Game Theory: Gaming's Biggest Mystery SOLVED! | Half Life G MAN Theory

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Love the video, but I have to say you can't use who the voice actors are as potential evidence of something. Voice actors often do more than one character. That's just an industry norm.

Heck in the Simpsons some of them do like 10 characters...

👍︎︎ 12 👤︎︎ u/arewar 📅︎︎ Aug 15 2017 🗫︎ replies

Another thing is that the G-man is seen throughout HL1 in Black Mesa, but never appears in Xen until after the Nihilanth is defeated.

One little thing I noticed is his appearance to Barney in Blue Shift. In HL1 and Opposing Force the G-man can be seen regularly- and rightfully so, he both aids and hinders the main characters- and in Decay he appears only once; in the vicinity of the crystal he supplied to start the events of the games. His appearance in Blue Shift however is in a different, far-away area of the facility right before things start happening. Why would he make his appearance known to someone whom he has no inclination of interacting further with?

👍︎︎ 10 👤︎︎ u/TripleTwo 📅︎︎ Aug 15 2017 🗫︎ replies

I find any theory on the g-man very interesting as we might never get the ending to this franchise. The best thing we can do is speculate.

👍︎︎ 8 👤︎︎ u/TheGeeNee 📅︎︎ Aug 15 2017 🗫︎ replies

Wait you forgot a very big part. !!!!

That of The Borealis (Aperture Science) That was at the end Half life 2 episode 2.

Maybe the combain came to earth because Aperture laboratories discoverd how to make portal guns ?

(my H2 Theory)

The can't get in Aperture laboratories because of glados is protecting the underground labs ??

So that explaning the moving of lots of weapons and other equipment before the explosion of there HQ. at the end of H2e2.

And The G-man has woke you op at this time because of all the chaos of moving the equipment and the rise of the rebellion.

The Rebellion start maybe because they know that the combine needs somthing from Aperture, lots of scientist worked for Aperture before black mesa? (that last part could be wrong ) and the security is weakend of the move so a perfect opportunity! for a rebellion. At the same time you can try to save the captive Nihilanth (So doing your job for the G-man).

And thats my Theory a weak Theory but thanx for reading.

Ps. sorry for my writing I have dyslexia and english is not my native language, so yha.

👍︎︎ 5 👤︎︎ u/mak868 📅︎︎ Aug 15 2017 🗫︎ replies

The bit right after the theme song...geez. No wonder MatPat relies on FNAF and Mario so much if they're the only fandoms he can reliably make a video about without offending.

Poor MatPat. He's far from perfect, but some of his videos are really interesting, and even the ones that aren't (or are interesting but flawed) get far, far more hate than they deserve. I don't get why.

Is it just popularity, or is there something more? Something about the delivery and how it whiplashes from casual to melodramatic? Typical nerdy outrage at challenging any preconception about a work? A common, deep-set distaste for logically analyzing fiction? I sure hope it's not those last two—just about the only thing I like more than analyzing fiction is challenging my preconceptions.

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/GreatWyrmGold 📅︎︎ Aug 16 2017 🗫︎ replies

Wow I love the intro. :D

If /u/MatPatGT was assimilated into the Borg, he'd be like this. And it's pretty creepy!

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/LimPehKaLiKong 📅︎︎ Aug 16 2017 🗫︎ replies

the hate he gets is just so unreal to me. its a theory, right or wrong. of course you cant please everyone but my god, some people really need to chill.

