What if the Chernobyl Disaster Was Far Worse?

The Chernobyl disaster was a mess, but what if we dial that up to 11? Yes what if we took this already bad event and made it even worse. That is the video.
Patreon: / alternatehistoryhub (To watch, suggest and vote on bonus content videos)
Discord: / discord (Build your own empire.)
Chapters:
Intro: 00:00
Patreon Discord: 00:46
Disaster Day: 03:02
Weeks After : 08:05
Months After: 11:01
Year After: 15:54
Decade After: 18:56

Пікірлер: 2 500

  • @AlternateHistoryHub
    @AlternateHistoryHub4 ай бұрын

    Oh boy. Got a Discord again. discord.gg/KYAdxWbGEP This time around we’ve knocked it out of the park. Make sure to check it out and grab the piece of land you like best, before someone else does.

  • @Kuiper_Commentary

    @Kuiper_Commentary

    4 ай бұрын

    no. suc my mushroom >:(

  • @siberianexile1263

    @siberianexile1263

    4 ай бұрын

    Discord gang

  • @user-yt6ec6kk2n

    @user-yt6ec6kk2n

    4 ай бұрын

    Carl Clank says #discordgang

  • @shzarmai

    @shzarmai

    4 ай бұрын

    is this a remastered video? if it is, then please make an updated video on what if Persia conquered Greece? 😊

  • @6000.

    @6000.

    4 ай бұрын

    Having nuclear power plants will always the peak of our society

  • @runningthemeta5570
    @runningthemeta55704 ай бұрын

    Ah, Chernobyl, the nuclear disaster that became the reason why many people oppose nuclear power. Despite missing the added context that Chernobyl’s poor management was to blame. Edit: since people have been saying it a lot in replies, yes I am aware that the equipment at Chernobyl was faulty and not up to code. However, I false believes that putting it under the umbrella of “poor management” was adequate enough to summarize why Chernobyl is a bad excuse for why people are against nuclear power.

  • @The_Midnight_Bear

    @The_Midnight_Bear

    4 ай бұрын

    A chunk of them being on the far-left makes it more ironic.

  • @Voidedfireleg2

    @Voidedfireleg2

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah what most people don't realize is the safety standards and nuclear technology have greatly improved since the 80s

  • @mr.patriotjol

    @mr.patriotjol

    4 ай бұрын

    Nuclear energy is ironically cleaner lol, but of course it has its bad affects if a disaster were to occur

  • @user-oi3jk4qo9j

    @user-oi3jk4qo9j

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@The_Midnight_Bear Yea as Leftist who have Common sense

  • @olafhenson3626

    @olafhenson3626

    4 ай бұрын

    @@The_Midnight_Bear its a little naive to think its mostly hippies who were/are against nuclear power planet.

  • @marcoyado
    @marcoyado4 ай бұрын

    3:40 Gorbachev's birthmark is just Mexico lol

  • @mr.patriotjol

    @mr.patriotjol

    4 ай бұрын

    I just realized lmao

  • @rorymoore9269

    @rorymoore9269

    4 ай бұрын

    I always thought it looked more like some Greater Korea which Controls Taiwan

  • @rpgeek22

    @rpgeek22

    4 ай бұрын

    Like in the grand Budapest hotel

  • @sarahmesser6056

    @sarahmesser6056

    4 ай бұрын

    Viva Gorbachev!

  • @user-rf1op3uh6n

    @user-rf1op3uh6n

    4 ай бұрын

    Grand Budapest Hotel reference

  • @IMPORTADOZAPOPAN-zq3oh
    @IMPORTADOZAPOPAN-zq3oh4 ай бұрын

    3:40 new alternative history scenario; What if Gorvachev's birthmark was a perfectly detailed map of Mexico with major landmarks and highways that magically changed over time?

  • @aaroncabatingan5238

    @aaroncabatingan5238

    4 ай бұрын

    He'll be classified as an SCP

  • @1ronDragon

    @1ronDragon

    3 ай бұрын

    Like how in Harry Potter, Dumbledore has the London Tube map on (I think) his leg

  • @crimsondynamo615

    @crimsondynamo615

    2 ай бұрын

    You’re making me think of this Ray Stevens song Surfin U.S.S.R. and its music video where Gorbachev’s spot does look like a map.

  • @misterwhipple2870

    @misterwhipple2870

    2 ай бұрын

    It's a map of Afghanistan.

  • @DiggyPT

    @DiggyPT

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@misterwhipple2870no it's not

  • @cdcdrr
    @cdcdrr4 ай бұрын

    Downside: we wouldn't be able to play Stalker in this timeline, as the programmers are either drafted into the Soviet Civil War, or emigrated to the West. Upside: You can LARP as a Stalker in the real Pripyat, firing live ammunition within the irradiated hellscape as you escape Soviet loyalists, seperatists, partisans and survivalists.

  • @louisduarte8763

    @louisduarte8763

    4 ай бұрын

    But no respawning or saving/reloading your game.

  • @concept5631

    @concept5631

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@louisduarte8763 So hardcore mode?

  • @Sucullentbutter

    @Sucullentbutter

    4 ай бұрын

    Even better@@concept5631

  • @YTDeletes90PercentOfMyComments

    @YTDeletes90PercentOfMyComments

    3 ай бұрын

    ukraine used to try to get volunteers by letting them larp as STALKERs during the donbas war.

  • @stevenobrien557

    @stevenobrien557

    3 ай бұрын

    You realise that Stalker was ripped off from a book, the game just changed the surroundings to the Chernobyl zone because it suited.

  • @remenir97
    @remenir974 ай бұрын

    What if Chernobyl did *not* happen? It would turn our view on nuclear power different.

  • @warmachine5835

    @warmachine5835

    4 ай бұрын

    Honestly I'd love to see this as a two parter with your suggestion as the second part. Take a specific event, push it out to both extremes and look at the outcomes. "The crew in charge realizes the test conditions are dangerous and aborts the test in spite of political pressure. Now what?"

  • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat

    @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat

    4 ай бұрын

    A world where only Fukushima happened?

  • @mrhonkhonk6116

    @mrhonkhonk6116

    4 ай бұрын

    @@UCannotDefeatMyShmeatmaybe Fukushima is the real chernobyl because of how nuclear power will be treat it if chernobyl didn't happend

  • @thesuperintendent4290

    @thesuperintendent4290

    4 ай бұрын

    It would be a world where safety and new nuclear regulations wouldn't happen and soviet style reactors like Chernobyl would be in mass use and something would happen eventually.

  • @kuramisaga

    @kuramisaga

    4 ай бұрын

    I know close to nothing about the history, but I’d imagine that without Chernobyl being a wakeup call for nuclear plants to crack down on safety, there might’ve been a lot more incidents and Chernobyl-level meltdowns that result in more severe consequences and a larger social stigmatism towards nuclear energy.

  • @redline841
    @redline8414 ай бұрын

    Man Stalker is so cool, I wish Chernobyl was real

  • @JerryCan101

    @JerryCan101

    4 ай бұрын

    bruh (yes I know this is a joke so nobody needs to correct me)

  • @user-lv7kn5rz6i

    @user-lv7kn5rz6i

    4 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@JerryCan101 retard (There didn’t correct you)

  • @6000.

