Library

Video Player is loading.
 
Current Time 0:00
Duration 11:17
Loaded: 0%
 
x1.00


Back

Games & Quizzes

Training Mode - Typing
Fill the gaps to the Lyric - Best method
Training Mode - Picking
Pick the correct word to fill in the gap
Fill In The Blank
Find the missing words in a sentence Requires 5 vocabulary annotations
Vocabulary Match
Match the words to the definitions Requires 10 vocabulary annotations

You may need to watch a part of the video to unlock quizzes

Don't forget to Sign In to save your points

Challenge Accomplished

PERFECT HITS +NaN
HITS +NaN
LONGEST STREAK +NaN
TOTAL +
- //

We couldn't find definitions for the word you were looking for.
Or maybe the current language is not supported

  • 00:03


  • 00:04

    Theory welcome Internet hello game!

  • 00:07

    Hello to Internet welcome Theory Game!

  • 00:10

    Hello Internet Game to Welcome Theory.

  • 00:14

    Hello internet, welcome to Game Theory!

  • 00:17

    where we've finally finished out long Easter Egg hunt.

  • 00:20

    (Silence with Game Theory title in Petscop style and of course, welcome to game theory :3)

  • 00:28

    It's been about four months since we last covered the horror let's play: Petscop,

  • 00:33

    and it's been even longer since we got ourselves a new episode, that was until this past Easter when we got not one

  • 00:38

    not two, but five new uploads.

  • 00:41

    Nearly a quarter of this entire series, all in one day.

  • 00:46

    Let me impress upon you how unusual that is.

  • 00:48

    Petscop is a creepypasta in progress, a giant murder mystery unfolding via a youtube let's play

  • 00:55

    of a fictional PlayStation game, that may or may not be haunted by the souls of the dead

  • 01:01

    and it's been telling that story very, very slowly uploading like one video every four months

  • 01:09

    so to suddenly get five in a single day is unusual to say the least

  • 01:14

    Needless to say, that's a whole lot to unpack in a single episode.

  • 01:17

    Even if a solid minute-and-a-half of those uploads is dedicated to just this.

  • 01:25

    Yup. Just that. It's slightly closer and bigger.

  • 01:29

    A MINUTE AND A HALF!

  • 01:30

    Here people say that I pat out my run times.

  • 01:33

    But that's not all.

  • 01:34

    It's also, at least in this theorist's opinion,

  • 01:37

    The end of the series.

  • 01:38

    I mean, let's look at the facts here.

  • 01:40

    Five episodes, all on one day, Episode 21, "The Finale".

  • 01:44

    Airing on Easter, which is also the 21st of April,

  • 01:47

    And the channel description adding a final line about:

  • 01:50

    "Our long Easter egg hunt" being over.

  • 01:53

    Plus, you got four episodes filled with

  • 01:55

    a LOT of concrete world-building.

  • 01:57

    Which just seems to be like the creators

  • 01:59

    trying to tie up loose ends answer any remaining questions.

  • 02:01

    It's all just *too* perfect.

  • 02:03

    20 episodes out the door and then you got

  • 02:05

    episode 21, which is just a climactic final-dance break.

  • 02:08

    (Dancing in LOL style)

  • 02:10

    Well... as climactic as you can get

  • 02:12

    when your avatar is a sea sick butt.

  • 02:14

    To me, if you forgive me borrow a phrase from

  • 02:17

    another franchise you might be familiar with,

  • 02:19

    The pieces are in place for us to solve this thing, but

  • 02:21

    But, uh, damn if there aren't a LOT of pieces.

  • 02:25

    I mean, in the aftermath of these uploads I re-watched

  • 02:28

    the entire series again, both forwards and backwards.

  • 02:31

    (Yes, backwards, and honestly, it's more helpful backwards)

  • 02:34

    And have over 25 pages of notes!

  • 02:37

    And I'm not the only one here, either

  • 02:39

    On the Petscop Reddit, there's a discovery document for beginners

  • 02:42

    that is over 100 pages long!

  • 02:46

    And that doc doesn't even include the latest 5 uploads.

  • 02:48

    EAT YOUR HEART OUT SCOTT CAWTHON!

  • 02:50

    Heck! Even Marvel doesn't have lore this elaborate.

  • 02:53

    But here's the thing: To my knowledge,

  • 02:55

    No one has talked about what I've uncovered today.

  • 02:58

    And it breaks this mystery wide open.

  • 03:01

    Sure! Petscop may have finished its long egg hunt, but that means ours is just getting started.

  • 03:06

    So, fire up those playstations and tune up your needle's piano

  • 03:11

    Because today we start our quest to put this series to rest

  • 03:14

    By answering one of its biggest overarching questions.

  • 03:17

    Is this game actually haunted?

  • 03:21

    Or is there something else going on?

  • 03:23

    The true anwer lies in these five new episodes and in deciphering the 200 separate save files that exist buried

  • 03:31

    in the game's code.

  • 03:33

    Before we begin dissecting this elaborate web of clues that the creators put into this thing,

  • 03:37

    let me remind you that Petscop IS an entirely free to watch series here on Youtube.