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Aug 17 2017 🗫︎ replies

He didn't solve anything One of the worst episodes I have watched His theory is very unrealistic

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/junjor01 📅︎︎ Aug 15 2017 🗫︎ replies

This is one of his weaker theories imo

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/HereForTOMT 📅︎︎ Aug 16 2017 🗫︎ replies
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(whoosh) (MattPat's creepy voice) Rise and shine, loyal theorists. Rise and . . . shine. Not that I wish to imply you have been sleeping on the job, watching your videos on fidget spinners and Jake Paul. Well, let's just say your hour has come . . . again, to wake up, theorists. Wake up and smell the ashes. (MattPat's regular cheerful voice) Hello, Internet! Welcome to Game Theory, the show where I inadvertently piss off fandoms of games that I am genuinely a fan of, slowly alienating me as a gamer franchise by franchise-- all except Mario games for some reason. Apparently, I can say whatever I want about him! Anyway, the sector of the Internet I am hoping not to enrage today is the "Half-Life" community as I try to solve what may be one of the longest standing mysteries in all of gaming-- Who is the G-Man? "I do apologize for what must seem to you an arbitrary imposition. I trust it will all make sense to you in the course of . . . well, I'm really not at liberty to say." I am, though, G-Man! It's about fifteen minutes, about fifteen minutes (and twelve seconds). Now, since people born on the day the original "Half-Life" came out turned eighteen last year, it's likely that many of you have only been exposed to this masterpiece of a franchise through "Half-Life 3 Confirmed" memes. So let me quickly catch you up on the series and why this guy is so endlessly fascinating and has kept gamers scratching their heads for decades. "Half-Life" puts you into the shoes of Gordon Freeman, MIT grad with THE most absurd doctoral thesis title imaginable. (deep breath) Yes! First time! One and done, baby! Yeah, for a guy who doesn't talk for the entirety of the series, he's awfully wordy. Anyway, Gordon starts a new job at the Black Mesa research facility and experiences THE worst first day ever when the team accidentally opens up a gateway that lets in hoards of murderous aliens. Looks like somebody's got a bad case of the Mondays! You, as Gordon, have to go to the aliens' dimension, known as Xen, in order to shut down whatever's keeping these portals open. After crowbarring your way through hundreds of enemies and killing off a LITERAL testicle monster, you eventually find yourself face to face with the big bad--Xen's leader, the Nihilanth, a giant, three-armed, floating fetus monster that's holding open the portal. You do what you were trained to do in graduate school when first encountering intelligent extra-terrestrial life-- SHOOT IT TILL IT DIES! As the battle wraps up, you black out, but when you come to, you're face to face with this guy. We never hear his name spoken aloud, but resourceful gamers found him referenced as "the G-Man" in the game's code, a name later confirmed by Valve. He explains that he and his mysterious employers are now in control of Xen, and he commends you with everything that you've done. "The border world, Xen, is in our control for the time being, thanks to you. Quite a nasty piece of work you managed over there. I am impressed." The game ends with him offering you a new job, working for him and his employers. Accept the offer, and he puts you into stasis until he needs you again. "That's why I'm here, Mr. Freeman. I have recommended your services to my . . . employers, (deep breath) and they have authorized me to offer you a job." Refuse, and he teleports you to a room filled of aliens from Xen to be beaten to death, but here's the craziest thing-- even though this is the first time that he talks to you in the game, if you've been paying attention, he's been watching you silently from the corners the whole time, from out-of-reach locations, and it was HERE that the mystery of the G-Man was born. Gamers had years, YEARS, to contemplate who this character was, and with "Half-Life 2" featured him playing an even bigger role, the questions just began to mount. Who are his employers? How can you explain his odd voice and weird powers? Why is his character model so much uglier than everybody else's? And today, after looking at all the evidence, ALL the expansion packs, ALL the hidden lore, the conclusion I've reached will blow your minds. Are you ready for this? After decades of waiting, I've discovered that the G-Man is Sans! Wait, wait, wait! Don't hit that "Dislike" button! Obviously, I'm just kidding, obviously. The reason I bring it up, other than to poke