    @6000.

    4 ай бұрын

    @@JerryCan101it isn’t a joke bro, stop acting unserious

  • @JerryCan101

    @JerryCan101

    4 ай бұрын

    @@6000. Its just I'm really tired of being corrected about things I already know, so I thought maybe if I put a disclaimer I wouldn't be corrected. But apparently that doesn't work either.

  • @johndoe8442

    @johndoe8442

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, unfortunately nuclear power is just a fantasy. 😂

  • @christophergillette7167
    @christophergillette71673 ай бұрын

    It’s genuinely distressing that a disaster of that magnitude was only prevented because the firemen that charged into danger weren’t killed by the radiation until *after* they succeeded. But it also deepens my already great respect for the sort of people who do such dangerous work.

  • @thequixoticangler3364

    @thequixoticangler3364

    3 ай бұрын

    Remember the others. 1. The miners. They kept it from being a worldwide disaster. Officially, 1/4 of them died before 40(most were under 30). Realistically, based on records, it was 1/2. 2. The 3 guys who turned the valves on. They swam in radiation for an hour. All 3 lived long lives. 2 are still alive. 3. The "Masha" site workers. All of them died of cancer. They got exposed to extreme levels of radiation. They also cleared the site so the dome could be built. 4. The dome workers. It'll be 20 years before we really know how many died, but as of now it's a 40% cancer rate for site workers. 5. The Unit 1/2 workers. They kept Chernobyl open for over a year after the accident. 1000s died. 6. The Bridge of death. The Pripyat River Bridge was the single deadliest site of that evening of the accident. The entire neighborhood converged on the bridge to watch the fire. Everyone there, save Mila Ignatenko, who left the next day, died within 2 years. That was directly downwind of the accident. They were blasted by it. That's an area bigger than Rhode Island that you'll die going to for 200 years. The reactor itself can never be entered. Ever. It's the closest we've ever come to wiping out our entire planet. Frightening to think about.

  • @christophergillette7167

    @christophergillette7167

    3 ай бұрын

    @@thequixoticangler3364 Thanks for taking the time to compose all of that. My knowledge of this disaster is limited and everything you shared was new to me. The number of people that have to step up when a disaster occurs is mind blowing.

  • @krisstarring

    @krisstarring

    2 ай бұрын

    The firefighters at Chernobyl remind me of the passengers on Flight 93 during 9/11. It's tragic that they lost their lives, but by their brave actions they prevented an already awful day and scenario from being much, much worse.

  • @CumCaptain

    @CumCaptain

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@thequixoticangler3364there was never a bridge of death, that was a story people took as fact.

  • @Nuvendil

    @Nuvendil

    Ай бұрын

    No, thr disaster flatly couldn't reach the scale discussed here. Even if it had been left completely unattended, the meaningful impacts would still be localized. What happened pretty much is the worst case scenario.

  • @johnecoapollo7
    @johnecoapollo74 ай бұрын

    Chernobyl did irreparable damage already. It turned people off from nuclear energy and ensured that Europe would continue being dependent on the latest strongman from that area of the world for energy.

  • @chrisgaming9567

    @chrisgaming9567

    3 ай бұрын

    Europe isn't dependent on the US for energy, unless you're referring to the UK or France (which I guess makes sense since they still "strongman" quite a lot in places like South America and Africa)

  • @S3rp3nte

    @S3rp3nte

    3 ай бұрын

    @@chrisgaming9567 He meant Putin.

  • @Godzillafan78

    @Godzillafan78

    3 ай бұрын

    @@chrisgaming9567he was talking about Putin and russia not the US

  • @stlawstlaw7585

    @stlawstlaw7585

    2 ай бұрын

    The biggest CIA operation in history.

  • @Godzillafan78

    @Godzillafan78

    2 ай бұрын

    @@stlawstlaw7585 my guy the Soviets would know if the CIA was going do something they had more spies in the states then the states themselves

  • @Charles-In-Charge
    @Charles-In-Charge4 ай бұрын

    The lack of outro makes this video strikingly haunting

  • @elemperadordemexico

    @elemperadordemexico

    4 ай бұрын

    Absolutely

  • @danilomejiarua4521

    @danilomejiarua4521

    4 ай бұрын

    That was completely unexpected And it worked to make me shiver

  • @SonicRyan1992

    @SonicRyan1992

    3 ай бұрын

    it's funny how much the Jimmy skits add relief to the stories

  • @pisscvre69

    @pisscvre69

    3 ай бұрын

    it made it comwdic to me, im just listening and sudeenly it stops LOL

  • @minestar2247

    @minestar2247

    3 ай бұрын

    All of it is haunting!

  • @generaljo7471
    @generaljo74714 ай бұрын

    Right at 8:04 when He asked "How would the Soviet Union respond?" I got an ad for the Suicide Hotline. Funniest ad break ever. 😂

  • @Johnnylemoni

    @Johnnylemoni

    4 ай бұрын

    hope you didnt have personalized ads on

  • @garybrown2039

    @garybrown2039

    4 ай бұрын

    The UN: " Look, we know this and your marriage/partnership with Ukraine is going very poorly right now. But you can't resort to that. I mean, who knows how things will be in a little over 36 years? There's hope."

  • @rodrikforrester6989

    @rodrikforrester6989

    4 ай бұрын

    the way you capitalized He implies Cody is God

  • @aaroncabatingan5238

    @aaroncabatingan5238

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@rodrikforrester6989He isn't?

  • @isaacskinner5565

    @isaacskinner5565

    3 ай бұрын

    SAME, I got an ad for Lifeline (Australian suicide hotline)

  • @silvertree88
    @silvertree884 ай бұрын

    What's crazy is the other 3 reactors on sight produced electricity for almost 20 years after the explosion.

  • @justicedunham4088
    @justicedunham4088Ай бұрын

    An important note to anyone who thinks nuclear is unsafe: this disaster could never have occurred in the west due to a completely different design scheme. In a western reactor, water was the coolant and moderator, meaning that if it boiled away, the reaction would slow down, not continue out of control.

  • @pinkyandbrain123

    @pinkyandbrain123

    26 күн бұрын

    This should be on top of

  • @ATeTortenelemPuskad
    @ATeTortenelemPuskad4 ай бұрын

    My parents recall getting alerts in the radio that they shouldn't eat any plant that grows out of the ground. My dad lived near the Matra mountains and my mom lived in the Kiskunság and they were still severely affected by it even though Chernobyl was more than 1000 km away.

  • @Enyavar1

    @Enyavar1

    4 ай бұрын

    As a baby born one month after the desaster, the cautious restrictions in public led to my parents avoiding travel that summer. ... Which is the reason that my grandfather who lived away and who died several months after the catastrophe, never got to see any of his eight grandchildren.

  • @detleffleischer9418

    @detleffleischer9418

    4 ай бұрын

    Here in Mexico thousands of children were poisoned because our government bought contaminated radioactive milk for the social welfare program, it's insane just how much damage it did even oceans away

  • @flip849

    @flip849

    4 ай бұрын

    My parents couldn't eat certain things in Italy for a year

  • @concept5631

    @concept5631

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@Enyavar1 That's a shame.

