Which story changed YOU forever? Get 50% off A Catalogue for the End of Humanity and the audiobook HERE linktr.ee/timhickson
@analyzationm
12 сағат бұрын
Beartown by Frederick Backman. It changed my perception of how impactful a story can be. I first read it when I was in 9th Grade
@arrow_awsome
12 сағат бұрын
one spesfic episdoe of the orginal digimon anime. i watched it when i was pretty young; and the episode that skullgreymon comes out for the first time was the frirst time i ever saw a protagonist fail; and espically failing as a friend. it really stuck with me
@plutoicecream3490
12 сағат бұрын
I've never actually had a story change my life. Though, I find that others have fascinating.
@Izag-wn5kd
12 сағат бұрын
The anime Oshi-No-Ko is a story about the Japanese stars known as Idols, it tackles all the deep dark issues with the entertainment industry like cancel culture, stalkers, and higher ups making poor decisions. After the first episode alone my mindset towards celebrities had completely changed, and when the main character is trying to stop his sister from achieving her Idol dreams, I actually was rooting for him. Which I wouldn’t have before seeing the first episode because it led to their mother’s death. Even though I knew what he was doing was wrong.
@grongitts
12 сағат бұрын
Soylent Green terrified me and showed me for the first time of how dark our world could truly be if we remain ignorant.
@m-rj.8332
12 сағат бұрын
Outer Wilds is that game for me. The curiosity, the loss, the thrill of putting things together - and how most of the logs you find are just as curious as you are, and how the story rewards... wow, man, just wow
@zergbergerdelemon9634
9 сағат бұрын
Boosting this with a comment because he NEEDS to see this. Outer Wilds is *that guy*
@c4tfsh8
7 сағат бұрын
Came here for the outer wilds comment!! This game gave me a reason to keep going after I escaped the lds church. I was told my entire life what would happen after death, and that every waking moment should be spent towards preparing for that death. And then I got Outer Wilds. It spun tales of characters that I fell in love with again and again, it told stories of compassion and tragedy, it finally made me realize that the universe isn't controlled by anything, it simply _is_ and that no one is judging me for living the way I want to. (It also reminded me that life can be unfair, and that it's always been that way. But that's not a reason to give up, if anything, it's a reason to keep going. There's always little moments of happiness to be found, sparks of connection with people who you may never see again, and isn't that so incredibly special?) And in the end, it told me that all will be forgotten. But instead of being put off by that fact, it gave me reason to find solace. You may fade from the record, but you are also _alive_ . You make your mark on the world before you dissolve into obscurity by the way you help people, the ways you try to make them smile, the ways they pay that back. And, aren't you glad you stopped to smell the pine trees? So uh yeah, Outer Wilds is probably the most life-changing piece of media that I've ever stumbled across, and I'm so glad I did
@kayskreed
4 сағат бұрын
Yes, I forgot to add that one to my list. It was frustrating at times and yet the mystery was very compelling.
@MisterNeumeyer
6 сағат бұрын
Signalis is one that changed me, I can't even describe how, but after playing it two years ago, it has left me with this inescapable longing, a dread in my heart that has never faded. 10/10, would play it again, and ugly cry into my desk.
@jemleye
11 сағат бұрын
Delicious in Dungeon. The amazing switch up from comedy to existential horror and impeccable character drama while keeping the story as fun as it ever was and even funnier, because Ryoko Kui is just the goat of writing intertwined comedy that feeds drama that feeds comedy which all is built upon incredible characters and Tolkien level worldbuilding. For it all to begin with food and base desires of human condition.
@calebpeters8008
6 сағат бұрын
I watched this recently and was blown away at how well everything in the story was handled! The show absolutely deserves the praise it's getting.
@davekuzyk5740
2 күн бұрын
Amazing video! I love that you are so vulnerable with these discussions; I've sometimes felt ashamed or guilty at feeling such strong feelings from a story, especially when others I know haven't. It's very gratifying to hear that I am not weird 😅.
@R4Y2k
13 сағат бұрын
Nothing to be ashamed of. Just means that you're not yet dead inside which kinda is a good thing these days if you ask me ;-)
@KalikaRoo31
12 сағат бұрын
I understand your feeling especially if it's a sory that's very simple or ment for children. It's gratifying to know so many people experience this.
@lilunette9319
11 сағат бұрын
@KalikaRoo31, there's only an age minimum, not an age limit, for stories to be enjoyed.
@MorgottofLeyendell
9 сағат бұрын
Stories are stories and stories are meant to make you feel something. If you feel strongly about a story, you're not the weird one, you are enjoying the story as it was meant to be enjoyed.
@jalapenoofjustice4682
12 сағат бұрын
when I heard you discuss the funeralists, I assumed this was some classic story by a highly acclaimed author, so I was impressed to discover you wrote it
@Lky-Pky
4 сағат бұрын
Thank you for this video. I was born a storyteller and still am one. I've written 3 unpublished books, and love stories with all of my heart. A while ago I was at an exploitative company and I used writing as my last hope to escape that. Creativity and writing is something to be enjoyed, putting that pressure and expectation on myself made everything I did not enough. Fast forward to quitting my job and working on my mental health, the book Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert has helped me change my perspective. I think that stories are beautiful, and all of them should be celebrated, including the broken ones told by 5 year olds. Thank you for speaking of the majesty of stories. Please continue creating(: And my fellow storytellers, don't be so hard on yourselves. 'done is better than perfect' and 'You are not required to save the world with your creativity; your art not only doesn't have to be original, in other words, it also doesn't have to be important' Your art is something to be enjoyed and celebrated.
