did deadlock get a buff, or is it just used more in high elo? cus I never get deadlocks in my games
@IdkJustKIllua7 сағат бұрын
carebear crossover?
@ami99647 сағат бұрын
2:30 I HAD SAME REACTION
@jryt157 сағат бұрын
crispy aim bro
@Shlaklakk7 сағат бұрын
congrats on 700k! 👊
@realishere53127 сағат бұрын
Riot is never gonna lower the prices if these content creators keep promoting it for extra clicks Future is not so far where riot will be releasing bundles worth 200 dollars and these ppl stillbe promoting it❤
@GamingTV-oz2bb7 сағат бұрын
That skin so gayy Broo :))))
@erospasbecq30827 сағат бұрын
play in ranked plzzzz, cause plat lobby its easy
@moe69k227 сағат бұрын
corsair code plz
@Traxy1247 сағат бұрын
100$ is to much for a bundle lol
@longamc20128 сағат бұрын
Rayna and skin cute:)))????
@AyanS-fm1iy8 сағат бұрын
rare footage of kaemi oblliterating his opponents with a vandal/ghost not marshall
@shaneomac82898 сағат бұрын
if someone dropped my whole team with this fucking skin i would prolly kill myself
@tuanminh18668 сағат бұрын
Riot really turn "English or Spanish" to a bundle 😭
@diop72328 сағат бұрын
nice unrated clips lil bro
@taitocat75908 сағат бұрын
8:20 Pterodactylus Pterodactylus (from Ancient Greek πτεροδάκτυλος (pterodáktylos) 'winged finger'[2]) is a genus of extinct pterosaurs. It is thought to contain only a single species, Pterodactylus antiquus, which was the first pterosaur to be named and identified as a flying reptile and one of the first prehistoric reptiles to ever be discovered. Fossil remains of Pterodactylus have primarily been found in the Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria, Germany, which dates from the Late Jurassic period (Tithonian stage), about 150.8 to 148.5 million years ago. More fragmentary remains of Pterodactylus have tentatively been identified from elsewhere in Europe and in Africa.[3] Pterodactylus was a generalist carnivore that probably fed on a variety of invertebrates and vertebrates. Like all pterosaurs, Pterodactylus had wings formed by a skin and muscle membrane stretching from its elongated fourth finger to its hind limbs. It was supported internally by collagen fibres and externally by keratinous ridges. Pterodactylus was a small pterosaur compared to other famous genera such as Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus, and it also lived earlier, during the Late Jurassic period, while both Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus lived during the Late Cretaceous. Pterodactylus lived alongside other small pterosaurs such as the well-known Rhamphorhynchus, as well as other genera such as Scaphognathus, Anurognathus and Ctenochasma. Pterodactylus is classified as an early-branching member of the ctenochasmatid lineage, within the pterosaur clade Pterodactyloidea.[4][5] Discovery & History The type specimen of the animal now known as Pterodactylus antiquus was the first pterosaur fossil ever to be identified. The first Pterodactylus specimen was described by the Italian scientist Cosimo Alessandro Collini in 1784, based on a fossil skeleton that had been unearthed from the Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria. Collini was the curator of the Naturalienkabinett, or nature cabinet of curiosities (a precursor to the modern concept of the natural history museum), in the palace of Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria at Mannheim.[6][7] The specimen had been given to the collection by Count Friedrich Ferdinand zu Pappenheim around 1780, having been recovered from a lithographic limestone quarry in Eichstätt.[8] The actual date of the specimen's discovery and entry into the collection is unknown however, and it was not mentioned in a catalogue of the collection taken in 1767, so it must have been acquired at some point between that date and its 1784 description by Collini. This makes it potentially the earliest documented pterosaur find; the "Pester Exemplar" of the genus Aurorazhdarcho was described in 1779 and possibly discovered earlier than the Mannheim specimen, but it was at first considered to be a fossilized crustacean, and it was not until 1856 that this species was properly described as a pterosaur by German paleontologist Hermann von Meyer.[6] n his first description of the Mannheim specimen, Collini did not conclude that it was a flying animal. In fact, Collini could not fathom what kind of animal it might have been, rejecting affinities with the birds or the bats. He speculated that it may have been a sea creature, not for any anatomical reason, but because he thought the ocean depths were more likely to have housed unknown types of animals.[9][10] The idea that pterosaurs were aquatic animals persisted among a minority of scientists as late as 1830, when the German zoologist Johann Georg Wagler published a text on "amphibians" which included an illustration of Pterodactylus using its wings as flippers. Wagler went so far as to classify Pterodactylus, along with other aquatic vertebrates (namely plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, and monotremes), in the class Gryphi, between birds and mammals.