem to have a lot of tread. There is no way this guy would be able to peddle and stay stable at the same time.
A lot of historical photos we seen were taken in situations where the photographer couldn’t meter for light or pull focus precisely without letting the moment slip away but film photography can look really good. All of these are much older than the 1930s
I believe it happened and all. But I wonder how. How did he get it on his shoulder and keep it there when overcoming the initial inertia. Then getting there without stopping suddenly. Then how did he get it down? The pure mechanics boggle my mind.
I'd guess a combination of "shelves" being held up along a central pole while not being fixed so that the combined weight creates additional friction on the boxes and stops them from sliding off the stack into the streets