<br>Grand Theft Auto has easily become one of the most beloved games in the gaming open World games vehicles, especially since the latest installment. With its recent updates and online interactive gaming capabilities, gamers have been even more invested in the series than they ever have been before. As with many other games, players devote tons of precious hours attempting to uncover many of the hidden easter eggs and other in-game secrets... and believe me when I say that there are a lot of them in this series. This is as true of Grand Theft Auto V as it is of any of the other games in the ser<br><br> <br>Jetpacks are pretty significant in the GTA V conspiracy theory community. The mythical propulsion device is seen as symbol of freedom and liberation from the tyranny of an expansive, interconnected enigma that refuses to be solved. Jetpack hunters aren't just running on fumes, though. There's genuine reasons to think that the jetpack exists in the game, or that it was at least going to be added at some point . Code referencing a jetpack has been found, after all. For the longest time, this revelation had mystery hunters scouring Los Santos for clues about the device's whereabouts. One of the most pervasive theories focused on Fort Zancudo, the heavily guarded military base on the Northwest coast of the map. The fort bears a resemblance to Area 69 from San Andreas , which actually did hold a jetpack. Searches of Zancudo have yielded nothing… <br><br> <br>Michael is obviously a favorite character of many GTA V fans. In the final mission, players must choose whether or not to kill Michael (although he dies either way). After Michael's death when players return to his mansion, they discover that his family has moved out and if they stand in the backyard, the painting of his wife Amanda watches you. Her eyes follow your every move. But this isn't where it stops... upon entering the house (which is otherwise locked) you'll discover that the mirror in the bathroom will flicker until completely turning to black. Some players have even got videos of what is believed to be an orb in the bathroom. The creepy painting alone would have kept me out of the house, but check it out for yourself if you're feeling skepti<br><br> <br>Grand Theft Auto has always been about mayhem. You can execute mass murderings on pedestrians, or blow up cars without consequence (well, the cops will come after you, but you can blow them up as well). But with Grand Theft Auto V 's take on three different main characters with their own respective safehouses, who's to stop you from taking out your frustrations on one of your buddies? If you choose to drop some lead or leave some explosives on one of the game's main safehouse, whoever's house it may be will shortly leave you an angry text message, and asking you "nicely" to stop it. If you REALLY want to continue your current destruction, nothing's going to stop you, but be careful if you're trashing Michael's home. If you harm any of his family members, you'll be forced to pay their medical bills shortly afterwa<br><br> <br>This conspiracy theory got so out of control that it even made the front page of various video game news sites . Basically, the theory asks one single, terrifying question: What if everyone was out to get you? This particular legend has to do with GTA Online , which is divorced from the Mount Chiliad Mystery and most other phenomena in the game. Basically, after an update that added bikers, GTA Online players started to notice that they were being aggressively targeted by NPC drivers. That aggression started to ramp up over time, with cars straight-up plowing into player vehicles for seemingly no reason. That’s a big deal. Vehicular accidents in online mode can rack up an impressive bill. Maybe Rockstar is trying to squeeze more money out of an already inflated economy and these NPCs are trying to take out those who got too close to the tr<br><br> <br>Goatman is actually a smaller piece in a much larger conspiracy theory that borrows from actual mythology to explain the many supernatural deities supposedly roaming Los Santos. The theory, from Reddit user alejcho , starts with a diagram that looks eerily familiar to an in-game poster that is the focal point in the overarching Mount Chiliad Mystery. The diagram actually has links to Cahuilla Native American mythology, which has its own godly pantheon of sorts. According to the conspiracy hunters, that pantheon lines up neatly with certain creatures and NPCs found in GTA V , not least of which being Goatman, a half-man, half-goat hybrid long rumored to secretly plague the Grand Theft Auto universe, who has been equated to Taqwus, a trickster god who comes out at night and causes mischief. The theory even posits that Ursula, the handicapped lighthouse operator, was victim to a god's obsess<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>