@パンダの死体
12 сағат бұрын
One of the most profound experiences I had was in "Umineko: When They Cry" that develops from a deconstruction of the murder mystery genre to the exploration of humanity's relation to fiction and shows how stories are alive as long as we carry them (one of the messages getting out of it). And after getting to what it really is about, there was almost nothing that could come close. "Without love, it cannot be seen"
@i.147
11 сағат бұрын
umineko and nier both are stories that changed my life but also my outlook on it for the better. truly unforgettable and unparalleled experiences
@triomegazero
6 сағат бұрын
I hope we one day get a complete animated adaptation. I really need to sit down and read the novels.
@lorddaegoth
13 сағат бұрын
For me, what nier changed was that I started to internalise that no matter how dark it gets, you can find a light. It might be in an exceptionally weird place, you might even have to become the light yourself... but it's there. Somewhere.
@michaellyons810
7 сағат бұрын
this is quite possibly the best ad for your own book I've ever seen. If I had the means, I would be buying the book right now.
@Dat_Guys_Wise
12 сағат бұрын
Probably your best video You’ve perfected your style getting your thoughts, opinions, and emotions about an idea across so well here
@Daemonworks
12 сағат бұрын
The very first of these for me was The Phantom Tollbooth. That book basically turned me from a kid who could read, but was mostly read to, into somebody who started reading basically everything I could get my hands on. It quite literally changed the entire trajectory of my life, set me on a track that would guide me for decades to come, just by being /exactly/ the right book for the person I was at the time.
@Ashtarte3D
9 сағат бұрын
Great choice! I remember having a similar experience with Phantom Tollbooth. I was forced to read it in elementary school and I remember it vividly as one of the times I went from being forced to read something to devouring it quicker than my teachers ever expected.
@mollystewart740
12 сағат бұрын
The first one I can remember really changing me is Good Omens. It was the first Terry Pratchett book I ever read (my dad lent me his copy in about 2011) and it really hit me with its humour, its themes of fate vs free will, determinism, and what the nature of Good or Evil are
@MikaelaSelene
7 сағат бұрын
The only video game thats done this for me was Life is Strange. I honestly don't know how to explain the feelings it gave me, but after i finished it for the first time, i literally sat on my couch in silence for at least an hour. I didnt touch a video game for weeks and i retreated to my comfort show (ATLA), binged it, then followed it up with Korra. Finally after all that i settled back into a somewhat normal routine. That was 2 years ago. Even now i will think back and sit in silence for a bit. Violet Evergarden did something similar as well.
@kellymoore5517
3 сағат бұрын
LIS was so good! I wanted more and wasn't disappointed personally.
@jeaniegirlover5335
11 сағат бұрын
9:36 This hurts. I'm sitting here trying, raking my brain, TRYING to remember a story that changed me and I can't remember any. I've read most of the ones you mentioned and I was like 'oh, yeah, right, I read that once...I don't remember if it changed me". I have a very bad memory especially of my childhood. I KNOW that there has been stories that changed me, that made me cry, made me question life and my place in it but I just can't remember them. I can usually ignore my memory problems. The great thing about forgetting things is you usually don't miss them...until someone reminds you...and suddenly you're crying, mourning something you don't remember losing.
@xzonia1
7 сағат бұрын
I can relate regarding not being able to remember a story that's changed me. He's a passionate guy, which is great to see, but I'm not a passionate person. I've read stories that have blown me away (figuratively), but I cannot remember any that I would say changed me. I'm still basically the same steadfast person now that I was at 2 or 3 years old, back to my earliest memories. I feel the same, just more knowledgeable. When I read stories, great or small, I always have a feeling like I'm remembering something I knew but forgot. They're simply reminding me of what I already know, in a way. Stories always feel familiar to me, as if they've always been a part of me. I also have a bad memory. I've loved a lot of stories, but I don't feel changed by any of them. You're not alone in this.
@kaikalter
13 сағат бұрын
Always a good Saturday when there's a new Hello Future Me video
@davidfwooldridge3430
9 сағат бұрын
“The Inner Light” from StarTrek TNG is a master piece in this topic. The Enterprise encounters an ancient probe and it zaps Picard, usual stuff, but it isn’t nefarious, it has Picard live the life of one man living on a dying world. In the end, it was a desperate plea cast into space on the glimmer of hope that someone would find it and witness there in. The episode ends with Picard making the sort of flute they had and playing a song he learned; the last notes of a civilization millions of years dead.
@kaikalter
13 сағат бұрын
Red Dead Redemption 2 has left me going out of it with a sensation I had never had before, and never since. I do not know quite how to describe it.
@trumpetluver1022
11 сағат бұрын
Fire Emblem: Three Houses. It was the first video game I played on my own without my husband. It showed me that video games (something I didn’t grow up with and knew nothing about) could be these beautiful pieces of storytelling art. There was a place for me here, I could enjoy and even get good at video games and my world got so much bigger. I’m now 600+ hours into Baldur’s Gate 3, with three journals full of terrible fanfiction and I’ve never been happier 😄
@ngarcia2116
8 сағат бұрын
I was in third grade and my friend and I were looking at books in our classroom when I picked up Harry Potter. I was going to read it but she wanted to as well, and since she was a faster reader than I was she read it while I picked up Dear America, My Heart is on the Ground. That book changed my life as a 9 year old by showing me how harsh it was to be a little native girl being sent to a missionary and being forced to give up her culture and watch her friend be buried alive. It was written in a diary format from the girls pov and it hit so hard. It changed me and the kind of books I was drawn to forever after that. I didn’t end up reading Harry Potter until I was 18 because of that fateful day 😅
@PaladinGaymer
12 сағат бұрын
Outer Wilds. Everyone should play it. Play it blind. Don't look into it. Just get it and start it. It's worth it every time. In my humble opinion. Lol. All The Wyers of Pern was the first book I had a visceral emotional reaction to as a child. The end of that hit me light a freight train. And diving into Dune for a while as a teen gave me a literal existential crisis. XD
@atheistsgod
2 сағат бұрын
The way you talk about stories makes me feel seen and like there are other people like me out there after all, even if I didn't grow up around them or have them around me now.