  • @comedyreliefguy5112

    @comedyreliefguy5112

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@Enyavar1I don't know if you're religious, but I'm sure he'll get to see all of them one day, somewhere else. :)

  • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
    @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat4 ай бұрын

    I remember when the Ukraine...fiasco began in earnest, my buddy was really concerned that the elephants foot would be used as a weapon. It’s crazy how quickly that time passed.

  • @LexYeen

    @LexYeen

    4 ай бұрын

    I mean, at the time, valid concern.

  • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat

    @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat

    4 ай бұрын

    @@LexYeenyeah at the time I couldn’t argue with it. Now it seems like it would be more valuable to keep to be able to go “ehh? Are we going to do it today U.S? Nah not today” *side eyes entire continent*

  • @TheRandomshite123

    @TheRandomshite123

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@LexYeen not really, a dirty bomb is the most impractical weapon there is

  • @furfixer

    @furfixer

    4 ай бұрын

    lmao imagine just launch it into kremlin with a really big catapult

  • @Enyavar1

    @Enyavar1

    4 ай бұрын

    All of Europe is still concerned about Saporishshya - or at least, it should be. It's the place where Russian neglect at war could lead to just a similar desaster somewhere between RL Chernobyl and the ATL presented here. I'd say something there is more likely to happen than not.

  • @christiansimmers168
    @christiansimmers1684 ай бұрын

    Using Revelations imagery is appropriate considering Chernobyl is named after a variety of wormwood, the name of the fallen star that poisons the land.

  • @erdood3235

    @erdood3235

    4 ай бұрын

    Where's are those images?

  • @TheSkyGuy77

    @TheSkyGuy77

    4 ай бұрын

    Ironic

  • @hugo_studio_hay439
    @hugo_studio_hay4394 ай бұрын

    my grandfather was a fireman from LPSR, and he was needed to serve in the effort to extinguish the reactor, but for a blessing, he was relocated to Estonia as a ship was burning :D

  • @alanpennie

    @alanpennie

    4 ай бұрын

    A lucky man. Those firemen were absolute heroes.

  • @hugo_studio_hay439

    @hugo_studio_hay439

    4 ай бұрын

    ik o7 to every man who lifted a single rock there@@alanpennie

  • @concept5631

    @concept5631

    4 ай бұрын

    Firefighters are pretty heroic in general.

  • @duckitydoo
    @duckitydoo4 ай бұрын

    My mom was living in Poland at the time of Chernobyl, she told me about how they had to take pills to prevent sickness from radiation

  • @fallenberdlol

    @fallenberdlol

    4 ай бұрын

    my geography teacher whos polish said that too

  • @clawy99

    @clawy99

    4 ай бұрын

    that is a preventive measure though. Romania handed out pills when the Ukraine war started for the case of an atomic bomb being used. Parts of Romania were in fact effected by the nuclear plant fiasco, also the place where I live, since this is where the rainfall happened. But another region was more effected, a work colleague of mine told the story of how her father and all the man he was out with out grilling with on May 1th and were hit by the rain eventually died of cancer.

  • @Flesh_Wizard

    @Flesh_Wizard

    4 ай бұрын

    Rad X

  • @ArakkoaChronicles

    @ArakkoaChronicles

    4 ай бұрын

    I heard stories about some "weird clouds" - though that may be some overactive imagination from my relatives.

  • @auroraourania7161

    @auroraourania7161

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Flesh_WizardIt's actually just iodide. It doesn't prevent anywhere near all radiation damage, but it does do a lot to protect your thyroid by causing your body to have so much iodide that it just lets the radioactive iodide produced by fallout pass through quickly. The thyroid is one of the more at risk organs from longer range airborne fallout.

  • @FriendlyPhilcoDealer
    @FriendlyPhilcoDealer4 ай бұрын

    Cody's scenarios are always top-notch, but I always love these little classic "what if" scenarios for specific little diversions in history - feels like an episode from a couple years back

  • @Yourlocalwordrobe
    @Yourlocalwordrobe4 ай бұрын

    i remember my dad telling me a story about how here in poland during charnobyl everyone was given special medicine in liquid form to stop the possibility of dying from radiation or getting cancer (i heard that it wasnt very useful)

  • @anna-flora999

    @anna-flora999

    3 ай бұрын

    Iod, probably. A big problem from nuclear fallout is radioactive Iod as the body stores it in the thyroid. As a preventative measure, you can take high amounts of safe Iod so the body already has more than it needs

  • @irvalfirestar6265
    @irvalfirestar62653 ай бұрын

    Don’t forget about all the nuclear warheads contained within breakaway post-Soviet states and allies. Even in the mostly-peaceful breakup of 1991 there were still a lot of lost warheads during the transition period, now imagine if the breakaway states are now so hostile against each other due to scarcity pressures that it’d be entirely feasible that post-Soviet Ukraine would start nuking Moscow, potentially via clandestine or guerilla means. It’d make NK seem like the Vatican.

  • @Merugaf

    @Merugaf

    3 ай бұрын

    If only...

  • @TheFirstCurse1

    @TheFirstCurse1

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@MerugafYou have to be a sociopath to think this way. Billions would die, and the world would be ruined. We're talking almost complete destruction of our planet.

  • @DarkestDawnZK
    @DarkestDawnZK4 ай бұрын

    “In this timeline Nuclear Power would become a taboo” I mean in the US, it still is to a lot of people who don’t understand nuclear power.

  • @zlinedavid

    @zlinedavid

    4 ай бұрын

    Which is a shame, because from an infrastructure standpoint, the degree to which modern nuke plants are built borders on insane. I’m in IT for a company that has multiple nuclear power stations, and the redundancies built into them are multi-level. Anything involving safety or measurement of radiation levels have multiple backups, and if in the extremely unlikely case of all of them failing, the core goes into immediate shutdown.

  • @redslate

    @redslate

    3 ай бұрын

    True, but it's not nearly as taboo as it is in Germany, where the bulk of the voting populace literally views it as an actively leaking weapon. Nevermind the fact that more people die from windpower.

  • @CAMarg-zs1xq

    @CAMarg-zs1xq

    2 ай бұрын

    We understand but we realize our politicians can be bought and companies will prioritize profits over safety and people so it's scary because another Chernobyl situation could easily happen again here

  • @Lightscribe225

    @Lightscribe225

    2 ай бұрын

    Except it nuclear energy has spent the last 5 decades foolproofing the design of plants to prevent another Chenobyl. Even Chernobyl is full of failsafes(as we saw when Russian had the big brain idea of shelling the site, the whole thing shut down safely and locked dangerous materials behind walls of lead and concrete). The biggest risk currently is big oil muscling out nuclear development.

  • @guriflash3603

    @guriflash3603

    2 ай бұрын

    yeah, i'm from brazil but until two years ago i just thought they threw uranium and water in a box and just caught the radiation

  • @l0lLorenzol0l
    @l0lLorenzol0l4 ай бұрын

    Isn't the HBO show theory actually a steam explosion THE SIZE OF a small nuke which destroys the rest of the power plant from the leaking core melting into the pooled water underground? They never mention any sort of nuke.

  • @surprisedchar2458

    @surprisedchar2458

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes. That is what the theory is. People just run with “nuclear bomb” because they’re idiots. It would have been more like a giant dirty bomb. Which is really much worse.