fun at that theory, is that it's worth noting that the G-Man possesses Sans-like powers. He seems to have the ability to teleport since he can disappear without notice. You'll also often see him moving in one direction, but then he'll appear ahead of you somehow. He has telekinetic powers, and we can even see during the end of "Half-Life 2" that he can stop time. "Time, Dr. Freeman? Is it really that time again?" He appears and disappears across miles in seconds, and between the first game and the second places Gordon Freeman in stasis outside of time. The G-Man plays with the laws of space and time like a fiddle, and this is important since it gives us our first clue as to who this guy actually is. "Half-Life 2" opens twenty years after the events of "Half-Life 1" with a creepy monologue from the G-Man to Gordon implying that it's time for you to make good on your employment. In the twenty years since you've been put in stasis, a whole 'nother alien civilization has invaded Earth, this time known as the Combine. The Combine is hard core! According to the in-game lore, they ground every military on Earth to dust (boom!) in just seven hours, and we come to learn that the Nihilanth and his warriors from "Half-Life 1" have been kicked out of their home planet and were hiding on Xen from these guys. So, considering that the G-Man explicitly states that he and his employers are in control of Xen at the end of "Half-Life 1," that must mean that he's a representative of the Combine then. Right? No! The Combine is awesome and a military force that can't be reckoned with, but they're bad at one thing--teleportation. Well, teleportation and apparently stopping a science nerd carrying a crowbar, but whatever. It's a major plot point in "Half-Life 2" that the Combine, while powerful, can't teleport within a dimension. (beeping) Sure, they can teleport BETWEEN dimensions, but once they're in a local space, they have to get around using normal means: trains, cars, jets, and spaceships. But as we've seen, the G-Man has no problems Dr. Who-ing it up. Additionally in "Half-Life 2," any NPCs that are allied to the rebellion against the Combine will not attack the G-Man, (ding!) while those who are pro-Combine will (buzz!). So the G-Man is the enemy of the Combine, right? Well, it's not so clear-cut. In the DLC--sorry, I mean "Expansion Pack," DLC didn't exist back then-- In the Expansion Pack, "Half-Life Opposing Force," the G-Man is seen rearming a nuclear bomb that eventually destroys Black Mesa, the same nuclear bomb that your character had just deactivated, and if that wasn't strange enough, it's this explosion that catches the attention ("Metal Gear" alert sound) of the Combine in the first place who then target Earth for their next invasion. So the G-Man is an enemy of the Combine who just so happens to be the person who calls them to Earth in the first place. And this points to another key feature of this character-- his role as chess-master. The G-Man is about making small moves that have disastrous long-term effects. We learn in "Half-Life 2: Episode 2" that he gave the crystal to Black Mesa which caused all the events in the first game to happen. He drops a nuke at the exact moment that causes a hostile alien invasion Instead of waking Gordon Freeman up when the Combine first attacks, he instead waits twenty years for the precise moment when Gordon's return would perfectly galvanize humanity to create a successful armed-uprising that eventually destroys the Combine's local presence. So, in total, to find the G-Man, we need to find something that can teleport, manipulate time, possesses deep knowledge of how future events fit together, and is an enemy to the Combine. And when you look at all of these traits, they perfectly describe . . . a Nihilanth, a creature that's the same species as the final boss from the first game. Yes! It's my theory that the G-Man, one of the most mysterious characters in the history of gaming is a creature related to the space-fetus from the first game. Let's run down the list. As we covered earlier, all the creatures on Xen in "Half-Life" were running in fear from the Combine after that species took over their home planet. So they all have the motivation of revenge, and since they can't beat the Combine themselves, setting up an elaborate plan where human resistance fighters will take the Combine down is a good alternate strategy. Just like the G-Man, the Nihilanth shows that he also has the power to create and manipulate local teleportation portals, as we see during the final battle against him. We also know that all creatures from Xen can manipulate time and space. The Vortigaunts, a peaceful alien species enslaved by the Nihilanth in "Half-Life 1," are shown to have the same powers as the Nihilanth