@siupanifan9316
10 сағат бұрын
The brightest example I've got of a story that's changed my life has to be Cowboy Bebop. Since I've always been a really sentimental and nostalgic person, its themes about being stuck in the past and living in your own shadow deeply resonated with me at the time I watched it. The characters, the music, and the aesthetic as a whole contribute to what is in my mind a truly special piece of fiction. And my favorite. I don't think a single day has gone by since I first watched it almost 4 years ago in which I haven't thought about it.
@sannamalina
11 сағат бұрын
For me, it’s the story that is the Mass Effect video game trilogy. Although I’m an avid reader too, the sometimes hundreds of hours you immerse yourself into a video game story should not be underestimated in the impact it can have on you.
@nikolaiorelov9305
6 сағат бұрын
For me, it's Vinland Saga by Makoto Yukimura. Watching a person who was raised in one of the most violent societies humankind has ever known, turn into a man of compassion and empathy. A man who wants all to benefit. A man who learns to let go of his hatred, and understand that no one is his enemy. That story really touched me and forever changed how I view humanity and the brief existence we've been given. I'll forever be grateful to Yukimura for crafting such a deeply horrifying yet remarkably beautiful tale.
@TheRibottoStudios
11 сағат бұрын
For me a movie that I distinctly remember changing me was the Nightmare Before Christmas. I was super homesick one time in college (I was only 4 hours away but that's a difference when you've never left home before) and I was super depressed. At the end of my freshman year I watched this movie and got enamored with it. I wanted to learn more about the movie making process. So, I switched my major to Film. I wasn't as into the major as I hoped (thanks depression) but one thing I did really love despite my crippling depression was editing. It's a grueling process, but fun to see it come together. I'll watch a movie now, even something as simple as Transformers, and be in awe of the CGI for the Autobots and Decepticons. I'll watch Arcane and be enamored with the animation. I'll watch Titanic and be floored by the practical effects used to bring that gorgeous ship to life. Be in awe of how they broke her in half. Be impressed by the attention to detail. Only to then go online and see people talk about the usual talking points, vs what I'm seeing; the techniques, the themes, and technology used to create these stories. It is a lonely isle indeed. Part of me wishes I was a ignorant as the average movie going audience but the other part is glad I know how these stories are made so I can better appreciate them.
@trumpetluver1022
11 сағат бұрын
I wish more people would talk about those things too! I disliked the live action ATLAB on a bones deep level, and I agreed with the usual talking points, but it wasn’t until I saw a video of someone breaking down the terrible shot compositions and specific film making techniques that I really understood why I disliked it so much. Wish I had a more positive example, but this is the most concrete one I could think of 😅
@triomegazero
6 сағат бұрын
Haibane Renmei was a story I watched because it influenced Megatokyo, showing up in some of the artists side projects. I watched it tell a slow, character focused story in a setting that was mysterious and never really explained much. I didn't understand it then, and on rewatching it to show some friends, I would say I still don't. But the experience of absorbing 13 episodes of the lives of these characters in an unfamiliar world, culminating in a single scene that still resonates, with everything leading to just a single sentence with so much weight behind it. That changed me, it showed me that lore and action and dialogue are tools that don't always need to be used, that storytelling is about knowing how to use them and when not to. I will spend hours watching, listening, reading, just to find that one moment of weight. And I will enjoy every bit of it.
@lepidopterachoir4079
6 сағат бұрын
When i was in early middle school my mom decided i was old enough to see a production of Les Miserables. That story has shaped my morality for the rest of my life, and i haven't shut up about it since. One of my most happy moments was receiving a text from a friend saying they'd just watched it, and they got it now.
@john-michaelcenters171
9 сағат бұрын
Bastion. I will never forget how I felt playing the end of bastion. the entire game is structured around a premise and it twists at the end and I sat there for 15 minutes, paralyzed by the intensity of that twist. truly one of the best games I have ever played.
@DieNibelungenliad
12 сағат бұрын
I think the best tales are those that pick a theme and go through with it all the way to the very end, even if it's uncomfortable to do so. Sometimes, there's no end in sight, but you've got to keep going down the winding path through to wherever it takes you
@rett_nord
12 сағат бұрын
Black Sails - my life literally has never been the same after I got to the scene where the queer protagonists says 'not only am I not going to ask society for forgiveness after they ruined my life and called me loathsome and a monster, it's actually me who will decide whether to forgive them'.
@rebeccacrow9427
10 сағат бұрын
James Flint is honestly one of the most inspiring characters I've ever had the pleasure of meeting. Black Sails also changed my life. Edit: I also don't want to forget Miranda. The scene where she stands up for Flint...