  • @blackXhawksXkickXbut

    @blackXhawksXkickXbut

    4 ай бұрын

    Precisely! It wasn’t a potential nuclear explosion. It was a very powerful steam explosion ejecting the rest of the site into the atmosphere

  • @zephyr8072

    @zephyr8072

    4 ай бұрын

    Which is also the claim made by Soviet scientists at the time. Though some believe it was a gross exaggeration and others that it was entirely manufactured by the regime in order to spin a tale of a heroic victory in the aftermath of the disaster. Regardless the show had it right and Cody must’ve not been paying attention.

  • @TheRandomshite123

    @TheRandomshite123

    4 ай бұрын

    There was never any real chance of a steam explosion, that would've required the whole molten core dropping into a sealed container full of water, neither of which could happen as their were plenty of holes to vent pressure and the corium would've dripped slowly, like a volcano does into water

  • @KoRntech

    @KoRntech

    4 ай бұрын

    In a sense, but it wouldn't be an explosion, there seems to be this notion that the water supply is sealed containers, which they even mention that the fire fighters water hoses were draining back into those tanks. Would it have been bad? Sure! Would it have been a continent killer? Hell no.

  • @cmd31220
    @cmd312204 ай бұрын

    If you have never seen Pripyat, its both really cool and completely haunting. You cant help but feel youre being watched as you walk through a total ghost town left exactly as it was 40 years ago. You can go into the apartments and see children's toys left on the floor mid-play, kitchens still stocked, and cold war propaganda everywhere.

  • @ynokenty

    @ynokenty

    3 ай бұрын

    So glad I visited before the invasion - what a life changing experience!

  • @nahuelma97

    @nahuelma97

    15 күн бұрын

    @@ynokenty I wonder how it looks now after the invasion. I mean, I imagine military troops sieging a place would clearly alter it, but at the same time I also think the Russian soldiers had to know where they were and how much contamination there still is around these days, enough to know not to start messing around with the place just because

  • @MASTEROFEVIL

    @MASTEROFEVIL

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@nahuelma97Bomb damage, rumble, destroyed buildings

  • @ynokenty

    @ynokenty

    12 күн бұрын

    @@nahuelma97 I don’t think the place got too damaged during fights. However, I believe everything is covered in mines so we wouldn’t be able to visit for at least a decade, or more

  • @ynokenty

    @ynokenty

    12 күн бұрын

    @@nahuelma97 > ru soldiers had to know where they were They were constructing trenches in the Red Forest and digging up probably the most radioactive soil around Chornobyl at the beginning of the invasion. When I was visiting, and our tourist bus was just passing by Red Forest, literally every Geiger counter was going crazy on the bus. Although devices were mostly silent during the trip, getting as crazy as this only several times in Prypiat. Even near the 4th reactor they were silent (that should’ve been probably the safest place in Zone).

  • @Robochuck
    @Robochuck4 ай бұрын

    Nuclear dystopia you say bunker societies you say One might even say "vaults" uh... I think you innadvertedly sold me a soviet fallout spinoff and I kinda dig it.

  • @covenawhite4855

    @covenawhite4855

    2 ай бұрын

    Metro 34 is the video game of Soviet Moscow fallout in the subway

  • @robert25archer25

    @robert25archer25

    Ай бұрын

    Atom RPG is more what you'd look for

  • @deleetiusproductions3497

    @deleetiusproductions3497

    13 күн бұрын

    the sequel is even called “the fallout wars”

  • @theamazingengineer1901
    @theamazingengineer19014 ай бұрын

    If I had a nickel for every time Alternate History Hub discussed an alternate version of a science-related disaster from 1986, I’d have 2 nickels. Which isn’t a lot but it’s weird it happened twice

  • @Whiteythereaper

    @Whiteythereaper

    4 ай бұрын

    With one involving Big Bird no less. Hilarious

  • @AmericanCryptid1

    @AmericanCryptid1

    4 ай бұрын

    He also has an old video about if the Chernobyl disaster didn’t happen.

  • @balabanasireti

    @balabanasireti

    4 ай бұрын

    Wow, never heard that one. So funny 🙄

  • @oi-cj1pz

    @oi-cj1pz

    4 ай бұрын

    @@balabanasireti lemons

  • @elemperadordemexico

    @elemperadordemexico

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@balabanasiretiI hate that joke

  • @jamesesterline
    @jamesesterline4 ай бұрын

    Video idea: What if FDR lived to finish his fourth term?

  • @aidanbarrett9313

    @aidanbarrett9313

    4 ай бұрын

    Or even if he lived for just one extra year.

  • @DioNellaBottiglia

    @DioNellaBottiglia

    4 ай бұрын

    Even better: what if FDR was immortal?

  • @l0lLorenzol0l

    @l0lLorenzol0l

    4 ай бұрын

    I hate FDR

  • @mitchconner403

    @mitchconner403

    4 ай бұрын

    @@l0lLorenzol0lI hate Reagan

  • @shivanshna7618

    @shivanshna7618

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@mitchconner403i hate mao zedong

  • @yetimen29
    @yetimen294 ай бұрын

    great alternative, but you underestimate how stubern are humans. Even in out timeline, although the government prohibited people to come back to this region, the old residents did comeback. Drinking contaminated water and eating radioactive food. They didn't care, this was their home.

  • @darthplayer5333

    @darthplayer5333

    26 күн бұрын

    And HBO miniserie portrait that really well with that Babushka. "First was the White Russians, then years later, the germans, and even after that i' still here. Now you want me to get away because of something i cant even see?"

  • @temikus
    @temikus3 ай бұрын

    Contrary to popular belief Gorbachev’s policy was not the primary factor in USSR’s collapse. By that time it was already imploding economically. In 1987 the ships were already being arrested in ports for not keeping up with payments. USSR was bankrupt. Gorbachev just tried to secure more funds by liberalising and making USSR more atteactive for foreign investment. You can read more in E. Gaidar’s “Collapse of an Empire”

  • @skysthelimitvideos
    @skysthelimitvideos4 ай бұрын

    This would be horrible for humans but great for the wolves who would suddenly have a much bigger chunk of uninhabitable radioactive land to live in then they do in our timeline. (Chernobyl these days is basically a slightly radioactive national wildlife preserve with a thriving ecosystem).

  • @alanpennie

    @alanpennie

    4 ай бұрын

    The depopulation of CEE is occurring though. Just a bit slower in our timeline, though accelerated by the war in Ukraine.

  • @lemieux-z8933

    @lemieux-z8933

    4 ай бұрын

    They'll be having a great time until their pups get another non-functional ear, a blind third eye, and jaws that cause pain all their life due to radiation fucking up their genes

  • @board-qu9iu

    @board-qu9iu

    4 ай бұрын

    I think even Squatters live in the region. People don't realize that the radiation while sigificant isn't a big deal unless your actually near the source

  • @chimera9818

    @chimera9818

    4 ай бұрын

    The only good in that timeline is the formation of the largest wildlife reservation on earth

  • @board-qu9iu

    @board-qu9iu

    3 ай бұрын

    @@chimera9818 It might quickly shrink though b/c people definetly will move back regardless of the residue radiation given it likley is fine in the outer parts.

