>>15637279Oh, it's made here. Of course it is. I've never seen it in my city though, I'm guessing because we don't really have sand around, it'd be a bother to bring it all the way from another place. But, I'm confused now, do they heat up the seat or not? I thought they put the plate of sand over a stove or something and let it heat up, is that not the case? It just makes the coffee on it's own? That's really weird then, wow, but I guess it makes some sense, the few times I remember being in a beach, I remember the sand being pretty hot. But, not hot enough to make coffee with, was it? And it doesn't really make sense that it'd stay that way after putting it on a plate and everything, but, whatever, okay, I don't know. That's just weird to me. Anyway, I still don't really get the appeal, though. The texture of it at the end does look different compared to the couple cups of coffee I've had, but I don't think the taste would be any better even if that's the case, it's still just coffee, and I can't even take a sip of coffee without getting disgusted, so, yeah. Maybe it'd be goo dfor a cofee person, I don't know. Oh, also that cup would end up having bits of stuff at the end, you know like when you make homemade fruit juice, and it has bits inside, it'd be like that, and I absolutely can't stand that, it's insanely gross to me. And the overall look of it too, like it's not as fluid as it can be, if I put that right. It just doesn't sit well with me. Anyway, whatever, I guess for a coffee person, who likes having bits and particles in their cups for some reason, it'd be good to have? I really don't approve of that, though. I mean, at the end of the video, there's a perfectly good cup of tea sitting right behind the coffee, just drink that, it's infinitely better, in every way, shape and form, plus you don't need to wait 3 minutes like they did in that video for it to be made, so, yeah. I'm gonna go have some of it right now, actually, our tea is really good.