@CookiesRiot
9 сағат бұрын
_The Beginner's Guide_ has fundamentally shifted my perception of video games, interpersonal relationships, storytelling, and just generally how humans communicate and understand each other. Other things that have completely redefined how video games and storytelling work: - The Stanley Parable (same dev as The Beginners Guide), especially the broom closet ending - Spec Ops: The Line, iykyk - most of the Supergiant Games catalogue, but especially Pyre - a rare game that turns all "fail states" into meaningful and interesting stories, to a degree that you might intentionally choose to lose the main gameplay loop to make the story go the way you want it - Stray Gods, which somehow pulls off a real-time choose-your-own-adventure musical while also being a classical Greek myth about prophecy - Journey (same composer as Stray Gods), which manages to have an emotionally impactful story with an unnamed mute protagonist and the occasional other player
@6pades
6 сағат бұрын
i feel the same way about the beginner's guide!!! i will always talk my friend's ears off about it and make them play it going in blind, that's so key
@rhylin26
11 сағат бұрын
Dishonored. You’re the Empress’s personal guard and you fail to stop her assassination and the kidnapping of her daughter. The game reacts to your choices, specifically how violently you play the game. Obviously I’m pissed and I slay all the henchmen I come across until the game finally lets you rescue the daughter. In a quiet moment at the home base of the game you walk by the princess drawing to pass the time and process the trauma she just went through. She tells you she’s drawing you rescuing her, and she drew me as a terrifying smoke monster because of how violently I rescued her. That hit me hard. From that point until the end of the game I tried to play as pacifist as I could.
@ericyoungenya1926
10 сағат бұрын
same bruh. her drawing you hits different. was barely able to pull back enough to change course
@RossOriginals
7 сағат бұрын
There's stories that gave me fresh perspectives on things but I don't think I've ever had this feeling of being changed by it.
@xzonia1
7 сағат бұрын
Same. I like his passion, though. :)
@danielsantiagourtado3430
13 сағат бұрын
Thanks For this! ALL your videos are awesome! Your hardwork is always appreciated 😊😊😊❤❤
@hecksnek6158
7 сағат бұрын
I have two: Rain World fundamentally altered my brain chemistry, probably some of the best ludonarritive around. It also taught me that i'm not the protagonist, or even a side character, I'm part of a dense ecosystem of others, and that doesn't make life any less meaningful. I Saw the TV Glow woke me up to the fact that I'm probably trans, and it feels like a lot of the scenes are laser-targeted to emotionallly annihilate you if you are closeted.
@gamemasterofscratch
12 сағат бұрын
Undertale fundamentally changed how I played every single game after it.
@theempress1104
10 сағат бұрын
The stories that really stayed with me....Are You There God, It's Me Margaret by Judy Blume ....it opened up the idea that I can talk to God as a friend. :) And The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis. The most magical story I've ever read as a kid.
@mejzzwejz713
12 сағат бұрын
This heals me more than therapy
@Paincreas.
6 сағат бұрын
Thank you Tim, for sharing another beautiful video. This is what I needed to smile today. I want to share stories in the passionate way that you do. So, as soon as I finish my college work for the day I’m going to write. And nothing can stop me. Thank you.
@CrazedSeer
7 сағат бұрын
For me it was the story of Elantris. Specifically, the story of Hrathen, the priest. The exploration of religion, morality, how faith drives us, what faith is, and everything else helped shape me so much in my relationship with religion.
@mshinkle1
12 сағат бұрын
Amazing you upload this video today as I just read the story last night.
@theppotato1667
6 сағат бұрын
I think a part of my childhood died when I read Flowers For Algenon in school. I saw people take turns reading parts of this piece out loud, each voice changing from bored to excited to scared to me. On my turn I was quiet. I had a paragraph, there were words on a page of a man yelling in a diner at the injustice he has just seen. But yet I couldn't say it, I went to the bathroom and cried. I will always love this story and I read the rest on my own.
@John-me1hz
7 сағат бұрын
The end of LOTR made me feel a strange kind of sorrow which has stuck with me. Having read the Hobbit, I expected a similar conclusion. But when Frodo and Gandalf and the others left for Valinor, and with the coming of the age of men, it felt like the magic was seeping out of the world just as the story was slipping away from me.
@rebeccacrow9427
10 сағат бұрын
I don't have words to explain the stories that impacted me, so I'll just leave a list. Black Sails. Hadestown. Arrival. Avatar the Last Airbender. Paddington 2. Haikyuu. Battlestar Galactica. Firefly.
@vincentshadow9194
11 сағат бұрын
the stories that changed me are games like nier, persona 5, outer wilds and what remains of edith finch tv shows like teen titans, avatar, death note and batman tas movies like a silent voice all of these mediums made me different and for that i will always love them
@CEMonaghanOfficial
7 сағат бұрын
What an incredible video, Tim! This exact idea - the deep connection we all have with storytelling is exactly why I like to read and write. I absolutely need to check out that collection of yours when I have the chance.
@rachelwebber3605
9 сағат бұрын
I'm reading through Kentaro Miura's manga, Berserk, for the first time and I can feel it changing me. I've been confronting childhood trauma through it, but my partner is here to support me when it gets bad.
@deandredukes95
12 сағат бұрын
Fiction reveals the truth that reality obscures.
@fenixmagicjd
13 сағат бұрын
Black Beauty by Anna Sewell. I read that book so many times as a child. I read it once I had become an adult, and realized so much of her morality had been my guiding compass. I think in a lot of ways that book has shaped me more than anything else.