  • @darth_elsa6681
    @darth_elsa66814 ай бұрын

    So, the Stalker games would have a different storyline

  • @pennsy6755

    @pennsy6755

    4 ай бұрын

    Nonono. We’ll _be_ the stalker games

  • @Chewberto

    @Chewberto

    4 ай бұрын

    They'd just be seen as documentaries in video game form

  • @masenformen

    @masenformen

    4 ай бұрын

    Stalker would be just The Sims

  • @alextinsley1769

    @alextinsley1769

    4 ай бұрын

    Stalker would be real, kinda. I doubt there will be any anomalies

  • @crimsondynamo615

    @crimsondynamo615

    4 ай бұрын

    They say every time an emission occurs or someone makes a wish at the wishgranter, the zone expands several kilometers.

  • @newtonianpineapple2817
    @newtonianpineapple28174 ай бұрын

    Due to the vastly increased fear of nuclear power in this timeline, decades later climate change could be much worse than it may become in our own timeline

  • @swissorr
    @swissorr3 ай бұрын

    Nice video! Nuclear fallout makes me wonder about the hypothetical of “What if Y2K actually happened?” where people really had a fear of it.

  • @ardasarkaya6276
    @ardasarkaya62764 ай бұрын

    Turkey is pugged in this scenario. Our government that time largely tried to convince public that radiation did not exist/was not that bad, and dumping products from Black Sea Region to public schools and military

  • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat

    @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat

    4 ай бұрын

    “Hey, that power source that doesn’t exist? It sucks”

  • @ardasarkaya6276

    @ardasarkaya6276

    4 ай бұрын

    @@UCannotDefeatMyShmeat I realised my mistake and fixed it but what I tried to refernce was Kenan Evren (who was president at the time) saying tradition was good for the bones.

  • @kingofhearts3185

    @kingofhearts3185

    3 ай бұрын

    Well it sounds like Greece might have been able to get that coastline back afterall, if only because there wouldn't be anyone to say otherwise. That is definitely a yikes.

  • @funnit7320
    @funnit73204 ай бұрын

    this video genuinely feels terrifying

  • @alanpennie

    @alanpennie

    4 ай бұрын

    Who knew how bad it could have been?

  • @alanpennie

    @alanpennie

    4 ай бұрын

    Everyone in Europe is indebted to those firemen.

  • @coolthefool1

    @coolthefool1

    4 ай бұрын

    so dystopian

  • @coolthefool1

    @coolthefool1

    4 ай бұрын

    in the uncanny valley

  • @FranklyImaPerson
    @FranklyImaPerson4 ай бұрын

    It's good that you can do episodes occasionally on these uplifting, optimistic scenarios

  • @jakemagro1213
    @jakemagro12134 ай бұрын

    It's unfortunate that nuclear energy has a bad stigma, since it is literally a dream come true. Cheap, environmentally friendly and economically better as it employs a lot more jobs than that of other fuels. But reality is very far from a dream, I'm afraid.

  • @baguettegott3409

    @baguettegott3409

    3 ай бұрын

    Oh yeah, it's a great dream. If you stick you head in the sand and ignore all the problems down the line with waste, which we DO NOT have a safe way to store indefinitely, nor a way to prevent future civilisations from digging it up (on accident or out of curiosity) - but that's the future's problem, right? Oh and I guess it's a dream where mismanagement, which happens all the time and will continue to because we are flawed humans in flawed systems, can cause catastrophes THIS bad. Or Tsunamis, earthquakes, things we don't have any way to prevent and only limited ways to protect from. Guess we'll just... cross our fingers and hope it doesn't happen! But well, it is very cheap, so I guess that makes up of it lol.

  • @Godzillafan78

    @Godzillafan78

    3 ай бұрын

    I have a small feeling that it’s not the nuclear energy itself people are worried about but another poor management situation again

  • @der_kaiser_cole
    @der_kaiser_cole4 ай бұрын

    Sad that the most efficient and clean power being Nuclear is seen so badly, even though it’s simply incompetent management is at fault

  • @kingkoopa64

    @kingkoopa64

    4 ай бұрын

    Fear is innovations worst enemy

  • @MultiKommandant

    @MultiKommandant

    4 ай бұрын

    It's easy enough to at least understand the fear that the average joe has of Nuclear power. We shove fissile material into bombs and proximity to such substances can cause cancers to grow and for skin to burn and slough off. Those who know what they're dealing with would obviously treat it with a healthy respect for the danger it poses and Nuclear energy is efficient and clean but the what-ifs that buzz around in its shadow are difficult to truly dispel. Humans typically see danger and instinctively avoid things related to it, regardless of what studies and papers say on the matter.

  • @livethefuture2492

    @livethefuture2492

    4 ай бұрын

    It wasn't nuclear power that was a danger, it was the soviet system itself...

  • @anblueboot5364

    @anblueboot5364

    4 ай бұрын

    The Problem people nowdays have with nuclear Power is the storage of the waste. There is No permanent solution, right now Here in Germany just gets Transported from a to b to c Back to a by train and some waste Materials are Stored Underground.

  • @auroraourania7161

    @auroraourania7161

    3 ай бұрын

    @@anblueboot5364Finland has an excellent method, of bury it very deep in a very geologically inactive area, but not everywhere that has nuclear power has access to those. At this point, I think we should focus on expanding wind and solar since they're efficient now and there's more willingness towards them, and nuclear plants are very expensive to build, but if we hadn't stopped making new ones and decommissioned many of the existing ones after this (and even after 3 mile island, where it's likely that not a singular person died, even of radiation caused cancer like 40 years later, and the amount people were exposed to ranged from at most a medical xray down to a single plane ride), we'd likely be in a much healthier world with less climate change.

  • @SumeriyaYaxlaka
    @SumeriyaYaxlaka4 ай бұрын

    3:42 why is gorbachev's mark a sideways mexico😂

  • @Pretermit_Sound

    @Pretermit_Sound

    4 ай бұрын

    Guessing it’s a Grand Budapest Hotel reference

  • @dannyboy1200
    @dannyboy12004 ай бұрын

    Ooo do the Fukushima reactor next. It would be especially interesting considering the geopolitical tension that area is constantly under

  • @Emanon...
    @Emanon...3 ай бұрын

    I'm still pro-nuclear power (and no, I'm a European Socialist). It's the best stopgap we have for now, until better clean sources are available. Just don't cut corners in the price and maintenance and everyone will be absolutely fine.

  • @conserva-chan2735
    @conserva-chan27354 ай бұрын

    I'd love a vid on if the Sino-Soviet split never happened or was patched up in the 70s

  • @sergioventura2595

    @sergioventura2595

    4 ай бұрын

    Sup my man

  • @conserva-chan2735

    @conserva-chan2735

    4 ай бұрын

    @@sergioventura2595 I will never give up

  • @sergioventura2595

    @sergioventura2595

    4 ай бұрын

    @@conserva-chan2735 It will happen some day

  • @chrisgaming9567

    @chrisgaming9567

    3 ай бұрын

    The only way it could get "patched up in the 70s" is if either the remaining Old Bolsheviks came together to pull off a counter-coup against the revisionist regime (like what they tried and failed to do in 1957), or if Deng's rise to power resulted in a geopolitical shift toward the Soviet Union rather than toward the West (like what China's been doing with Russia within the past 20 years).

