<br>The universe in GTA V is rich. There’s a lot more than what meets the eyes, and if you decide to dig into it a little bit, you’ll be surprised by what you may find. When developing the game, Rockstar decided they would give this opus a sense of reality by adding quite a few mysteries that bother the humanity every <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><br> <br>In GTA V , when you complete the game at 100%, you need to keep your camera (or eyes) on the sky because you’ll start seeing UFOs! Yes, there are quite a lot of flying saucers that can be seen, and even accessed by the player, which is totally rad. The only downside of this: it’s impossible to drive them. Can you imagine how cool it would have been to cause chaos in the city aboard a flying saucer? I sure <br><br> <br>There are several mysterious writings that players can find on the walls near the movie theater and other areas of GTA V . Of course, anyone who's ever played GTA knows that Rockstar Games did not place these here for the heck of it! If you go for a swim at the beach in GTA V , you might come across the body of a woman with concrete on her feet. Many players believed that this is related to the deaths of the concrete shoe men in GTA: Vice City , but if you take a look at the scrawling on the walls around town, your intuition may tell you otherwis<br><br> <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>GTA V has three protagonists (Franklin, Michael, and Trevor) who create chaos all around the island-city of Los Santos. Together, they take mission after mission of hilarious violence and depravity. As entertaining as this game is, it sure did spark controversies because of how it depicts women, criminality, and through its use of striking content. Still, it didn’t stop the players from loving every sec<br><br> <br>The state of San Andreas is the biggest map that Rockstar has ever made for a game, ever. The size of Grand Theft Auto V 's map is larger than GTA IV, San Andreas, and Vice City's combined, which of course has led to all of these little secrets that are held within the game. Top that off with a full underwater ocean map and that adds even more layers to the land for you to explore. But if you take a look at the map, you'll notice the state of San Andreas is actually an island. So what would happen if you were to say, sail out to sea? What about by plane? Yeah, you're dead. If you sail out far enough, your boat will simply sink and you'll die from fatigue, while your plane engine will shut off if you fly too far away from land. If you really think about it, San Andreas is just a giant prison. A giant prison that gives you a little too much free<br> <br>There’s a long, storied history of conspiracy theorists and myth hunters attached to Rockstar games. Perhaps the most visible was the Bigfoot hunt from Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas , but GTA V is bigger than San Andreas , and it’s got another thing going for it, too. GTA V is also the first Grand Theft Auto games to be released in an era of ubiquitous internet access. That means that not only have theories been proposed to a massive community of internet denizens, but that those theories can be vetted and tested by players all over the world. This freedom of information has resulted in myths both big and small cropping up, from cryptids to overarching conspiracies. Here’s a few of the best (and weirde<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 weapons sourced internet villain, in a Rockstar game is a little harder to swal<br>