@melusine826
11 сағат бұрын
The plague dogs. Heartbreaking
@GuiSmith
17 минут бұрын
I think there are several ways that SOMA and Adastra changed me and my perspective forever, for their existential themes and both having some pretty remarkable genre deconstruction. The tragedy in both is also not to be understated. They encourage thought and reading deeper, and I love that about them because even years after they're done and I've played both, I can still learn more.
@havenschade8174
4 сағат бұрын
The sandman, i love how stories are portrayed in it. Its so beautiful because stories are the most powerful things ever. I love death too, the scene of a man looking up at her at the end of worlds end and describing how he will love her all his life, like his oldest deepest friend Edit: i bought the book
@anivijudi
10 сағат бұрын
There's been so many. It feels like every new period of my life can be partly defined by what stories fascinated me at the time. The first was a book of fairy tales. There were several but one stands out in my mind. I grew up in France so it was called something like "contes de fées du monde entier" (fairy tales from all over the world). It was this big A4 size book a couple of centimetres thick, heavy for little 4-5 year old me and even for the slightly older me once I could read it on my own. Every tale started with the title, the name of this version's author, and where in the world it was from. There were big beautiful full page color illustrations, that took pains to match the story, giving each one more of the flavor of where it was from. It expanded my understanding of the world so much, it showed me that the system I lived in was one of so many others. It doesn't take much for a child's world to expand, even simply using words like Shah or Maharajah instead of King is enough to open a whole new dimension of understanding of the world. Then there's things like "what's the most magical fruit?" in different parts of the world, what sort of animals do people turn into...etc. So much of what I know and understand of other cultures and even geography can be traced back to the seeds of knowledge that book discreetly planted in me as a child. Then there was the Faucon Déniché (the falcon that fell out of the nest/was discovered) a lovely story that every primary schooler in France has read because it depicts life in the middle ages so well and has a love/hate relationship with. That was my first encounter with a book that slaps you in the face with reality and how life just isn't meant to be fair. It has the perfect heroes journey and then just as all the injustice seems resolved and we're headed to Happily Ever After everything is ruined on the very last page because life in the middle ages sucked (if you've ever met a French person and wondered "why are they like this?" this book is why, or at least it was probably the starting point). Every single Dick King-Smith book (the author of Babe the shepherd pig) was great and I still recommend those as gifts fro any child 9 and under. Tomora Pierce's series, the Song of the lioness, Protector of the Small, Magic Circle and Circle Opens (and her other books) helped me gain confidence as a teenager and still to this day I can pull small lessons from them to help me persevere. Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials hurt me in the best way possible and made me think so much about people and the world and was probably the first time I really thought about what it means to be good or bad. And his Sally Lockhart series still makes me grieve (I read those once and never could bring myself to do it again but they are still in my top ten best books of all time list). In my early twenties I read Claire North's the First 15 lives of Harry August, and the Disappearance of Hope, and those redefined what good books mean to me as well as deepened my thoughts on contemporary problems. And this comment got too long even though I was trying to hold back 😅
@liamconnelly3115
10 сағат бұрын
This just happened to me a few days ago, when I found dandadan. And I find it ironic that a video like this just came out talking about the impact of stories. The best of stories have something in them that touches the very fabric of what it means to be human. If anyone hasn't read it yet, I highly recommend it. But this revelation and reading other incredibly awesome stories while I struggle just to write one page a day with mine makes me feel heavy on the inside.
@flashsideways950
12 сағат бұрын
Automata really did spend 4 playthroughs telling you everything you're doing is pointless, believing in things is dumb, and there's gonna be tragedy no matter how hard you try, but if you don't do something and don't believe in something then there's no point in existing. It's got such an existentially bleak outlook, and yet somehow, it's still the most cathartic and life-affirming piece of art I've ever encountered.
@BugsyBugYT
Сағат бұрын
I think the story that's really stayed with me the most and changed me forever is a little book called The Girl Who Drank the moon, a fantasy story on paper about a small town covered with fog made of sorrow, about the witch who keeps it that way and the people who save it but what the story is actually about is memories, happiness, sorrow and moving on.
@liamfernandez198
Сағат бұрын
One story that really affected me was lost in random. The main character’s constant optimism and drive to help people was really fun to play and watch and as a teenager the story was an incredibly poignant coming of age story. I’m not normally one for those types of stories, but being able to play through it and the unique parts to the story and world made it effect me very deeply.
@scrollkeeper5272
11 сағат бұрын
Baldur's Gate 3, Nier Automata, Divinity Original sin 2, hell even Mass Effect Andromeda. These are just four stories that have resonated with me on deeply personal levels, and they are all on my list of inspirations and reasons for wanting to create and share stories with others. To build epic worlds full of love and tragedy.
@unicorntomboy9736
9 сағат бұрын
What about Subnautica, which is one of my favourite examples of compelling worldbuilding
@hanchan2k
8 сағат бұрын
Recently, Frieren has completely captivated me. It’s hit me deeply on so many levels…
@yasminceleste3844
2 сағат бұрын
Also , another incredible video! I’m loving these ones! And the story!! You have me hooked, I’m off to order the book
@DD112987
10 сағат бұрын
“No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man.” The same way we never read a story twice as even if the text is the same, we are never the same reader. A story always with me is Princess Mononoke as i always keep the in mind the idea to see with eyes unclouded by hate.
@jjw9641
7 сағат бұрын
Great video! Sorry if this doesn't count, as it is nonfiction. David Attenborough's "Life on Earth" brought it home to me, at about 13, how old the world is and how important our brief time alive here is.