[11] The German/French scientist Johann Hermann was the one who first stated that Pterodactylus used its long fourth finger to support a wing membrane. Back in March 1800, Hermann alerted the prominent French scientist Georges Cuvier to the existence of Collini's fossil, believing that it had been captured by the invading forces of the French Consulate and sent to collections in Paris (and perhaps to Cuvier himself) as war booty; at the time special French political commissars systematically seized art treasures and objects of scientific interest. Hermann sent Cuvier a letter containing his own interpretation of the specimen (though he had not examined it personally), which he believed to be a mammal, including the first known life restoration of a pterosaur. Hermann restored the animal with wing membranes extending from the long fourth finger to the ankle and a covering of fur (neither wing membranes nor fur had been preserved in the specimen). Hermann also added a membrane between the neck and wrist, as is the condition in bats. Cuvier agreed with this interpretation, and at Hermann's suggestion, Cuvier became the first to publish these ideas in December 1800 in a very short description.[10] However, contrary to Hermann, Cuvier was convinced the animal was a reptile.[12] The specimen had not in fact been seized by the French. Rather, in 1802, following the death of Charles Theodore, it was brought to Munich, where Baron Johann Paul Carl von Moll had obtained a general exemption of confiscation for the Bavarian collections.[6] Cuvier asked von Moll to study the fossil but was informed it could not be found. In 1809 Cuvier published a somewhat longer description, in which he named the animal Petro-Dactyle,[13] this was a typographical error however, and was later corrected by him to Ptéro-Dactyle.[10] He also refuted a hypothesis by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach that it would have been a shore bird.[13] Cuvier remarked: "It is not possible to doubt that the long finger served to support a membrane that, by lengthening the anterior extremity of this animal, formed a good wing."[14] Contrary to von Moll's report, the fossil was not missing; it was being studied by Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring, who gave a public lecture about it on December 27, 1810. In January 1811, von Sömmerring wrote a letter to Cuvier deploring the fact that he had only recently been informed of Cuvier's request for information. His lecture was published in 1812, and in it von Sömmerring named the species Ornithocephalus antiquus.[15] The animal was described as being both a bat, and a form in between mammals and birds, i.e. not intermediate in descent but in "affinity" or archetype. Cuvier disagreed, and the same year in his Ossemens fossiles provided a lengthy description in which he restated that the animal was a reptile.[16] It was not until 1817 that a second specimen of Pterodactylus came to light, again from Solnhofen. This tiny specimen was that year described by von Sömmerring as Ornithocephalus brevirostris, named for its short snout, now understood to be a juvenile character (this specimen is now thought to represent a juvenile specimen of a different genus, probably Ctenochasma).[17] He provided a restoration of the skeleton, the first one published for any pterosaur.[10] This restoration was very inaccurate, von Sömmerring mistaking the long metacarpals for the bones of the lower arm, the lower arm for the humerus, this upper arm for the breast bone and this sternum again for the shoulder blades.[18] Sömmerring did not change his opinion that these forms were bats and this "bat model" for interpreting pterosaurs would remain influential long after a consensus had been reached around 1860 that they were reptiles. The standard assumptions were that pterosaurs were quadrupedal, clumsy on the ground, furred, warmblooded and had a wing membrane reaching the ankle. Some of these elements have been confirmed, some refuted by modern research, while others remain disputed.[19] In 1815, the generic name Ptéro-Dactyle was latinized to Pterodactylus by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque.[20] Unaware of Rafinesque's publication however, Cuvier himself in 1819 latinized the name Ptéro-Dactyle again to Pterodactylus,[21] but the specific name he then gave, longirostris, has to give precedence to von Sömmerring's antiquus.[21] In 1888, English naturalist Richard Lydekker designated Pterodactylus antiquus as the type species of Pterodactylus, and considered Ornithocephalus antiquus a synonym. He also designated specimen BSP AS.I.739 as the holotype of the genus.[22]
@olirahaman94088 сағат бұрын
It looks like a battle pass skin, with a little glitter, did a little effort for a whip-out animation, terrible box-knocking bullet sound, minimalistic kill animation Basically after releasing so many good skins, this is one of those weak, bad skins they release once or twice per year.
