The Enzymatic Genetic Scrambling of the Colonists in PANDORUM Explored | Initiation Points Explained



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As humanity overpopulated on Earth because it was fun, resources the planet could offer became more and more scarce over time which resulted in outbreaks of conflicts all over the surface of the world. The larger countries eventually got involved to take these materials which sparked larger and larger issues for everyone as time passed. Eventually it became quite evident that humanity was not going to get this population issue under control and as such, they turned towards the stars hoping to find a new world. When they looked out, they saw potentially an earth like planet called Tanis. Seeing this as their only hope rather than just taking resources from the solar system which seems a little dumb, they built an arc of sorts to head towards Tanis and with it, put 60,000 people on board. However, when the next rotation comes out of hypersleep, they find there are monsters on board hunting them. Who are these monsters and why are they here? Lets discuss that in todays episode!

Thank you for watching Roanoke Gaming and I Hope you enjoy The Enzymatic Genetic Scrambling of the Colonists in PANDORUM Explored | Initiation Points Explained

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No Seriously, If Earth is running low on resources, why did we not just start mining Mars or the Moon?: 00:00
Guess the producers of this movie didn’t FACTOR in some nerd on the internet asking this!: 1:41
Like you’re gonna sit there and tell me, They could build a ship to get to Tanis but not colonize our own solar system first? Bruh what: 02:49
Like did we even try to land on Mars first? There are so many useable resources in our backyard why would we go to another continent?!: 17:37
No, Now I am upset because I only just connected this now rather than in the video. Crap in a hat-Thanks for watching!: 35:47

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48 thoughts on “The Enzymatic Genetic Scrambling of the Colonists in PANDORUM Explored | Initiation Points Explained”

  1. I have a problem with this if we do it right the Earth can sustain that many people easily by building upwards instead of outwards on our cities and allowing the farmland to State farm land because we throw away way more food than we consume by letting it spoil and farmers are also paid by the government not to farm some crops so the price will stay controlled a Note 2 years ago they were so far behind on pork and chicken that they were killing them by the thousands just here in Oklahoma and burying them one farmer gave away almost 500 pigs just to whoever would come and get them

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  2. It’s funny, I just watched this the other day. I wondered if the cannibalism was what ultimately caused the enzyme to stay active as the altered we’re eating passengers who still had it in their systems. Instead of a short term adaptation that would taper out, the tribe kept receiving it over their entire lives and combined with several generations of breeding meant they were in an almost constant adaptive state. Probably for the best they all drowned since if they still had the enzyme in their system and reached the surface it’s possible their bodies would change in response to a different stimulus in a similar way to normal humans but be physically superior in many other ways.

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  3. I LOVE YOU FOR THIS DA- ROANOKE! Event Horizon, Pandorum, The Void. My top three favorite scifi movies next to The Expanse. and Stargate (SG1) and SG Atlantis being my favorite shows. <3

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  4. The biggest problem right now with overpopulation has to be the wastefulness of our economic systems and how so much material and product gets wasted and simply thrown away. When a country has a high level of technological progress the birth rate naturally declines, in fact the US has a lower birth rate than death rate in over half of the states.

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  5. First of, love your content!

    Secondly, not sure if you already done it and please let me know if that's the case. But would love to hear your take on the humanoids in The Decent.

    Keep it up and nicely done!

    Reply
  6. I asked this on the discord but I’m going to ask this again because I find it very interesting and I think you would to. There’s a doctor who episode called “The Waters of Mars” it’s set in the year 2059 and it follows a group of humans on the very first Martian base when a water based infection breaks out called “The Flood” that’s all I’m going to give. Oh btw the practical effects on the infected humans are great.

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  7. This movie was so cool but I was disappointed that the ship was just submerged. I remember watching it as a teen thinking that they were in either an isolated part of the Bootes Void or had somehow ended up in a pocket within a black hole. Some kind of eye of the storm. My curious young mind pondered on how they would overcome this. Then I saw the jellyfish.

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  8. i fucking wish I knew about the Bajau Laut people when my 9th year science teacher asked me to compare Lamarkian evolution with Darwinian evolution but never freaking mentioned it in class.

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  9. Was that the boy in the ad? Is Roanoke swole?

    Idk why, but I never pictures him to have gains like that. I didn’t picture him as like overweight or skinny. Always in just good health.

    Mans getting them GAINS!

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  10. My theory worked off phenotypic plasticity. To start I thought of the enzyme as more of a cocktail. The first part would allow adults to adapt within the bounds of their stock human genome, even though they didn't develop on the planet. Think skin pigmentation to use one of Roanoke's examples. Then the enzyme would ensure the expression of the trait was the genetic sequence passed on to the next generation. Essentially it changes the set point of the genetic code to the phenotype of the organism, pushing genetic adaption forward. If for whatever reason the process isn't moving along fast enough the enzyme could be administered sparingly to subsequent generations.

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  11. For anyone who didnt know, the first 100 ish years of attempts at colonizing north america also ended in retreat, party wipe, or cannibalism. Until jamestown which is the first permanent euro colony in n. America.

    This happened due to the much more complete destruction of native societies in the east by plague when the spaniards hit s. America.

    This wasnt as much of a problem in south america mostly due to europeans encountering far more native socieites that were relatively intact allowing spaniards to trade or conquor for resources.

    I cannot emphasize HOW HARD it is to go somewhere and colonize. Every time one has succeeded in doing this it is almost exclusively by building on the remains of someone elses agricultural and urban infrastructure (most major cities in north america have an old town layout that can be directly traced over the native buildings, farms, irrigation canals etc.) OR by colonizing very slowly and within trade route distance of the mother civilization as with early man.

    Humans are a cooperative species. That throw away line on roanoakes part is so important. Colonization is brutally hard

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  12. Idk if your looking for more video suggestions but I figured you've done all the ones I've mentioned. Maybe critters since you did gromlins. Could do the wyverns from monster hunter movie, or the t virus mutation from the original movies. I noticed you haven't done Prometheus. The black goo evolution into that proto morph.

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