Anybody got any thoughts? I’m planning a watch of the entire series and a deep dive into the offshoots.
EDIT: This one is not the original producer’s page, but it’s laid out a lot more easy to follow. Moves from 1 through to the end.
I made my son a skibidi toilet cake for his birthday this year .I get a good laugh out of it !
Wait it’s an episodic show? I thought it was just a short 1 off clip. You should definitely watch it all and summarize the lore so we don’t have to endure watching every episode.
Basically the skibidi toilets take over and start a war in a city, the cameramen form a resistance group to fight against the skibidi toilets. Both sides keep escalating coming up with new counters to gain the upper hand. The cameramen also team up with speakermen and the tv people in their fight against the skibidi toilets.
It started making a lot more sense to me when I realized that one of the main good guys had gotten “turned” - before that it was like, “is it one color vs. another?” It would have helped to watch them in some semblance of order:-P.
Sounds kind of cool until you watch it. I saw a few eps and I’m just happy kids still use source assets.
There’s about 70 episodes 1-3 minutes each
Wtf 70 episodes. Maybe I should watch it
We watched 1 through 66 recently. We will be going back for more. It’s like watching someone put in their 10,000 hours one episode at a time. The art, story telling, direction, cinematography, sound etc all improve with each episode.
It’s just the GMOD stuff the people of my/right before my generation used to do
It’s even about the same level of “lol weird random”
I’m curious, but not curious enough to watch it myself. If you have highlights or a summary later, I’d read it lol
It’s done by some Millenial or GenZer animator. It’s a series of videos made on Source Filmmaker that feature prominently the head of Half-Life character, Gman, amongst others, protruding out of a toilet, doing a comically animated dance to various remixes of popular songs with the special featuring of the line “Skibidi”. The remixes are all original for the videos. The extremely short videos were initially of only the toilet man dancing with fellow toilet folk, but it has evolved to follow the conflict between skibidi toilets against camera head men struggling to take over the world with increasingly ridiculous scenarios of combat and warfare that include mechas, gore and sci-fi weapons. It has no dialogue, the plot is implied via animation exclusively.
The thing went popular on the YouTube shorts algorithmic suggestions and since it has no dialogue, it features repetitive and catchy music and a bizarre and amusing subject matter with immature bodily function humor, it garnered massive attention by small children. I say that Gen alpha barely passes 10 years old right now, so we should give them a break before imposing inflexible marketing labels upon them.
Good breakdown.
Ive explained it to people as "On the grand scheme of entertainment, its insane and not very good. On the scale of “indie films made on a $0 budget” its better than it has any right to be and for what it is, which is an animated science fiction war movie with no dialogue made in an ex soviet country on a pc by one guy its a fucking masterpiece. "
Same. In 20 years Gen A won’t be interested in whatever 12 year olds are watching; why should I be different?
Same
Zoomers are addicted to a Half Life 2/Garry’s mod meme?
Not zoomers, gen alpha is.
Honestly I don’t hate it, it started as genuine shitposts but evolved quickly into a larger scaled war that’s actually decently animated. I didn’t find it funny, but I am curious to where this story goes in the future.
This was my first time watching any of this, too.
My little Gen A brother calls his friends who watch it “super brainrot”. I like to tease him by calling things skibidi sometimes because I’m finally old enough to be the one getting the eye roll for using slang incorrectly and it’s truly hilarious.
When is this getting added to the criterion collection
So this is what my coworker was talking about? Wtf.
The younger generations are big on “authenticity”. The fact that this isn’t made by a production studio for money but by someone simply for the enjoyment of their craft, is amazing! It’s not “good” compared to a Hollywood movie, but it’s fantastic for being made by one young person on their home PC, and therefore my guess is that it is quite inspiring what others can accomplish with the technology available today, if they try, and continuously develop their skills.:-)
…what even…