WARNING: If your computer has less than 16 GB of RAM, you are advised to exit this page immediately. Scratch 3.0 currently has a severe memory usage issue with large numbers of costumes. ▸ asdfscratch: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/2460272 ▸ asdfscratch2: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/44358106 ▸ asdfscratch3: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/44880966 ▸ asdfscratch4: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/45958496 ▸ asdfscratch5: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/46027794 ▸ asdfscratch6: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/46042670 ▸ asdfscratch8: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/46321260 ▸ asdfscratch9: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/76520440 ▶ HOW TO WATCH: 1. Click the green flag 2. Enjoy the hilarity that ensues. asdfmovie7 was written by TomSka. Watch the original version here: http://asun.cf/34tef ▶ HOW I MADE THIS: Using a horribly messy bash command (ffmpeg -i asdfmovie7.mp4 -q:v 4 -r 20 -f image2 -vf scale=480:-1 'asdf7/%04d.jpg'), I converted the asdfmovie7 YouTube video to a sequence of JPEG images. Using an old version of Kurt (http://asun.cf/iakn7), I decompiled (with decompiler.py) an old Scratch 1.4 project I had lying around, added the sequence of images to it, and compiled (with compiler.py) it back into a .sb file. I then imported that into the Scratch editor. After that, I added some scripts to make it animate, and uploaded the project to this website to make what you see right now. An absolute-time based animation method was necessary to compensate for the fact that not all computers run at the same speed. It's amazing that you have actually made this far reading this. Have some animated gifs! http://asun.cf/9syfu http://asun.cf/ash-0 http://asun.cf/9tk3d http://asun.cf/dqzk7