@xzonia1
7 сағат бұрын
Nonfiction stories are still stories. They're told from a particular POV, and can change drastically if that POV is changed, so however "real" it is, it's still a story. Attenborough counts. :)
@Cubehead27
11 сағат бұрын
On Hundred Years of Solitude is the big one for me. Stopped me dead in my tracks when I first read it as a teenager. One that I think more people should give a try though - the short story "Three Versions of Judas" by Jorge Luis Borges". I don't know how many people would be likely to be affected by it in the way I was, but it's unbelievable.
@Booksforthewin
7 сағат бұрын
A Place Further Than the Universe- the only people that haven’t been changed by it hasn’t watched it. To say it is a masterpiece is an understatement.
@artyfarty87
6 сағат бұрын
Kia Ora Tim, one of the most impactful books I've read was All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. I've always been intrigued with stories set on the back drop of war. Even though the two main characters are fictional. I still think about them & imagine what it would have been like experiencing the world, the way in which they experienced it. Without giving away too much, the two main characters initially seem like two different stories, but eventually their fates converge. They experience the world very differently to each other but are connected through those experiences. It was joyful, sad, harrowing & ultimately satisfying to read. A happy ending that is somehow tinted with a sense of loss yet resilience.
@Drunkenvalley
8 сағат бұрын
I read "A Silent Voice", it had me crying a lot, and for weeks and months I debated whether to give some people in my past a chance. Maybe they regretted, or had matured in ways they had to.
@Hilversumborn
12 сағат бұрын
Persona 5 gave me a proverbial wake up call about myself that I carry to this day. Persona 3 helped me deal with my grief after my grandfather had passed. Lost Judgment showed me how much the victims of bullying suffer, and if I spot it, I deal with it immediately.
@pauloariente
9 сағат бұрын
I have a few. Dark Souls, Mass Effect, The Garden of Sinners, 86, Hollow Knight... they've changed me so deeply that I can say that they molded me. I'm writing my own story and every time I write a scene, I remember these stories and what they've taught me, of their beauty and of their horror, of their sadness and of their divinity. I'm glad I've experienced them, and I don't want to ever forget them.
@jeffreybrannen9465
9 сағат бұрын
Taran Wanderer by Lloyd Alexander - as a 10 year old who didn’t know who I was, but wanting to accomplish something important, journeying with him as he became a man changed me. I have returned to this over and over again. The original Homeworld. When you jump back to the Earth and the debris of the last space station greets you while Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings calls all the longings of lost hope… The anguish of that moment is something I’ve never experienced in a video game before or since. “The Death of Ivan Ilyich” by Tolstoy - two years after being diagnosed with brain cancer, laying in bed, reading about Ivan’s loneliness and the humiliation of dying, it was so sad and distressing I couldn’t do anything but lay there and weep for hours. I couldn’t explain it to my family, especially because they have been there with me throughout the hospital, the surgery, the chemo, all of it.
@Genderkaiser
4 сағат бұрын
Ocarina of Time, when I was like six or seven. It was my first favourite video game and it taught me that games could be more than just really fun toys - that they could be profound and beautiful. Even now I still think back to that line from Shiek, "the flow of time is always cruel". It's something I've understood more and more with time.
@Oshamon
6 сағат бұрын
One of the ones that I can actually remember that truly impacted me was persona 3 reload. I had been spoiled beforehand, but there’s a difference between hearing about the events of a story and actually experiencing it. I’m not going to spoil anything because I highly recommend playing it without spoilers, but it honestly reminded me of what it means to live when I was at one of my lowest points.
@nickbrown762
9 сағат бұрын
The Lord of the Rings. Even the smallest person can change the fortunes of all
@Sentinel_Soul
7 сағат бұрын
The Fairyland series by Catherynne M Valente displayed a coming of age story in a way that shook me to my core and made me realize that even at my "adult" age of early twenties I still had a lot of growing up to do.
@oliverworley5162
7 сағат бұрын
SWOTOR 2 resonated with me. Kreia and her vision of the world has been on my mind for, over a decade now... I can't hell but think of it when I write my own things
@sierrad.7654
9 сағат бұрын
The revenge of magic by James Riley. It really made me think about how any conversation you have with someone may be the last you have with them especially a loved one. The thought that this could be the last time I talk to someone sits in the back of my brain rent free at all hours of the day
@pitchblackkoi
57 минут бұрын
the one story that always ends up coming to mind when this comes up is a little known book i picked up in 6th grade to read for class. it's called Green Angel and it's by Alice Hoffman and i have never forgotten it. it's this incredible meditation on grief and how that transforms you and how one bad day, one catestrophic event, can change your life. i read it at 11 years old and it blew my mind even then. in just a year i lost my father and the book took on a whole new meaning for me. i ended up buying a copy that sits on my shelf more than a decade later. i pick it up every once in a while and to be honest it still hits for me.
@sacredfir5861
Сағат бұрын
I've never seen anybody talk about it, but I loved The Deed of Paksenarrion. The way Paks dealt with hardship was very sad, but very realistic. It sticks with me to this day, and I'm really not sure why. But I think about the book a ton.
@here_bedragons
10 сағат бұрын
Another great video to start my Saturday with!