  • 03:42

    So if you haven't seen any of this incredibly thoughtfully constructed experience,

  • 03:47

    go ahead and click over and watch 'em.

  • 03:49

    With 21 being the last episode or, I would expect the last that we're gonna get in a LONG while,

  • 03:54

    you can now binge watch the entire season. For... lack of a better word.

  • 03:58

    It's honestly hard to summarize for someone who hasn't seen it.

  • 04:01

    I mean how would you explain the narrative of a time-jumping, multi-character, meta murder mystery

  • 04:06

    that covers everything from Darwinian learning algorithms to Ace of Base?

  • 04:09

    Well, I guess you start off with what we know and build from there.

  • 04:12

    So, let me catch you up with the essentials.

  • 04:14

    Throughout the series, we mostly follow Paul,

  • 04:16

    who found an old playstation game made by a man named Rainer.

  • 04:20

    At first, the game appears to be just a crappy version of Pokemon where you collect creatures

  • 04:24

    called pets by solving puzzles.

  • 04:26

    And.. uh.. They're pretty difficult puzzles, honestly

  • 04:29

    for this being the opening stage of this supposed game.

  • 04:32

    Things, though, take a dark turn after Paul enters a cheat code that he found attached

  • 04:36

    to the game's cover.

  • 04:37

    Which leads him to the dark and spooky Newmaker Plane.

  • 04:40

    Throughout the first 16 uploads, we learn more and more about the mysteries of Petscop.

  • 04:45

    That it's trying to tell us a story.

  • 04:47

    A story of Mike Hammond who died as a child,

  • 04:49

    a story of Care, a girl who was kidnapped and trapped in a school building for five months by her father,

  • 04:55

    and the story of Care's father, Marvin.

  • 04:57

    Who, in addition to being a kidnapper and serial abuser, also appreciates the finer things in life.

  • 05:03

    Like windmills, pianos, and well-groomed eyebrows.

  • 05:06

    He also might have most definitely have killed his childhood friend back in 1977.

  • 05:12

    But what exactly happend to these three?

  • 05:13

    And how Paul fits into it is the mystery that we've been trying to solve since my first theory on the topic.

  • 05:19

    But this series of convoluted riddles starts to break open with the help of the sound test menu.

  • 05:25

    You see, sound tests are where developers have been hiding some of their coolest and most nightmare-fueled

  • 05:29

    secrets for years. You think that the new Sonic design for the movie looks disturbing?

  • 05:33

    Ha! Then you have never seen the secret hidden in Sonic CD's sound test.

  • 05:37

    *creepy computer and bell-like music noise*

  • 05:47

    Creeped out MatPat: EuUuH!

  • 05:48

    The Japanese that you see on screen translates to "Infinite Fun"

  • 05:51

    SEGA, What were you taking?

  • 05:54

    Anyway, Rainer apparently had a similar idea when he was programming Petscop

  • 05:57

    hiding a secret backend menu through a similar sound test code.

  • 06:01

    In Petscop 17, we see how it's unlocked.

  • 06:04

    By selecting the sound effect of Care saying "Bye-bye"

  • 06:07

    Care: Bye-bye

  • 06:08

    366 times,

  • 06:10

    Care: Bye-bye bye bye bye bye bye bye bye bye bye

  • 06:12

    Followed by an "Uh-oh"

  • 06:13

    Care: Uh-oh

  • 06:14

    We get access to all sorts of new information about this game.

  • 06:19

    First, character design histories where we spend A LOT of quality time with that house.

  • 06:24

    NINETY WHOLE SECONDS OF HOUSE!

  • 06:27

    But it's not all waste of time. We also learn that butt-face here has a name -- Guardian

  • 06:31

    and that the big bird Toneth started his design in the game without his signature broken leg.

  • 06:37

    Very interesting. Second is the all recording sub menu.

  • 06:40

    Which allows us to see the 200+ recordings that have been made within the game Petscop.

  • 06:45

    Where we gonna come back to that one at a minute,

  • 06:47

    coz you have imagined, there's a lot going there.

  • 06:49

    For now, let's start with where the video starts explore 'Room Impulse'

  • 06:53


  • 06:55


  • 06:57


  • 06:59


  • 07:01


  • 07:03


  • 07:05


  • 07:07


  • 07:09


  • 07:11


  • 07:13


  • 07:15


  • 07:17


  • 07:19


  • 07:21


  • 07:23


  • 07:25


  • 07:27


  • 07:29


  • 07:31


  • 07:33


  • 07:35


  • 07:37


  • 07:39


  • 07:41


  • 07:43


  • 07:45


  • 07:47


  • 07:49


  • 07:51


  • 07:53


  • 07:55


  • 07:57


  • 07:59


  • 08:01


  • 08:03


  • 08:05


  • 08:07


  • 08:09


  • 08:11


  • 08:13


  • 08:15


  • 08:17


  • 08:19


  • 08:21


  • 08:23


  • 08:25


  • 08:27


  • 08:29


  • 08:31


  • 08:33


  • 08:35


  • 08:37


  • 08:39


  • 08:41


  • 08:43


  • 08:45


  • 08:47


  • 08:49


  • 08:51


  • 08:53


  • 08:55


  • 08:57


  • 08:59


All

The example sentences of HISTORIES in videos (15 in total of 56)

