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YMMV / Corridor Digital

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  • Awesome Moments: See here.
  • Awesome Music:
  • Broken Base:
    • The "React" videos. Are they a unique concept that adds some nice variety to the Corridor Crew channel, or is it detracting from the slice-of-life and behind-the-scene episodes that many die-hard fans seem like more?
    • Their video using the text-to-image software Stable Diffusion was praised by AI enthusiasts, but lambasted by many animators as encouraging use of programs that plagiarize artists while simultaneously putting their jobs at risk. Even famed animator Ralph Bakshi responded to their video coldly.
  • Crosses the Line Twice: The destruction of Alderaan is considered by many to be one of the most vile actions in the Star Wars universe. But having a Stormtrooper with good eyesight perform a 360 no-scope with the Death Star successfully is utterly hilarious.
  • More Popular Spin-Off: While the main Corridor Digital channel is definitely well-known, they are focused exclusively on the content that they created. They soon found the Corridor Crew channel that focuses on behind-the-scenes interactions would often outpace the viewership of the content itself, due to great chemistry between the team and equally high-quality video production value. The "React" videos in particular came to be seen as the best of their kind, ending up featuring a number of high profile Special Guest commentators.
  • Nightmare Fuel: See here.
  • Special Effect Failure: While Spider-Man: Cake Day features stellar CGI for its budget overall with its portrayal of 1960s New York City, it does manage to sneak in modern-day background elements in some scenes such as a modern UPS van or present-day, non-CGI traffic.
  • Visual Effects of Awesome: It's kind of their thing. Some of the cooler examples include Portal Trick Shots, which shows all sorts of crazy tricks with a portal in live action (including one part where the camera moves through one); Graphic Violence, Brush With Death, and Paper Cuts, all of which involve things transitioning between 2D plane and 3D world; and First Person vs Third Person, a video based on the Spies vs Mercs mode in Splinter Cell and features special effects alongside entire scenes shot behind-the-shoulder.
    • Their "Bosstown Dynamics" series feature incredibly detailed Atlas expies that have managed to fool people into thinking they're seeing actual Boston Dynamics footage.

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