  • @LexYeen
    @LexYeen4 ай бұрын

    5:05 _oh boy_ you aren't messing around when it comes to changing variables.

  • @Bribridude130
    @Bribridude1303 ай бұрын

    14:44 I Thank you for using ERB once again, just like in your "The Most Underrated Era in History (In My Opinion)" video. You specifically used a clip of EpicLloyd as Gorbachev from "Rasputin vs Stalin", my favorite ERB video of them all.

  • @TheDanEdwards
    @TheDanEdwards4 ай бұрын

    "blown up" - it should be emphasized that first explosion was a steam explosion. And while the U was radioactive and sustaining fission, it was not a nuclear bomb as in Hiroshima. The firefighters are fighting _chemical_ fires.

  • @adamredwine774
    @adamredwine7744 ай бұрын

    Even though there is a substantial exclusion zone to this day, there is still a bit of a community that live near Pripyat as self exiled scofflaws.

  • @solsunman383

    @solsunman383

    4 ай бұрын

    I believe they live in Chernobyl (which is further away from the power plant), as I've heard that Pripyat is inimical for sustained human life?

  • @livethefuture2492

    @livethefuture2492

    4 ай бұрын

    The actual radiation around the exclusion zone is not nearly as high as people think it is. a lot of it has since been cleaned up. The radiation there is only slightly higher than normal background radiation in most places. Only specific places like the hospital or basement are especially radioactive.

  • @FelipeJaquez

    @FelipeJaquez

    3 ай бұрын

    You get more radiation from riding on a plane than working in a power plant so I assume those people are fine nowadays.

  • @auroraourania7161

    @auroraourania7161

    3 ай бұрын

    There's only a few spots where it's concentrated enough to be lethal over the course of months or even years. They'd probably have a lower life expectancy, and any who get pregnant would be more likely to have, miscarriages, stillbirths, and birth defects, but someone living in Pripyat can absolutely have humans living there for significant periods of time. People shouldn't live there, but they absolutely can. Some actions, such as digging, would be significantly more dangerous than many others (since that will reveal a lot of material that's been carried deeper by rain, the surface would have a lower concentration). There's a reason a ton of animals live there. Hell, people are working very near the plant at any given time. Before the war a ton of civilians were involved in monitoring things and maintaining the new confinement building, and even with Russia's insane misuse of the exclusion zone (using it as effectively a military base and stationing artillery in the surrounding area, including the red forest, which contains some of the most dangerous areas outside of the confinement building), they've still let those people work there freely since they know that, if they fuck up bad enough there, the chances of the US and its allies getting directly involved to secure the site and protect NATO members in Europe from potential dangers rises significantly.

  • @anonymousmyvern8927
    @anonymousmyvern89274 ай бұрын

    Prypyat is one of the worst disaster in human history, thinking how much worse it could've been is absolutely tragic. -Discord gang.

  • @AeSyrNation
    @AeSyrNation4 ай бұрын

    "The only russian and ukrainian people left would be either abroad or in bunker societies." So, all of siberia gets wiped off the map? Not to mention that it would be hugely optimistic to say that absolutely everything west of the urals would become inhospitable. Also, the wind blew radiation west. Is the wind direction changed in this scenario?

  • @yarpen26

    @yarpen26

    3 ай бұрын

    My feelings too. Throughout the video, I never got the vibe like a catastrophe of truly apocalyptic proportions was actually under way. Millions of people dead, pan-Soviet war as a result? Sure, possible. The entire European part of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus left uninhabited? Ummm, why? This honestly sounds more like a Spanish flu-type outbreak: sure, tragic and spoken of for years in hushed tones... but state-shattering in its scope? Nah.

  • @SomewhatClassyGoose
    @SomewhatClassyGoose3 ай бұрын

    Cody, this has to be one of my favorite videos of your works. This feels like a legit horror scenario.

  • @laurencewinch-furness9450
    @laurencewinch-furness94504 ай бұрын

    A few video ideas: 1066 - two videos: what if Harold Godwinson had won at Hastings and what Harald Hardrada had won at Stamford Bridge? What if the imperial federation had been formed? What if Japan had been partitioned like Germany or Korea after WWII? What if Bukahrin had suceeded Lenin?

  • @minterdaly1265
    @minterdaly12654 ай бұрын

    Back to back releases. I love it! You outta give yourself a break, if you need one. Either way, we're happy. 😊😊😊

  • @Refty
    @Refty3 ай бұрын

    Do a video about "What if Harambe had converted to Islam?"

  • @speaker1106

    @speaker1106

    Ай бұрын

    I, the Igor Nesterenko, fully and truly support this idea!

  • @theaetherknight5614

    @theaetherknight5614

    9 күн бұрын

    Halalbe?

  • @Edax_Royeaux
    @Edax_Royeaux4 ай бұрын

    4:41 Wait, I thought the HBO show was taking about a thermal steam explosion? That once the meltdown reached the groundwater, the resulting steam explosion would destroy all the reactors.

  • @MichaelfromtheGraves

    @MichaelfromtheGraves

    4 ай бұрын

    The show portrays a concern with hot sand and boron reaching large pools of water that were in the building. That's why the three divers had to go in. They didn't think this steam explosion was a certainty but they weren't willing to take a chance. It wasn't until years of research later that we realized the sand and boron had probably already reached those pools but was falling slowly enough there wasn't a sudden steam explosion. The ground water was a separate concern which required the miners and the installation of cooling pipes under the building.

  • @Edax_Royeaux

    @Edax_Royeaux

    4 ай бұрын

    @@MichaelfromtheGraves Isn't that separate concern with the water table that was the biggest threat? Because that would cause the massive thermal explosion that everyone was freaking out over?

  • @agilemind6241

    @agilemind6241

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Edax_Royeaux No, ground is a super thermal insulator / regulator, and groundwater is mixed in with all kinds of dirt, rock etc... it isn't a big puddle under ground. Pouring super heated stuff on / into ground water would not cause and explosion. The problem with it getting into groundwater is contamination since water flows and diffuses and most groundwater is part of the general watertable that connects it to lakes, rivers, etc.. in the region. It is very difficult to control the spread of any pollution that gets into ground water.

  • @alphax4785

    @alphax4785

    4 ай бұрын

    Even if 100% of the reactor had melted down into the floor (instead of a substantial portion also being thrown upwards), there simply isn't enough nuclear material in reactor 4 and it isn't hot enough to cause that big of a secondary explosion. Also, with the containment vessel breached it would be difficult to probably impossible for the steam to build a high enough pressure... although of course if the meltdown did create a lot of steam the highly radioactive fog that resulted would be a catastrophe all its own and possibly necessitate shutting down the other reactors since no one could approach them.

  • @bbeen40

    @bbeen40

    3 ай бұрын

    If it reaches the groudwater you get the China syndrome. Very, VERY bad!! Radioactive steam coming out the f the ground for miles around.

  • @xNick01
    @xNick014 ай бұрын

    This felt like an sharp increase in video production quality, love to see it

  • @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988
    @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw99884 ай бұрын

    love the new format!

