MycroProcessor vs. AshcrementVII: Difference between revisions
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- The serving player makes the opening video from the material pool, the longer the better. Play proceeds as usual."</small> | - The serving player makes the opening video from the material pool, the longer the better. Play proceeds as usual."</small> | ||
At the time, YouTube had in place a hard upload limit of 10 minutes for each video, but in July 2010 this had become updated to a limit of 15 minutes<ref>https://www.cnet.com/culture/youtube-bumps-video-limit-to-15-minutes/</ref>, before sometime later being drastically extended to the modern limit of 12 hours. It was in this window of time that this match commenced, and {{MycroProcessor}}'s 14 minute, 10 second long serve became the first known video within YTP/Video Tennis to make creative use of this new upload length, becoming at the time the longest tennis round ever made. With a number of players subsequently breaking this record, Mycro would eventually break this record again in [[Nineroe vs. MycroProcessor]](2016), with the 6 hour long "Vore. Unbirth. Dinner." Coincidentally, during the long middle segment of this round in which Mycro converses off-camera to the viewer, he briefly touches upon this match, identifying the link between it and the much more drastic long form approach of the subsequent match, and also laments that he "never made Round 3". | At the time, YouTube initially had in place a hard upload limit of 10 minutes for each video, but in July 2010 this had become updated to a limit of 15 minutes<ref>https://www.cnet.com/culture/youtube-bumps-video-limit-to-15-minutes/</ref>, before sometime later being drastically extended to the modern limit of 12 hours. It was in this window of time that this match commenced, and {{MycroProcessor}}'s 14 minute, 10 second long serve became the first known video within YTP/Video Tennis to make creative use of this new upload length, becoming at the time the longest tennis round ever made. With a number of players subsequently breaking this record, Mycro would eventually break this record again in [[Nineroe vs. MycroProcessor]](2016), with the 6 hour long "Vore. Unbirth. Dinner." Coincidentally, during the long middle segment of this round in which Mycro converses off-camera to the viewer, he briefly touches upon this match, identifying the link between it and the much more drastic long form approach of the subsequent match, and also laments that he "never made Round 3". | ||
Round 1's title "When Did You First Learn About Tennis?" comes verbatim from a [[YouChew]] thread title of the same name in the Tennis subforum, created by PokeFire50 on December 22, 2009. A lengthy silent segment of this round additionally involves {{GameBop}}'s "Sid is NOT A BATTLE AXE"(2009), their [[GameBop vs. AjaxCubed|Round 1 with AjaxCubed]] and well identified as one of Mycro's all-time favorite YTPs, being progressively edited over via "veg replacement" and recursive "recycling" inside of GameBop's project file for "ROBOTNIK PURCHASES THE OTHER HALF"(2008), their [[InsinerateHymn vs. zacheatscrackers vs. GameBop|Round 12 with InsinerateHymn and zacheatscrackers.]] Various edited samples from the former video continue to show up in later parts of the serve in addition. Ashcrement's response, a defining representation of his early tennis style, includes the addition of images of the Pokemon Snorlax, followed by a series of edits that shape layers of video into a rough image of a Jolteon before then morphing into a similar rough image of a Snorlax, similar to techniques recently executed by {{Moogle}} in a similar fashion. | Round 1's title "When Did You First Learn About Tennis?" comes verbatim from a [[YouChew]] thread title of the same name in the Tennis subforum, created by PokeFire50 on December 22, 2009. A lengthy silent segment of this round additionally involves {{GameBop}}'s "Sid is NOT A BATTLE AXE"(2009), their [[GameBop vs. AjaxCubed|Round 1 with AjaxCubed]] and well identified as one of Mycro's all-time favorite YTPs, being progressively edited over via "veg replacement" and recursive "recycling" inside of GameBop's project file for "ROBOTNIK PURCHASES THE OTHER HALF"(2008), their [[InsinerateHymn vs. zacheatscrackers vs. GameBop|Round 12 with InsinerateHymn and zacheatscrackers.]] Various edited samples from the former video continue to show up in later parts of the serve in addition. Ashcrement's response, a defining representation of his early tennis style, includes the addition of images of the Pokemon Snorlax, followed by a series of edits that shape layers of video into a rough image of a Jolteon before then morphing into a similar rough image of a Snorlax, similar to techniques recently executed by {{Moogle}} in a similar fashion. | ||