@Supercooldude1107
11 сағат бұрын
Outer Wilds changed my life
@maxdonner4794
Күн бұрын
I love this thank you o can’t put it into words. Thank you
@foxqueen6214
7 сағат бұрын
I have a lot of memory issues due to head trauma, mental disabilities and illnesses, and plenty of other things, so I struggle to remember the first story that hit me hard, but I remember watching the Handmaid's Tale on Amazon during 2016 and the election that year. I was terrified and heartbroken and moved so deeply because I hated that I could see that becoming a reality. Maybe not exactly, but I feared for my rights and my friends and I was just entering into adulthood and it made me confront something I had never considered before: infertility. That story really changed how I felt about and saw the world, and was my first and only real existential crisis. I found a pristine copy in a Goodwill and have the book on my shelf now. I'm scared to read it but I know I want to, as well as the Testiment. Anyways, I really love this video and it's made me want to check out these stories (I wanted the Bridge to Terabithia movie when I was roughly 10 but didn't have the attention span to sit down and focus. Nor do I remember much besides the dog and the Tree man), and when I get my next paycheck I hope to get your book. This is very long and rambly, sorry, but I also wanted to say thank you for all your world and story building videos too. They've been a tremendous help with my writing and made me realize why it felt so slow or clunky or rushed and I can't wait to finish my own story and share it with everyone.
@elyaequestus1409
9 сағат бұрын
The story that changed me forever, was the story that got me into reading again. House of Leaves. The book is Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (CPTSD) solidified and it showed me the messiness of existance, the search for structure and the overwhelming, soul crushing need to be loved yet having the inability to accept love. It validated my traumas in ways that nobody could and because the writer is not a coward, he literally writes what the characters needed to do in order to get out of their trauma responses. And because it is so raw and vicaral, the people who have been through that hell, will also recognise the path out. It is beautiful. It helped me with acceptance that there are things in life (whether those are liars, abusers, a too narrow scope, a lack of understanding) that you will never understand. And that's okay. The moment that one digs into those mysteries from a place of fear is the exact place where hell begins. The theme of the book isnt to find answers. It is to find acceptance and closure. Which is my take. And what I love the most about the book is that it is so personal, so wild and so intense that 5 people can (and will) have wildly different opinions and thoughts about what the story is even about. I love it so, so much. And every other book became more rich because I could dig into 'what lies between the lines' and started with interpretting the text less about what it said, but what it meant to me. It set my mind free and I would not be where I am without it. This reminds me that I only started to read again after the video essay 'The Beauty of Annihiliation' from this channel and 'Control, Anatomy, and the Legacy of the Haunted House' by Jacob Geller. So thank you guys. You gave me pieces of myself that I did not know I had lost in the first place.
@awsomeness
8 сағат бұрын
I’m currently reading House of Leaves! I’m only halfway through but it has such fascinating depths I could never of guessed going into it.
@creativecatstudios
9 сағат бұрын
Ted Lasso was an extremely impactful story. Could not stop thinking about it for weeks.
@isabellamlodecki
13 сағат бұрын
The Outer Wilds was the first story I remember changing me like this, and I think it's also about stories on some level at least There's noting I can say about it, except that if you've played it you probably understand. And if you haven't, you should
@dmjauren2530
11 сағат бұрын
There's a passage from the Hatchet where the protagonist is fundamentally changed by his trials, and he "sees the trees" in the suburbs for the first time. Before, he had perceived them in a superficial kind of way, but this time, he truly absorbed their essence in a way he would never have been capable of before. It stayed with me because of my own trials in growing up and learning to truly see people, not as an archetype or a list of prescribed labels, but as fluid individuals constantly evolving by the forces surrounding them. It also reminds me of Frodo's evolution at the end of the LOTR and how he was forever changed, unable to see the world as he had before the veil of his innocence was lifted. How do we return to a former state once the journey is over? If we can't, how does one find the courage to take those first steps out the door, and how do we adapt who we are to a new and satisfying state when it's over? I still think about those questions, and I'm not sure I'll ever be satisfied with an answer. I'd love to hear what others might think if you're willing to share by replying.
@nerdywolverine8640
6 сағат бұрын
hatchet fundamentally changed how i viewed humans in relation to nature and i was already a kid who was interested in wilderness survival stuff when i read it. you just unlocked a core memory for me
@righteousitch
Сағат бұрын
Hyperion by Dan Simmons absolutely blew my mind when I first read it. The structure of the narrative was nothing that I'd ever experienced before, and the scale and quality of the world building (or universe building) just had me in awe. I already loved sci-fi but this really was so much more intricate than I thought it'd be. I know people give the last two books in the series a hard time, but I really loved the whole quadrilogy. In terms of short stories, A Song for Lya by George R.R. Martin also blew me away, and kind of changed how I thought of short stories and just how powerful they can be.
@oboretaiwritingch.2077
11 сағат бұрын
As a writer, I'm always split on how impactful fiction can and should be. On one hand, many of our highest grossing stories have environmentalist and anti-capitalist theme, telling stories of heroes who live by believing in human compassion, yet we still live in a planet that's literally crumbling apart by people who only think about serving themselves endlessly, and where millions use positive messages like tolerance to be toxic and hateful to strangers. Then on the other hand, we have fiction that have clear negative impacts on people. People who will literally send death threats to others for drawing their waifus in a way they don't agree with. Gacha games that use people's attachment to fictional characters to rob them blind. Fiction like isekais where the core message is "I hate the world and the world should revolve around me" and nothing else. I do dearly believe that fiction can inspire people into having better lives, to change the world for the better, but time and time again humans proved to take the wrong messages.
@legendswarble2845
5 сағат бұрын
The Cold Cereal saga by Adam Rex changed the way I think about stories. It was wild, bizarre, funny, painful, tragic, and comforting. It shaped me growing up
@i.j.dragonfly3123
8 сағат бұрын
Aside from Bridge to Terabithia, which you have already discussed, The Girl Who Could Fly by Victoria Forester is the first book I can remember reading which truly, genuinely, shook me to my core. The scene where the cricket sings its first and only song has haunted me for the last twelve years.