  • @majorearl12
    @majorearl123 ай бұрын

    I once tried to make an alt history scenario where Chernobyl was used as a ploy by the USSR to try and defeat the West, blaming Western spies for the tragedy. Pushing the "7 days to the Rhine" campaign and World War 3.

  • @Godzillafan78

    @Godzillafan78

    3 ай бұрын

    the Soviets would be fighting both the afghans and the west at the same time

  • @ewill3435
    @ewill34354 ай бұрын

    That was a rather abrupt ending. I wonder if it has anything to do with the final length of the video being 20:20

  • @spektri2297
    @spektri22974 ай бұрын

    I live in northern Europe, in Finland and more specifically in Savonia, my city was contaminated by this disaster. I have no proof, nobody has, but both of my parents have tumors and cancers. My father has a brain tumor, my mother survived breast cancer and later brain cancer, the brain one though is incurable and will eventually kill her. I know I and my brother both are ticking time bombs, and I fucking hate it. If this disaster were any worse, I think parts of Finland would be uninhabitable currently. We already have the most irradiated fish on the entire planet (so much so, that EU gave us different target numbers to allow us to even eat the fish) and you can still today see the radiation on fungi.

  • @jimmyjohnson1870

    @jimmyjohnson1870

    4 ай бұрын

    Oh my God. I'm so sorry to hear that.

  • @einfachignorieren6156

    @einfachignorieren6156

    4 ай бұрын

    Maybe its your genes

  • @concept5631

    @concept5631

    4 ай бұрын

    Sorry to hear that.

  • @Brikiboi69

    @Brikiboi69

    Ай бұрын

    That’s awful.

  • @josephwodarczyk977
    @josephwodarczyk9772 ай бұрын

    I just want to say I really appreciate your writing. No padding for time, no repetition, no attempts to persuade the listener, and surprisingly no confusion about real vs fictional timelines. It feels like everything flows naturally, and that's so hard to do. Well done.

  • @mopnem
    @mopnem3 ай бұрын

    Can never get enough of going down Chernobyl rabbit holes so appreciated this ep.

  • @MayonnaiseVenusaur
    @MayonnaiseVenusaur4 ай бұрын

    You shaped cartoon Gorbachev's port wine stains like Mexico. I noticed that. That was great. Loved it.

  • @RJManette

    @RJManette

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for teaching me what a port wine stain is! I never knew what it was called 😂

  • @grahamstone1198
    @grahamstone11984 ай бұрын

    By no means is the HBO show an example of rigorous historical accuracy, but what is Cody referring to with "the ludicrous theory proposed by the HBO show, in which a thermonuclear blast blows up all four reactors"? Is there a scene I'm forgetting where characters are talking about how it could have been hypothetically worse?

  • @PlatinumAltaria

    @PlatinumAltaria

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, the Chernobyl show makes baffling claims about the reactor producing a nuclear explosion that would render half of Europe uninhabitable.

  • @grahamstone1198

    @grahamstone1198

    4 ай бұрын

    @@PlatinumAltaria I think I found the scene being referenced: kzread.info/dash/bejne/dZ6BwZtwpa7LlLQ.html at about 1:45

  • @alanpennie

    @alanpennie

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@PlatinumAltaria Not that baffling. This video indicates how it could have happened.

  • @PlatinumAltaria

    @PlatinumAltaria

    4 ай бұрын

    @@alanpennie You need to actually listen to the video.

  • @velozio
    @velozio3 ай бұрын

    This is probably the best video you made in a while

  • @Horse-iy9wt
    @Horse-iy9wt2 ай бұрын

    Hey A.H.H! I love your videos! Especially the one were you theorize what would happen if antarctica was green. I especially love the speculative evolution genre and I just wondered if you will ever make a video like the green antrarctica dabbling into speculative evolution and history of nature.

  • @MilloSpiegel
    @MilloSpiegel4 ай бұрын

    I just want to add one thing, I believe that Austria would be hit harder that you think. Vienne is in the far east of Austria and IS only 1000 km or 620 miles from Pripyet and had a population of close to 1.5 Million at the time.

  • @rasoirwolf

    @rasoirwolf

    3 ай бұрын

    Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg and Switzerland also aren't that far, Hell, given the scale of the disaster, could it reach Saxony and Czechia?

  • @MsRmart999
    @MsRmart9994 ай бұрын

    Ty for the lighthearted video to start off the weekend ☺️

  • @cynthiasimpson931
    @cynthiasimpson9314 ай бұрын

    I remember when this happened. The earliest news bulletin I remember was one from Switzerland (I think) reporting a possible nuclear accident in the USSR in April of 1986.

  • @sangyi870
    @sangyi8703 ай бұрын

    What if mexico won the mexican american war?

  • @lanesteele240

    @lanesteele240

    2 ай бұрын

    California would be straight

  • @july9566

    @july9566

    2 ай бұрын

    Did they really lose ?

  • @akumatenshi7756

    @akumatenshi7756

    Ай бұрын

    If Mexico won, there's a chance Hitler would have won the second great war and that's a loss for literally everyone who wasnt a white german.

  • @ExcitedBaseball-xq1nr

    @ExcitedBaseball-xq1nr

    Ай бұрын

    What if Mexico invaded during WW1

  • @lanesteele240

    @lanesteele240

    Ай бұрын

    @@ExcitedBaseball-xq1nr the USA would be larger

  • @The_Future_isnt_so_Bright
    @The_Future_isnt_so_Bright4 ай бұрын

    Corium shares the strange property that liquid sodium chloride has with water. It explodes when it falls into a body of water. The Japanese reactors are a different story all together. water couldnt even get close to the liquid corium in the reactors.

  • @JustAnotherGuy-vx4po
    @JustAnotherGuy-vx4po4 ай бұрын

    Scenario idea: What if Athens won the pelaponesian war?

  • @YoungAsznee

    @YoungAsznee

    4 ай бұрын

    Good fcken idea

  • @hasturtheunnameable3888

    @hasturtheunnameable3888

    4 ай бұрын

    One consequence: no one ever hears of Socrates or his student Plato. Why? Well, Socrates would still have been known as a local gadfly in Athens, but he became a much bigger deal as someone to be taken seriously precisely because Athens had its humiliating defeat. Socrates comes along and questions Athenian tradition and culture just when things are at their most sensitive, particularly after the Rule of the Twenty. Here you have a guy who hates democracy and doesn't think the traditional myths are true, and he likes elitist caste systems like Sparta. Oh, and he has a big following among the youth of the aristocrats. So if Athens wins, his following is much smaller. People aren't as aggreived at his attacks on Athens traditions. His connection to Alciabades isn't a big deal, especially if Alciabades stayed loyal to Athens. So he isn't put on trial, he's not executed, and not martyred. At best he becomes a footnote to history, only known to specialists who know of him as a guy satirized in Aristophanes the Clouds. That takes Plato out the timeline likely (unless he just becomes yet another Pythagorean), and with that, one of the major influences on Christianity - no neoplatonists, no Paul of Tarsus. Oh, and no Alexander the Great - no Aristotle to tutor him, and Greece is more united around Athens when Macedonia kicked up trouble. So, yeah, incalculable consequences.