@akuzu2138 сағат бұрын
people was tired on this video they don t want to talk haha
@NoahPLAT8 сағат бұрын
even if it is worth it i dont have money🥲
@Fireball74288 сағат бұрын
If I get 30 bombed by this vandal skin user, I'm uninstalling. Dead serious.
@Bwast_9 сағат бұрын
This collection screams “i shouldn’t let gang know i fw this”😂
@elys.fthi_9 сағат бұрын
700k special
@TW-ubad9 сағат бұрын
Lmao i bougth the knife
@daleaf11309 сағат бұрын
Gay sentinels of light
@morfeyy-9 сағат бұрын
i better not see nobody rockin this shit in game. im bullying mfs if i see this.
@Minihead9 сағат бұрын
now u can ruin the days of others cutely
@DeoxGaming-xc2ho9 сағат бұрын
700K Less goo
@justvibin67359 сағат бұрын
Vandal sound like diesel engine
@kaamto688610 сағат бұрын
can they make a batman skin now based upon this finisher
@ylacly10 сағат бұрын
Can someone tell me for how long the bundle will be available from this point? I’m on vacation and I can’t check
@victoriakochura25129 сағат бұрын
20 days more
@okidokiyowyow35610 сағат бұрын
I bought the vandal ☺️
@crateplaysgames761910 сағат бұрын
Nice Video Kaemi. But please get a better microphone.
@ZapoxedIsDaGoat10 сағат бұрын
700k too ez for Kaemi >:)
@kennymlbb717610 сағат бұрын
"What was your father's last words?" "no ace"
@Ace123r10 сағат бұрын
Congratulations on reaching 700,000 subscribers!
@Moon-ep2yk10 сағат бұрын
one of the worst skin
@krokeh136111 сағат бұрын
YO KAEMI WHATS THE CROSSHAIR???
@wisp736911 сағат бұрын
I want a mf wand that makes me feel like a beautiful princess 😭🙏
Пікірлер
So worth. I love being girlypop as shit.
If u come with the bundle, why not
What an luck
Gayiest shit ever it suits you
The riding is crazzzzyyyy by cypher
"don't let the gang know I fw this" ahh skin
what's the crosshair?
sounds like mystbloom,
the perfect bundle doesn't exi... OMG!
Is pearl back?.
6:15 strongest round 1 sheriff buyer
Overpriced bundle
just buy 1 gun
did deadlock get a buff, or is it just used more in high elo? cus I never get deadlocks in my games
carebear crossover?
2:30 I HAD SAME REACTION
crispy aim bro
congrats on 700k! 👊
Riot is never gonna lower the prices if these content creators keep promoting it for extra clicks Future is not so far where riot will be releasing bundles worth 200 dollars and these ppl stillbe promoting it❤
That skin so gayy Broo :))))
play in ranked plzzzz, cause plat lobby its easy
corsair code plz
100$ is to much for a bundle lol
Rayna and skin cute:)))????