first proper noun, singular , character noun, singular or mass design noun, singular or mass histories noun, plural where wh-adverb we personal pronoun spend verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner lot proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction quality noun, singular or mass time noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction that determiner house noun, singular or mass .
diverse adjective and coordinating conjunction have verb, non-3rd person singular present their possessive pronoun very adverb own verb, base form histories noun, plural but coordinating conjunction there existential there 's verb, 3rd person singular present one cardinal number thing noun, singular or mass which wh-determiner bonds noun, plural them personal pronoun together adverb .
it personal pronoun s proper noun, singular often adverb a determiner complex adjective layering noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction multiple adjective histories noun, plural or coordinating conjunction a determiner hybrid noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction numerous adjective contextual adjective counterpoints noun, plural .
days noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction eldarion proper noun, singular , son noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction aragorn proper noun, singular elessar proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction whom wh-pronoun the determiner histories noun, plural have verb, non-3rd person singular present much adjective to to tell verb, base form .
because preposition or subordinating conjunction satan proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present often adverb conflated verb, past participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction lucifer proper noun, singular , there existential there 's verb, 3rd person singular present some determiner overlap noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun histories noun, plural - satan proper noun, singular
we personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present planning verb, gerund or present participle more adjective, comparative videos noun, plural on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner japanese proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction mongol proper noun, singular histories noun, plural , so adverb make verb, base form sure adjective you personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present
unfortunately adverb , their possessive pronoun histories noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present sparse noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction best adjective, superlative and coordinating conjunction they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present difficult adjective to to place verb, base form within preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner timeline noun, singular or mass .
he personal pronoun also adverb read verb, non-3rd person singular present biographies noun, plural and coordinating conjunction books noun, plural on preposition or subordinating conjunction histories noun, plural proper noun, singular english proper noun, singular history noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction particular adjective proper noun, singular as preposition or subordinating conjunction he personal pronoun
she personal pronoun had verb, past tense read verb, past participle several adjective nice adjective little adjective histories noun, plural about preposition or subordinating conjunction children noun, plural who wh-pronoun had verb, past tense got verb, past participle burnt noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction eaten verb, past participle
they personal pronoun keep verb, non-3rd person singular present our possessive pronoun histories noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction mind noun, singular or mass , they personal pronoun might modal refer verb, base form back adverb to to something noun, singular or mass we personal pronoun said verb, past tense before preposition or subordinating conjunction
he personal pronoun surveyed verb, past tense thousands noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction men noun, plural and coordinating conjunction women noun, plural about preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun sexual adjective habits noun, plural and coordinating conjunction histories noun, plural , and coordinating conjunction found verb, past tense
we personal pronoun share verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner common adjective ancestor noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction genetic adjective studies noun, plural say verb, non-3rd person singular present chimp noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction human adjective histories noun, plural split verb, non-3rd person singular present around preposition or subordinating conjunction
and coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun has verb, 3rd person singular present one cardinal number of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner most adverb, superlative complex adjective histories noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction any determiner roller noun, singular or mass coaster noun, singular or mass to to date verb, base form .
and coordinating conjunction see verb, base form all predeterminer the determiner inspirations noun, plural from preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun previous adjective ships noun, plural , all predeterminer the determiner histories noun, plural and coordinating conjunction backstories proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction
history proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present full adjective of preposition or subordinating conjunction things noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction personal adjective histories noun, plural , languages noun, plural , and coordinating conjunction even adverb whole adjective technologies noun, plural and coordinating conjunction

Use "histories" in a sentence | "histories" example sentences

How to use "histories" in a sentence?

  • I have become very good at clearing histories.
    -David Levithan-
  • A Republic without parties is a complete anomaly. The histories of all popular governments show absurd is the idea of their attempting to exist without parties.
    -Franklin Pierce-
  • Because imaginary time behaves like another direction in space, histories in imaginary time can be closed surfaces, like the surface of the Earth, with no [existential] beginning or end.
    -Stephen Hawking-
  • Good brands reflect the histories of the time and the group of people that made them. They can not be copied. They can not be recycled.
    -Richard Branson-
  • The only good histories are those that have been written by the persons themselves who commanded in the affairs whereof they write.
    -Michel de Montaigne-
  • Histories are as perfect as the Historian is wise, and is gifted with an eye and a soul.
    -Thomas Carlyle-
  • Whether histories have a happy ending or not depends on when the chronicler ends the tale.
    -Linda Gordon-
  • The only good histories are those written by those who had command in the events they describe.
    -Michel de Montaigne-

Definition and meaning of HISTORIES

What does "histories mean?"

/ˈhist(ə)rē/

noun
study of past events.
other
Established patterns or records.

What are synonyms of "histories"?
Some common synonyms of "histories" are:
  • yesterday,
  • antiquity,
  • yesteryear,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.