![]() ![]() Tuesday through Saturdays consist of Let's Play replays, mostly World of Tanks and World of Warships. His content include Mingles with Jingles on Mondays, where he chats about personal subjects and/or comments on present events in the gaming community. His main YouTube account has over 650,000 subscribers (November 2021). Charlton became known for his World of Tanks videos, which Die Welt in 2014 stated having attracted 250,000 subscribers. Inspired by other Let's Play videos, Charlton posted his first video on June 16th, 2012, which was a replay of himself playing the Chinese Type 59 tank in World of Tanks along with his own commentary. YouTube Īt first, Charlton used his YouTube channel to store World of Tanks replays for his own personal use. A Veteran of the First Gulf War, he retired from the Royal Navy in 2011, after 22 years of service on six ships: apart from HMS Brazen, HMS Coventry, HMS Southampton, HMS Nottingham, HMS Newcastle, and HMS Manchester. He moved on to being a Writer, a branch title that was subsequently changed to Logistician Personnel (Writer). Military career Ĭharlton joined the Royal Navy in 1989 as a Radio Operator on HMS Brazen. In 1986, his family moved back to England. Charlton started his early education at a boarding school in Barberton, Transvaal during South Africa's turbulent apartheid period. After a year there, his parents moved to Swaziland. In 1978 his mother remarried and the family moved to South Africa, where his stepfather worked for the South African Iron and Steel Industrial Corporation (Iscor). His father was a Paratrooper who had separated from his mother in 1974, and later died while serving in the French Foreign Legion. ![]() Paul Charlton was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. As of November 2021, The Mighty Jingles has over 650,000 subscribers. In 2012, he started a channel on YouTube, in which he primarily shares Let's Play video game commentaries on various games. Paul Charlton (born 10 March 1970), known as The Mighty Jingles, is a British YouTuber and retired veteran of the Royal Navy. Prt Scr = Take a screenshot, which goes to the folder.Toggle camera lock (between looking around freely and fixed in the same direction as the player did) = Left mouse button.Skip forward 40 seconds = Ctrl Right-arrow.Once you are done watching, the client has to be closed once again. ![]() To watch a replay, be it your own or a downloaded one, you must close the game and then double-click (open) the desired replay-file. Well, there is always the third purpose, bragging about your successes and gloating over the enemies' (or team-mates') mistakes!įor easy sharing, there are a number of sites that let you upload replays with comments. These replays serves two purposes: It lets you analyse the battle afterwards and get opinions from other players, and it serves as evidence regarding breaches of the Game Rules that has occurred. World_of_Tanks\replays, with the latest at the bottom. The resulting replays will be found in the folder. If you always watches your battles to the end, the setting "Last" will be sufficient. Every time you go to battle, you can have the entire battle recorded for later view if you set the drop-down menu "Enable Battle Recording", found on the General-tab in the ingame Settings, to "Always". ![]()
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