<br>The underwater hatch in GTA V has seemingly given up all its mysteries. First, players discovered the hatch, which rests just off the east coast of the state of San Andreas. Then, they figured out that there is actually a strange tapping coming from inside the hatch. The tapping was quickly deemed a tap code and subsequently deciphered. The result? A message that reads "Hey, you never call, how'd you fancy going bowling?" That’s a reference Roman Bellic, the cousin of GTA IV protagonist Nico Bellic. In GTA IV , Roman was notorious for calling the player up on their cellphone and demanding the two spend time together. All of this has been documented in a video exploring the hatch, but it fails to answer one question: What’s in the hatch? Is it a reference to the show Lost , or does it play a greater part in a larger myst<br><br> <br>In 1933, under Franklin D. Roosevelt’s administration, a conspiracy theory was born. It was believed that all influential industrials and bankers had made an alliance to destitute the president and his administration, in order to take the full power over the economy. This would have been the birth of the ultimate form of capital<br><br> <br>GTA V is a very entertaining game, to say the least. The characters are beautiful stereotypes, the scenarios for missions are crazy, there are cars and weapons when it’s convenient, and Los Santos is very glamourous. It’s all so very cinematographic, a bit like this game is orchestrated to look like it has been made by Hollyw<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>Head out to Tongva Valley and you might be in for a bumpy ride, at least that's what some GTA V players think. One of the newer conspiracy theories to crop up around the game, the Tongva Triangle, which spreads across much of the Tongva Valley and cuts straight across the mysterious Fort Zancudo, is ground zero for some of the more… ambiguous anomalies in the game–the kinds of myths that turn even the most ardent believers into skeptics. Strange happenings in the Tongva Triangle include swamp monster sightings, oddly irate drivers, number stations broadcasting at odd hours and Slenderman himself, among others. While it's not unreasonable to assume that GTA V might include a downed UFO in the Tongva Triangle (it does), the presence of Slenderman, a semi-open world games updates sourced internet villain, in a Rockstar game is a little harder to swal<br><br> <br>I'm not one to tell people how they should or shouldn't play a game, but if you don't find yourself causing a massive traffic jam or two in Grand Theft Auto V , you're not doing it right. Rockstar was pretty generous in regards to toning down the traffic congestion that plagues the streets of real life Los Angeles in their game. However, that doesn't mean you shouldn't swerve into a roaming car or two at your leisure for the sake of pure enjoyment. Most people you ram your vehicle into (that don't die on impact) will have a few choice words for you, and may even give you the bird as their raging 'cherry on top'. Don't fret, as long as you're still in your car and don't have a firearm equipped, simply press the fire button and let them know that you can dish it out just as well as you can take<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>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>