Guinness World Record

Most mini dominoes toppled (2,000 Dominoes)

Login to rate this video.

You can place this video on your website by inserting the (X)HTML code below:

Options:
pixels
pixels
Embed code:
<iframe src="https://www.snotr.com/embed/13844" width="400" height="330" frameborder="0"></iframe>

You can email this video to your friends by entering their addresses below:

Your information:
Recipients:

add Add another recipient

Human verification:

People who liked this video also liked

AtmosFear freefall tower at Liseberg Gothenburg in Sweden
I Can't Taste Anything
1087 Days in Just 15 Minutes - Growing Plant Time Lapse COMPILATION
Colored balls elevator. Particle fluid. Music. Molecular Script. Video 4K
2019 Tasmanian Tiger Photo
Budgie Balancing Trick

Comments

5 comments posted so far. Login to add a comment.

Expand all comments

Picture of MrG31 achievements

+8 1. MrG commented 10 years ago

Haha, laughed when they at 00:38 ruined it all and have to start from the beginning :D
Yes, I am an evil man ;)

It's hard to see, but it's the boy with the glasses who bumps his leg into the middle leg of the table, not much, but enough :D

I wanted to see the boys' reaction in the end, more satisfaction to see kids happiness than a grown-up teacher ;)
Picture of MakeTnotWar38 achievements

+4 2. MakeTnotWar commented 10 years ago

That's time usefull spent there. The world sure is a better place now.
Picture of ughlah41 achievements

+1 3. ughlah commented 10 years ago

Gotta try that. Doesn't look that hard and a pretty easy way to enter the guinness book.
Picture of torbengb43 achievements

+1 4. torbengb commented 10 years ago

I would build a domino-block-placing machine out of Lego, powered by its own wheels, neatly placing those damn blocks in its wake.

Time saved setting up domino blocks with the machine: 2 hours.

Time spent building the machine: 2 weeks :x
Picture of dvandok29 achievements

0 5. dvandok commented 10 years ago

This is boring until they scale down to about 100 nanometers. Starting them off is done with a laser pointer, and setting them up could probably be done with the smart application of static electricity.