Jean-Baptiste Kempf created VLC media player, rejected millions in funding to keep it open-source and ad-free, and gave humanity a media player that literally plays everything. A true legend. But then he went and blessed us with the ability to crank the volume to 200%. You know, because sometimes 100% just isn't enough when you're trying to hear dialogue in a Christopher Nolan film or compensate for your laptop's pathetic speakers. The beauty is that VLC doesn't judge you. It doesn't pop up a warning like "Hey buddy, maybe turn it down?" Nope. It just says "You want 200%? Here's 200%. Your eardrums, your problem." That's the kind of trust-based relationship we need more of in software development. Also, respect to the title's MPC-HC shoutout—because let's be real, the media player wars are the most wholesome tech debate where everyone's just happy their codec works.