Duct Tape: Waterproof and weather-resistant Ideal for: Patching and seaming. Under extreme heat conditions, duct tape adhesive typically becomes extremely gummy and may slide and or dry up really fast, taking the integrity out of the tape and possibly making it fail.
For example, CL-W has excellent water, vapor and abrasion resistance, which makes it suitable in humidity and moist environments. Duct Tape: very flexible and easy to stretch Ideal for: Situations in which the tape must fit into tight areas or hug irregular surfaces and contours. The matte finish stops the tapes from reflecting light making it blend in with a normal stage background or floor.
Ideal for: Securing cables or props that need to remain invisible under the lights of a photography or film set. Choosing the right tape for your job is extremely important. For more in-depth information on duct tape, check out our Complete Technical Guide to Duct Tape to learn the top 6 conditions where duct tape can fall short and what adhesive tape you should be using instead.
We would love to help! It's one of the most popular adhesives because of its versatility, but there are many misconceptions about the toolbox superhero…. If you're Kirk Giordano, the answer is unequivocally false. Of course,…. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn. February 3, Duct Tape. Duct Tape or Gaffer's Tape? We've Got Both! Buy Online. Need something else? Most of the choices are purely to play a different clip, like when Harold and George argue over which movie to watch.
In general, there are just fewer choices between the long, rambling segments. There are a few branching choices in Happy Apocalypse to You , but the ultimate ending still pretty much boils down to Instant Failure or Success.
Some of the choices do affect specific endgame conditions, but not enough to drastically change the story or its outcome.
But for the most part, the choices are at least entertaining and frequent enough to feel engaging, even if some of the options just amount to cute interludes.
Based on Spirit Riding Free , an animated series loosely inspired by the DreamWorks movie Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, Ride Along Adventure follows a plucky group of young teenagers and their horses. But what starts off as a simple riding adventure turns into danger, as the horse gets kidnapped and the girls must rescue it.
Spirit Riding Free: Ride Along ultimately falls into the same pitfalls as a few of these lower-ranked specials. For the most part, no matter what you choose, it plays out the same storyline.
Credit must be given where credit is due — the second Bear Grylls interactive adventure is leagues better than the first. There is now a loose overarching narrative: the electrical fence at a nature preserve has mysteriously shut down, and Bear must fix it and corral some escaped animals.
He has a few separate missions to embark on, and the order you pick them in affects the resulting choices. There is a branching path here! The choices are also much more entertaining than the ones in the first You Vs. Wild interactive experience. One sees Bear battling a boa constrictor in the water, while another gives him a choice of luring a lion with meat or offering himself as bait. The only downside is the long swaths of time where there is no choice whatsoever, where Bear kinda just does his wilderness thing.
You may miss an upcoming choice if you zone out when he muses about coastlines, or hikes around, grunting. The Carmen Sandiego interactive adventure is currently one of the only Carmen Sandiego games readily available to play. While definitely one of the most aesthetically pleasing Netflix interactive adventures — the animated series itself has some stunning moments — it jarringly forces viewers down one path at the beginning.
The former results in an instant endgame. There are a few choices with consequences which affect whether the endings are successful. Carmen will still take on most of the missions, and only the order is shuffled around. Each iteration of the You vs. The initial set of choices — seeking food, water, or shelter — do skew into the usual territory, where if you pick the wrong choice, the story immediately segues into the right one, or into endgame. But once Grylls gets his basic survival necessities, he must embark on a rescue mission.
Here, the big branching choice happens: Should you trek over the mountains, or go through some spooky tunnels? Each path offers other, smaller choices — does Bear press through his altitude sickness, or wait it out? Does he mark his path with tiles or knots? Each of these questions affects the endgame conditions, and determines which extra steps you must choose to get him to safety. Based on the Puss in Boots animated Netflix series which spun off from the Shrek movie franchise , Puss in Book: Trapped in an Epic Tale tosses the swashbuckling feline hero into a magical book where a cheeky narrator intends to keep him trapped so he can play out the events of various fairy tales.
Viewers are prompted to pick which stories to play out a Sinbad-style pirate tale or a Snow White homage, for instance and then control smaller choices within the story. Puss in Books , overall, offers some branching and different endings. You can pick which fairytales to play out, and you can break out of the book in a few different ways. But the best part of the Puss in Boots interactive special is the tone.
Puss begs the viewer to make certain choices, while the narrator delights in torturing him, and getting the audience to participate as well. In one branch, Puss realizes how to gain control of the narrative, prompting some genuinely hilarious moments as he wildly forces former opponents to sing and dance.
Stretch Armstrong: The Breakout follows the Flex Fighters, three high-school students with superpowered suits, right after their high-tech billionaire mentor turned on them and framed them as criminals. After a mass breakout of villains, the Flex Fighters must save the city and stop the real villain. Coming into this game without heavy knowledge of the show puts viewers at a disadvantage, initially, but after just a few clicks, the story makes more sense.
But unlike the Carmen Sandiego or Kimmy Schmidt special, fewer of those wrong choices end in insta-failure. While some of the choices are inconsequential, there are enough to offer distinct branches with specific consequences.
Choosing to follow lumbering villain Multi-Farious means taking down a high-tech skyscraper, while getting Multi-Farious to follow the Flex Fighters means a different battle against an electric-powered bad guy. There are actually different ways things can unfold — with only a few frustrating game-overs. The entire setup of the Boss Baby interactive special is that it is a training simulation, designed to see which department at Baby Corp makes the most sense for the player.
That means even early endgames feel like successes. Three villains in the Boss Baby universe are also out for revenge, and you must guide the Boss Baby and his older brother to foil their schemes. Winning or losing the maze means that the next sequence of events unfolds differently.
There are clear choices with ramifications. There are also some puzzles to solve, some of which are pretty hard for what I assume is the young, target demographic!
Overall, Get that Baby! This makes Escape the Undertaker one of the most robust Netflix interactives yet. The story follows three wrestlers who trek to a spooky mansion to steal the powerful Urn from wrestler Mark William Calaway, aka The Undertaker. Early on, users are prompted to pick one of the three wrestlers to follow over the others, which allows for different explorations of the mansion and the creepy artifacts Undertaker stores within. But still, the diverging branches make this one of the best interactives thus far.
The standalone, Emmy-winning episode of Black Mirror follows a young game designer set on creating an interactive game. Meta, right? Many choices in Bandersnatch are inconsequential, but there are enough big ones to sharply pivot the narrative.
0コメント