I discussed this with a friend, wouldn't the river have a current? So if you fell in, you'd be washed right under. And if that's the case then there's no way Clementine could've survived.
I do believe that there are parts of rivers that can pool, which as you'd expect, would have next to no flow/current. Given that the area they cross seems to be a larger body of water than the rest of the river that we can see, this could be the case. That would also help explain the depth of the area.
Also, I'm still not an expert on how rivers and such work, but I think during the winter seasons, rivers flow greater in the deeper areas, while they slow in the areas closer to the surface, specifically where it freezes over. Going off that line of logic, if you fell into a frozen lake, you wouldn't be carried very far if you're still near the ice sheets. If you sank further down into the river, the current would get exponentially stronger the deeper you went, pulling you further away from where you fell in.
Again though, I don't know how accurate any of that is.
I discussed this with a friend, wouldn't the river have a current? So if you fell in, you'd be washed right under. And if that's the case then there's no way Clementine could've survived.
Comments
I discussed this with a friend, wouldn't the river have a current? So if you fell in, you'd be washed right under. And if that's the case then there's no way Clementine could've survived.
Carley. My 2nd favorite character in the game. Merry Christmas Carley........
I do believe that there are parts of rivers that can pool, which as you'd expect, would have next to no flow/current. Given that the area they cross seems to be a larger body of water than the rest of the river that we can see, this could be the case. That would also help explain the depth of the area.
Also, I'm still not an expert on how rivers and such work, but I think during the winter seasons, rivers flow greater in the deeper areas, while they slow in the areas closer to the surface, specifically where it freezes over. Going off that line of logic, if you fell into a frozen lake, you wouldn't be carried very far if you're still near the ice sheets. If you sank further down into the river, the current would get exponentially stronger the deeper you went, pulling you further away from where you fell in.
Again though, I don't know how accurate any of that is.
Me too.
♪ Mmm watcha saaaay ♪
carley
so sad lee as well
Carley's wasnt really that sad, it was just a shock. But Lee's death was incredibly sad- rarely do I cry at something so much.
yeah but it was still sad