  • @jadegecko

    @jadegecko

    4 ай бұрын

    When I first read this I thought it said "what if aliens won the Peloponnesian war"

  • @chrisgaming9567

    @chrisgaming9567

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jadegecko same lol

  • @user-HMKMat
    @user-HMKMat4 ай бұрын

    That end cut was brutal

  • @noba4696
    @noba469627 күн бұрын

    Here in South-Germany are still regions (mainly the elevated ones) where Boars who have been shot by Hunters have to be thrown away, because their radiation poisoning is still too high.

  • @Hardcoregamer68
    @Hardcoregamer684 ай бұрын

    Did you put Mexico on Gorbachevs head to make his birthmark lol

  • @MercShame

    @MercShame

    4 ай бұрын

    I came here to say this

  • @jamieervin4954

    @jamieervin4954

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes he did

  • @tanks608
    @tanks6084 ай бұрын

    So it’s STALKER setting more or less

  • @dasarath5779
    @dasarath57794 ай бұрын

    i have to nitpick because finns arent scandinavian and balts is a name for people who speak baltic languages, estonian is considered a baltic country yet are not balts

  • @JJAB91
    @JJAB914 ай бұрын

    Video ends abruptly

  • @patrickstuart3497

    @patrickstuart3497

    3 ай бұрын

    the radiation gottim 😢

  • @tommctear4672
    @tommctear46724 ай бұрын

    Is it me or did that end really abruptly? No shade, loved the video. Just felt really sudden.

  • @montanarepublic3296
    @montanarepublic32964 ай бұрын

    Good hunting, Stalker.

  • @dylanvienet7923
    @dylanvienet79233 ай бұрын

    Video idea: What if Yugoslavia never broke up? (Perhaps Tito named a successor or Slobodan Milosevic never came to power)

  • @wonzer812
    @wonzer8123 ай бұрын

    Nice scenario, though as someone with Masters in nuclear engineering, I have to point out that it would be impossible for larger % of uranium in the reactor to explode. There is some complicated laws in nature in work, but there is a reason you need >90% U-235 to build a uranium nuke, like the one used in Hiroshima. With nuclear power plant level enrichment, most of the uranium simply won't explode.

  • @anna-flora999

    @anna-flora999

    3 ай бұрын

    I thought he just meant more material is released by the initial explosion, not that more of it explodes

  • @JustAnotherGuy-vx4po
    @JustAnotherGuy-vx4po4 ай бұрын

    Scenario Idea: What if Cyrus The Great never existed?

  • @Lummox874

    @Lummox874

    4 ай бұрын

    You monster, you are a genius

  • @concept5631

    @concept5631

    4 ай бұрын

    One way to make any alternate historian suicidal is to make them work on a PoD set in Antiquity.

  • @rickconnolly5006

    @rickconnolly5006

    4 ай бұрын

    Now that's a biggun

  • @CuteFuzzyWeasel
    @CuteFuzzyWeasel4 ай бұрын

    was there an ending that got cut? This video just stops abruptly

  • @ProGremlinPlayer

    @ProGremlinPlayer

    4 ай бұрын

    I think that was on purpose. Also, hi, Weasel.

  • @CuteFuzzyWeasel

    @CuteFuzzyWeasel

    4 ай бұрын

    @@ProGremlinPlayer yo

  • @iGamezRo
    @iGamezRo3 ай бұрын

    I am Romanian. My family lives in an area very close to the Danube and my grandparents were really scared back then about the water. My paternal grandma still remembers the day they were issued Iodine Pills at the factory she worked at to give to her whole family.

  • @fbi9792
    @fbi97924 ай бұрын

    Kinda funny how the cold war basically ended with the USSR accidentally nuking itself.

  • @sarahmesser6056
    @sarahmesser60564 ай бұрын

    Heavy. Good perspective on how this could have been a lot worse.

  • @jackster8976
    @jackster89763 ай бұрын

    The sudden end of the video caught me off guard, i actually thought I clicked something at first.

  • @beefweiner
    @beefweiner4 ай бұрын

    awesome video man

  • @AlwaysWatchingYouTube
    @AlwaysWatchingYouTubeАй бұрын

    great show always wondered about what worse could have happened!

  • @MakriaMicronation
    @MakriaMicronation4 ай бұрын

    16:17 this is the moment I realised Gorbachev's birthmark was the map of Mexico💀

  • @Dentson
    @Dentson4 ай бұрын

    You know this topic idea is glowing

  • @concept5631

    @concept5631

    4 ай бұрын

    It's positively radiating.

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn4 ай бұрын

    Nice, an alternative history intro to an already alternative history video. Never forget 3 armed Chernobyl men, sounds like a cartoon network episode.

  • @neonbatteries4389
    @neonbatteries43893 ай бұрын

    15:54 music for this chapter is called “Beyond the Western Hills”

  • @deleted9797
    @deleted97974 ай бұрын

    The only positive outcome is that with that big of cancer cases our medicine would probably know how to treat cancer and tumors way better than now

  • @ultrablade2580
    @ultrablade25802 ай бұрын

    where tf is the soviet union vid?

  • @robertbarrows6687
    @robertbarrows66873 ай бұрын

    You need to do a part 2 for this.

  • @unrecht
    @unrecht3 ай бұрын

    Regarding the radiated food: the family of my mom split during the divide of East and West Germany. The family in the East magically had access to *far* more food than normal directly after the disaster. All of them died of cancer. But not a single one of the West German part of the family even had cancer. So my guess is that the Soviet Union "donated" to or made a "good" deal with her "brother" states to get rid of the radiated food.

  • @archmaester6594
    @archmaester65942 ай бұрын

    "What if the gaping pit of death was never closed." Not great. Not terrible.

  • @JerryCan101
    @JerryCan1014 ай бұрын

    Guys I just recently noticed Cody from Pointlesshub is the same Cody from this channel, how did it take so long for me to notice?

  • @derevianne1108

    @derevianne1108

    4 ай бұрын

    i think they're actually cousins

  • @JerryCan101

    @JerryCan101

    4 ай бұрын

    @@derevianne1108 I think Cody has another channel with his cousin, and his cousin has his own channel.

  • @I-io8ee

    @I-io8ee

    4 ай бұрын

    @@derevianne1108 No it is his second channel.

  • @I-io8ee

    @I-io8ee

    4 ай бұрын

    @@JerryCan101 Its his brother that has his own channel (knowledgeHusk)

  • @JerryCan101

    @JerryCan101

    4 ай бұрын

    @@I-io8ee ohh its his brother I thought it was his cousin

  • @clang_the_owl42
    @clang_the_owl423 ай бұрын

    My GF's grandfather was a liquidator. He died in his 50s from radiation poisoning, her whole family on mother's side was evacuated as the village they were living in was in one of the zones that was hit the hardest. All of her family (mother's side) has a heightened risk of cancer, her mother had thyroid cancer and it had to be removed and she, despite being born nowhere near the Chernobyl disaster both terms of time and place still has to undergo regular medical checkups and has plethora of health issues

  • @starsjosephfrost
    @starsjosephfrost4 ай бұрын

    WHAT IF BORIS YELTSIN LOST DURING THE EVENTS OF 1993!