<br>In Los Santos, during the 90s, eight male joggers were attacked by a serial offender. His name was Merle Abraham, A.K.A. the Infinity Killer. The victims’ bodies were never found by the police, but you can actually find them yourself (because you’re more intelligent than the Los Santos police, let’s be hone<br><br> <br>As it turns out, Los Santos has its own serial killer, Merle Abrahams, and amateur sleuths have parsed his clues to find the spot where he stashed his victims' bodies. The mystery starts at the killer's house in Sandy Shores, Blaine County. Inside the burnt down house is a message that reads "there will be 8," a reference to the number of people Merle supposedly killed. Other clues are scattered across the map–a morose poem scrawled on a rock, a creepy etching in a prison cell, a newspaper clipping in an abandoned shack–all leading to the location of the bodies just off the coast of Paleto Bay. Hats off to Rockstar for including an actual conspiracy in GTA V that that players can work to unra<br><br> <br>Every time Rockstar launches a new Grand Theft Auto game, the amount of discoveries and secrets that players find continue to grow even years after release. When Grand Theft Auto V released four years ago in 2013, there were secrets and easter eggs hidden throughout San Andreas' entire landscape. Whether you noticed the bit of Lester's brief mention of GTA IV's Niko Bellic or found the Red Dead book written by J. Marston in the De Santa house, Rockstar, among most developers nowadays, like to find ways to pay homage to the history of their company and open world Games secrets in gene<br><br> <br>How often does the average person use Facebook and Twitter on a daily basis? How often do you use social media? Well it turns out in the universe of Grand Theft Auto V, the answers in both real life and the game are exactly the same. All of the notable characters (playable and non playable) have their own respective Lifeinvader pages, fit with their occupations, relationship status, and online friends space. If you treat the game's social media parody like most people do in real life (you check it frequently), you'll notice your friend's Lifeinvader pages are all updated. These changes include messaging other characters in the game depending on the outcome of certain missions, or changing their current status. Turns out, everyone in Grand Theft Auto V is just like all of us. Difference is, they're all a bunch of crimin<br><br> <br>Yooka-Laylee is a spiritual successor to the Nintendo 64 classic Banjo-Kazooie . The smash-hit Kickstarter campaign hit its funding goal in less than an hour and brought in over a million dollars faster than any video game campaign before it. The game stars a green chameleon named Yooka and a purple bat named Laylee who venture off exploring colourful 3D environments collecting dozens and dozens of items along the way. The game is being developed by ex-Rareware developers, with music being composed by the legendary Grant Kirkhope and David Wise (responsible for most your favourite tracks from Banjo-Kazooie and Donkey Kong Country ). Yooka-Laylee is launching simultaneously for almost every major console under the sun, showing a confidence rarely seen from indie crowdfunded proje<br><br> <br>One of the most elaborate GTA V conspiracy theories states that Michael De Santa, one of the game's three playable characters, was actually dead the whole time. Stay with me here. The theory was first put forth by Reddit user Jetpack_Jones and it all begins with a quote from the first Tract of Epsilon, the in-game cult, so you know it's gonna be good. Heavily summarized, the theory posits that a series of inconsistencies in the game hints that game does not take place in 2013… or any concrete time at all. Incorrect concert dates, references to the most recent recession and some license plates have led mystery hunters to believe that the game actually takes place in roughly 2008, but that the whole game is actually a dream of Michael's. The purpose of the dream? Perhaps to accept that he's been dead the whole t<br><br> <br>Things are just getting started. We’re only a few short months into 2017, and we’ve already had an influx of big AAA games like Resident Evil 7 and quiet indie ones like Night in the Woods . Nintendo just released a brand new system and, by the end of the year, Microsoft will have released a new Xbox of their own. We’re still in the months away from E3 and there’s already more than a game a month we’re excited to get our hands on. It’s beyond excit<br><br> <br>There is a longstanding myth in GTA V about the mysterious Goatman. Apparently, this is based off of real-life "sightings" existing throughout the U.S., but what makes it even creepier is the fact that the bridge is based off of one in real life, in Maryland. In the game, if you visit Mount Chiliad during the day you can find a fire burning in a small cave, with occult symbols and a goat’s skull on the ground. If players investigate the mountain at night, they'll be able to hear a strange buzzing noise. Stand beneath the bridge (leading toward Cape Catfish) at night, and you may catch the sounds of the Goatman walking across it. Very few gamers have ever caught it on film, which is why it remains an unconfirmed myth, but the mysterious noises and occult shrine is undenia<br>