rare footage of kaemi oblliterating his opponents with a vandal/ghost not marshall
if someone dropped my whole team with this fucking skin i would prolly kill myself
Riot really turn "English or Spanish" to a bundle 😭
nice unrated clips lil bro
8:20 Pterodactylus Pterodactylus (from Ancient Greek πτεροδάκτυλος (pterodáktylos) 'winged finger'[2]) is a genus of extinct pterosaurs. It is thought to contain only a single species, Pterodactylus antiquus, which was the first pterosaur to be named and identified as a flying reptile and one of the first prehistoric reptiles to ever be discovered. Fossil remains of Pterodactylus have primarily been found in the Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria, Germany, which dates from the Late Jurassic period (Tithonian stage), about 150.8 to 148.5 million years ago. More fragmentary remains of Pterodactylus have tentatively been identified from elsewhere in Europe and in Africa.[3] Pterodactylus was a generalist carnivore that probably fed on a variety of invertebrates and vertebrates. Like all pterosaurs, Pterodactylus had wings formed by a skin and muscle membrane stretching from its elongated fourth finger to its hind limbs. It was supported internally by collagen fibres and externally by keratinous ridges. Pterodactylus was a small pterosaur compared to other famous genera such as Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus, and it also lived earlier, during the Late Jurassic period, while both Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus lived during the Late Cretaceous. Pterodactylus lived alongside other small pterosaurs such as the well-known Rhamphorhynchus, as well as other genera such as Scaphognathus, Anurognathus and Ctenochasma. Pterodactylus is classified as an early-branching member of the ctenochasmatid lineage, within the pterosaur clade Pterodactyloidea.[4][5] Discovery & History The type specimen of the animal now known as Pterodactylus antiquus was the first pterosaur fossil ever to be identified. The first Pterodactylus specimen was described by the Italian scientist Cosimo Alessandro Collini in 1784, based on a fossil skeleton that had been unearthed from the Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria. Collini was the curator of the Naturalienkabinett, or nature cabinet of curiosities (a precursor to the modern concept of the natural history museum), in the palace of Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria at Mannheim.[6][7] The specimen had been given to the collection by Count Friedrich Ferdinand zu Pappenheim around 1780, having been recovered from a lithographic limestone quarry in Eichstätt.[8] The actual date of the specimen's discovery and entry into the collection is unknown however, and it was not mentioned in a catalogue of the collection taken in 1767, so it must have been acquired at some point between that date and its 1784 description by Collini. This makes it potentially the earliest documented pterosaur find; the "Pester Exemplar" of the genus Aurorazhdarcho was described in 1779 and possibly discovered earlier than the Mannheim specimen, but it was at first considered to be a fossilized crustacean, and it was not until 1856 that this species was properly described as a pterosaur by German paleontologist Hermann von Meyer.[6] n his first description of the Mannheim specimen, Collini did not conclude that it was a flying animal. In fact, Collini could not fathom what kind of animal it might have been, rejecting affinities with the birds or the bats. He speculated that it may have been a sea creature, not for any anatomical reason, but because he thought the ocean depths were more likely to have housed unknown types of animals.[9][10] The idea that pterosaurs were aquatic animals persisted among a minority of scientists as late as 1830, when the German zoologist Johann Georg Wagler published a text on "amphibians" which included an illustration of Pterodactylus using its wings as flippers. Wagler went so far as to classify Pterodactylus, along with other aquatic vertebrates (namely plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, and monotremes), in the class Gryphi, between birds and mammals.[11] The German/French scientist Johann Hermann was the one who first stated that Pterodactylus used its long fourth finger to support a wing membrane. Back in March 1800, Hermann alerted the prominent French scientist Georges Cuvier to the existence of Collini's fossil, believing that it had been captured by the invading forces of the French Consulate and sent to collections in Paris (and perhaps to Cuvier himself) as war booty; at the time special French political commissars systematically seized art treasures and objects of scientific interest. Hermann sent Cuvier a letter containing his own interpretation of the specimen (though he had not examined it personally), which he believed to be a mammal, including the first known life restoration of a pterosaur. Hermann restored the animal with wing membranes extending from the long fourth finger to the ankle and a covering of fur (neither wing membranes nor fur had been preserved in the specimen). Hermann also added a membrane between the neck and wrist, as is the condition in bats. Cuvier agreed with this interpretation, and at Hermann's suggestion, Cuvier became the first to publish these ideas in December 1800 in a very short description.