@unfinishedpuzzlepiece4010
6 сағат бұрын
I have a few 1: children of memory by Adrian Tchaikovsky, although the whole children of time series also probably counts, it really made me think about how my sense of self is really formed 2: voyager s4ep 12: mortal coil It reflected so many of my own fears of death n a visceral level 3: small gods by terry Pratchett The way it approached religion and fundamentalist ideas stuck with me, and the ending scene gets me every time
@chaosbean6320
6 сағат бұрын
Small gods is probably the ine Discworld story that has helped me the most, to the point that I want to get a tattoo of "here and now, you are alive". Because yeah, there is the religious concepts that he explores, but more so the idea that we only have the present to make a change, that right now is the time to take action continuously drives me. Not in a way that's unthinking or uncritical, not in a way that's reactionary, but based on plans and ideas and through helping others. Small gods is the one that I always come back to when I'm struggling or feeling hopeless
@morganleanderblake678
11 сағат бұрын
I appreciate your mindfulness about access. I'm in a position to buy the more expensive copy and the audible without trouble *now* but a few years back I would have loved a favored author to have cheaper editions so I could get them at all. Thank you.
@SennaHawx
10 сағат бұрын
TV show 'Katla', which I watched just after working through my own suicidal thoughts. That last episode stuck with me ever since and I've yet to be able to rewatch it
@aonati2856
9 сағат бұрын
A Canticle for Leibowitz. It gave me my own personal definition of what beauty is. And is in my opinion the greatest sci-fi story ever written.
@DocFoxolot
7 сағат бұрын
I cannot think of a single view I hold that was not touched by Canticle for Leibowitz. I couldn’t agree more about being the greatest sci fi story
@SummerADDE_Elevators
12 сағат бұрын
I think it was Re:Zero seaon 1 & 2 that gave me new perspectives, seeing the character interactions and how they developed, and the horrors this series foretold me. It helped me to cope in a time I was at my worst and led me to a better path as I realized that the only way I could get out of darkness is to do the right thing myself and with help of others, and not to let fate dictate my future. Then it was Mushoku Tensei, and despite Rudeus, the main character, being hated upon, I could only relate to his isolation in his past life and the trauma he had as I was in a similar situation myself. Seeing how he grows as a person is an inspiring tale that tells me to be a better person myself, to give me a 2nd chance at life.
@enicot
9 сағат бұрын
The Dark Tower series from Stephen King was definitely life changing for me. Also, of course, Fight Club, but we can't talk about that.
@IchMagDosenmais
10 сағат бұрын
Delicious in Dungeon and Made in Abyss. Really changed how I look at Anime as a Medium. Both really amazing pieces of Art.
@RebekahLeiplein
12 сағат бұрын
The story that I believe has touched me mos is the RPG that I'm in that is currently in its final stretches. I came in late, most people in the party have been playing in this world for almost 5 years. I've been playing for almost two and even still it has been incredibly moving. Part of me goes "how unique of an experience can it be? 15 other people are experiencing it at literally the same time." And then on the other hand, no one else is looking through the eyes of the same protagonist I am. I have learned so much as a person and as a writer getting to be this girl every other week. She fell in love before I did. She lost her father before I did. She was faced with judging her self worth... in a similar time frame to me but she had life and death stakes. This story is so beautiful and to keep it from disappearing into history like the previous 40 years of stories this DM has told, I started a youtube channel (not this one, this isn't marketing) to somehow save it for a little longer
@meowywowie
11 сағат бұрын
The House in Fata Morgana is one of those stories that ever since reading it continues to stick with me for over a decade now. I find it super difficult to have anyone take the recommendation of it though simply due to it being a visual novel. It's almost like it's in an uncanny valley between being book and video game and for some reason that puts most people off.
@AlphaOblivion7
11 сағат бұрын
FATA MORGANA FANS RISE UP Yeah I hope with all heart that more people experience it. It goes on sale pretty often on Steam and Switch
@JustAnotherPerson4U
5 сағат бұрын
That's a really nice story you wrote. Really heartwarming of the idea that stories keep surviving even in a story about humanity eventually dying. I'm also reading through the Hogfather right now, so I'll see how it goes. Though ironically my friend who lent me the book said they weren't particularly keen on that pratchett book. Which seems to be in line with him. It seems like he dipped his toes into many genres and kept trying new things and some people liked certain books more than ithers and vice versa. As for my favourite story. It's Dark Cloud. Always Dark Cloud. It's an obscure PS2 JRPG game with graphics that weren't the best. However, it changed me because... I could travel a world. Even if it wasn't my own. I could meet people who were just as strange and expressive and wild as real world me. I could not just hear but actually be integrated in stories about love, loss and grief. It helped me to navigate emotionally in a way that was hard for me to get growing up. I had ASD so understanding others was hard. Everyone expected me to just 'know'. And when I didn't, I was somehow being deliberate in not knowing. And yes, a lot of it is escapism. But my escapism was also heavily tethered to this world I came from and it's hard to explain but going through the dungeons and defeating monsters like a brave hero and rebuilding a town in my image just struck a chord in me. And I cannot lie... the music was also a big factor as well. Many soundtracks I would just let Toan stand there as I listened to it and felt all my worries disappear... And my mind just had 2 moons illuminating the sky, with the blue moon always behind the bigger moon no matter what...
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