Content Warning / Cyberpunk 2077 | Noclip Crewcast #171



Read more about Cyberpunk 2077➜ https://cyberpunk2077.mgn.tv

Danny’s back (minus a gallbladder) with over 60 hours in Cyberpunk 2077, Jeremy gets content-pilled in Content Warning, and Frank returns to Japan – digitally, with Yakuza 3.

Content Warning (warning: no longer free):
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2881650/Content_Warning/

Cyberpunk 2077:
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1091500/Cyberpunk_2077/

Yakuza 3:
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1088710/Yakuza_3_Remastered/

iTunes Page: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/noclip/id1385062988
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Watch our docs: https://youtube.com/noclipvideo
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Learn About Noclip: https://www.noclip.video
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Chapters:

0:00:00 – Intro + Danny’s back!
0:05:36 – Thanking Our Supporters
0:06:35 – The Danny O’Dwyer Health Hour
0:22:05 – Shogun & 3 Body Problem
0:23:55 – Content Warning (the game, not like… a content warning)
0:35:10 – Cyberpunk 2077
0:55:50 – Yakuza 3
1:03:38 – Q: Where did you get the podcast intro song?
1:05:55 – Noclip Updates
1:08:37 – Sign Off

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32 thoughts on “Content Warning / Cyberpunk 2077 | Noclip Crewcast #171”

  1. Ahh, good to see you're back Danny. Full speed ahead on your road to recovery.
    Additionally, nice one to the rest of the team holding the fort, you lot did an awesome job and would love to see another podcast with you again.

    Reply
  2. 3 Body Problem, the show is fine and so far portraited the big ideas of the book trilogy pretty well. The chinese show shows more background, but is quite slow compared. The books themselves though are some of the most inventive Sci-Fi books I have ever read, highly highly recommended.

    Reply
  3. Welcome back, Danny! 😀 Thrilled everything seems to be in order. On that note: It has also brought me joy to see Frank getting back on his feet. Glad y'all are doing well!✨

    Reply
  4. You lads make me proud. Having supported you for many years, it's been amazing to see this shift in video game content post No Clip. You guys spearheaded the modern insurgence of video game docs. Without you fellows, people may have always thought of King of Kong: Fistful of Quarters whenever someone would mention the term Video Game Documentary.

    Reply
  5. sorry about your gallbladder Danny! Funnily enough I detox my liver and gallbladder every Friday night (although prob Sunday this week), and part of the process involves lying down for an hour to help the stones travel down the common bile duct and into the intestines, and I always listen to the Noclip Crewcast when I do it. Sometimes I can get REALLY nauseated in the process, and you guys constantly make me smile and laugh through the whole thing. I hope you're feeling better 🙂

    Reply
  6. Glad to see Danny back and healthy. The American healthcare system always sounds god damn terrifying with the way they can absolutely bankrupt you if you don't have health insurance.

    Reply
  7. Waited all this time and bought cp77 last week. Didn't have much expectations and am very positively surprised. Especially the story and chars are better than i assumed. Btw my "playstyle" is just running towards nmes and shotgun blast em. Didn't invest anything in body but am still an unkillable bullet sponge. Currently doing dogtown and halted main story at the last mission

    Reply
  8. For info:

    Cholestatis – the inability to eject sufficient bile to break up fats due to blockages can lead to a build up of necrotic tissue in the gallbladder itself (gangrenous cholecystitis), because 95% of bile is recycled in the body, and bile that is used absorbs toxins from your food. This bile is then considered to be biliary sludge. It is thick, laden with absorbed toxins and cholesterol, and gets recycled back around the body and stored in the gallbladder for potential use again. This isn't meant to happen in humans obviously, that we reuse thick bile, but our diets are not the same now as our digestive systems were trained on in our evolutionary history. We do not eat or drink bitter foods much now that would ordinarily dump out the thick bile and replace it with clean thin bile several times each day. Those kinds of foods would be teas of different kinds of leaves and roots like dandelion, chanca, eating ginger and brewing up bitters.

    Sometimes the liver will package up these collections of biliary sludge with bile salts and cholesterol and toxins etc. and store them in the many bile ducts down which thin clean bile should be ejected in the presence of fats. These packages are known as gallstones and can start in the liver (intrahepatic stones) and travel down into the ducts, blocking the way for sufficient bile to be ejected in the presence of consumed fats.

    If the gallbladder contains too many stones (some have been reported to have contained 2k-5k stones on removal) the organ can become distended and puts pressure on a nerve that runs down your back and around your diaphragm. So people with gallbladder pain often report respiratory difficulties as well as different 'signs' such as Kehr's sign, which is deferred arthritic pain in the right shoulder blade and neck that strangely doesn't restrict or decrease movement as a normal injury would.

    Insufficent bile flow also prevents the pancreas and stomach acid from.secreting enough hormones and acids to digest your food, which is why people with gallbladder problems develop digestive issues like candida or what docs call IBS. These can then develop into Crohn's or UC if they are left untreated or exacerbated. Other symptoms of a backed up gallbladder can include – and at this point treatment might be too late, even treatment with home remedies – intense nausea, vomiting, dizziness, jaundice, gallbladder attacks and pain when eating anything, not just fat. Adrenal fatigue, CFS, and anxiety, depression, anger, and headaches are also common.

    Treatment for gallstones often involves the removal of the organ, but you can actually sort out the problem yourself, which I happen to do, although no doctor will suggest this and nor is there basically any robust medical research into the area, so I'm.not gonna tell you how to do it lol as if I am some expert.

    But yeah gallbladder problems are huge in the population and they lead to a massive amount of other seemingly unrelated digestive problems and mental health symptoms (gut and neurotransmitter production are intimately linked).

    Reply

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