[10] However, contrary to Hermann, Cuvier was convinced the animal was a reptile.[12] The specimen had not in fact been seized by the French. Rather, in 1802, following the death of Charles Theodore, it was brought to Munich, where Baron Johann Paul Carl von Moll had obtained a general exemption of confiscation for the Bavarian collections.[6] Cuvier asked von Moll to study the fossil but was informed it could not be found. In 1809 Cuvier published a somewhat longer description, in which he named the animal Petro-Dactyle,[13] this was a typographical error however, and was later corrected by him to Ptéro-Dactyle.[10] He also refuted a hypothesis by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach that it would have been a shore bird.[13] Cuvier remarked: "It is not possible to doubt that the long finger served to support a membrane that, by lengthening the anterior extremity of this animal, formed a good wing."[14] Contrary to von Moll's report, the fossil was not missing; it was being studied by Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring, who gave a public lecture about it on December 27, 1810. In January 1811, von Sömmerring wrote a letter to Cuvier deploring the fact that he had only recently been informed of Cuvier's request for information. His lecture was published in 1812, and in it von Sömmerring named the species Ornithocephalus antiquus.[15] The animal was described as being both a bat, and a form in between mammals and birds, i.e. not intermediate in descent but in "affinity" or archetype. Cuvier disagreed, and the same year in his Ossemens fossiles provided a lengthy description in which he restated that the animal was a reptile.[16] It was not until 1817 that a second specimen of Pterodactylus came to light, again from Solnhofen. This tiny specimen was that year described by von Sömmerring as Ornithocephalus brevirostris, named for its short snout, now understood to be a juvenile character (this specimen is now thought to represent a juvenile specimen of a different genus, probably Ctenochasma).[17] He provided a restoration of the skeleton, the first one published for any pterosaur.[10] This restoration was very inaccurate, von Sömmerring mistaking the long metacarpals for the bones of the lower arm, the lower arm for the humerus, this upper arm for the breast bone and this sternum again for the shoulder blades.[18] Sömmerring did not change his opinion that these forms were bats and this "bat model" for interpreting pterosaurs would remain influential long after a consensus had been reached around 1860 that they were reptiles. The standard assumptions were that pterosaurs were quadrupedal, clumsy on the ground, furred, warmblooded and had a wing membrane reaching the ankle. Some of these elements have been confirmed, some refuted by modern research, while others remain disputed.[19] In 1815, the generic name Ptéro-Dactyle was latinized to Pterodactylus by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque.[20] Unaware of Rafinesque's publication however, Cuvier himself in 1819 latinized the name Ptéro-Dactyle again to Pterodactylus,[21] but the specific name he then gave, longirostris, has to give precedence to von Sömmerring's antiquus.[21] In 1888, English naturalist Richard Lydekker designated Pterodactylus antiquus as the type species of Pterodactylus, and considered Ornithocephalus antiquus a synonym. He also designated specimen BSP AS.I.739 as the holotype of the genus.[22]
It looks like a battle pass skin, with a little glitter, did a little effort for a whip-out animation, terrible box-knocking bullet sound, minimalistic kill animation Basically after releasing so many good skins, this is one of those weak, bad skins they release once or twice per year.
people was tired on this video they don t want to talk haha
even if it is worth it i dont have money🥲
If I get 30 bombed by this vandal skin user, I'm uninstalling. Dead serious.
This collection screams “i shouldn’t let gang know i fw this”😂
700k special
Lmao i bougth the knife
Gay sentinels of light
i better not see nobody rockin this shit in game. im bullying mfs if i see this.
now u can ruin the days of others cutely
700K Less goo
Vandal sound like diesel engine
can they make a batman skin now based upon this finisher
Can someone tell me for how long the bundle will be available from this point? I’m on vacation and I can’t check
20 days more
I bought the vandal ☺️
Nice Video Kaemi. But please get a better microphone.
700k too ez for Kaemi >:)
"What was your father's last words?" "no ace"
Congratulations on reaching 700,000 subscribers!
one of the worst skin
YO KAEMI WHATS THE CROSSHAIR???
I want a mf wand that makes me feel like a beautiful princess 😭🙏