species, just weaker versions of those powers: teleporting, manipulating space, even existing outside of time. In "Half-Life 2, there's an incredibly well-hidden cave that houses what's known as the Singing Vortigaunt. This guy is like Exposition-Dump Central, but one interesting thing he says is this: The word "coterminous" means "existing at the same time." So this proves that the Xen creatures are able to exist beyond the constraints of time, just like how the G-Man knows which actions to take to set in motion the Combine takeover as well as how he was able to set Gordon Freeman outside of time for twenty years. It's also worth noting that when the Vortigaunts unite their powers, they're able to stop the G-Man's plans, preventing him from contacting you and actually teleporting you away from his command at the beginning of "Half-Life 2: Episode 1." "We'll see . . . about that." This is an essential detail because the Vortigaunts have been enslaved by Nihilanths in the past, so of course they would be opposed to whatever plans the G-Man has. But perhaps the most [condemning] of all is that, like I said earlier when you refuse to work with him at the end of "Half-Life 1," the G-Man teleports you to a room filled with aliens you spent the game killing, which is the exact same thing the Nihilanth does to you throughout the final boss battle against him. Now, I'm sure some of you must be confused. How can I say that this thing, the thing that you kill at the end of the first game, is the same as the G-Man? We literally see this creature die. Well, it's easy, actually. There's canonically more than one Nihilanth. Although the game acknowledges that this Nihilanth, the final boss of "Half-Life 1," this species has been hunted to near extinction, according to a little-known interview with Marc Laidlaw, lead writer for the story of "Half-Life," there have been others. When asked whether the Vortigaunts or Nihilanth have ever been captured by the Combine prior to "Half-Life 2," Marc replied that: So we know that there are precursors to the Nihilanth species out there. But it gets deeper. Listen to this. (distorted noise) Did you hear it? "Comes another. Comes another." That's the Nihilanth talking telepathically to Gordon in the first game. Here, listen for it again. The Nihilanth, while communicating to you telepathically in "Half-Life 1" is outright saying there is another out there. "Comes another." But it keeps going. Another of his lines is, This is a clear allusion to the G-Man, but why is it significant? Because of the name of this creature's species, "Nihilanth." Everything we need to know is hidden right there in the name. "Nihil," Latin that literally means "none" or "nothing," and "anth," from the Greek "anthropo" which means "man." His name, "Nihilanth," nihil-anth, literally means "not man." In one fell swoop, we are told outright that the G-Man is Not Man. He's nihil-anth. Oh yeah! And here's the kicker, a detail so minute but it locks this whole thing together. Look at this, "Nihilanth," voiced by Michael Shapiro. "G-Man," voiced by Michael Shapiro. The G-Man is actually voiced by the same actor as the Nihilanth boss. Doesn't get much more clear cut than that. By the way, I've been joking about it this whole episode, but the Nihilanth looks like a human fetus. Is it too much to assume that one version of it or a precursor species could disguise itself as a saggy-faced human? Also, notice that the aliens from Xen tend to have this weird vestigial third arm right in the middle of their chests, the same place as where the G-Man is constantly playing with his tie. Tie or disguised arm? Alright, quit it, Matt. You're starting to dip back into Sans-is-Nes territory. Should've just stopped back at the voice actor bit. Suffice to say, "Half-Life 3" may never actually be confirmed. It's a meme that I sadly suspect will never come true, since Valve is too busy printing money with Steam and hat-based micro-transactions. This one is literally valued at $12000. Just sayin'. So with no big reveals or additional clues on the horizon, I figure this might be the closest we actually get to a final answer. And if you're a "Half-Life" community member and this theory got you upset, hey, remember that at least I care about trying to solve this bit of lore as opposed to the people who made the game and will keep you hanging for eternity, or not have an answer at all. I mean, take it from Marc Laidlaw, again, the lead writer I mentioned earlier, who has gone on record himself to say, that "I don't believe in canon." So keep that in mind. And with that, I think it's time. "Is it really that time again? It seems as if you've only just arrived." Yep, G-Man, it's time--time to remind everyone that it's all just a theory, a Game Theory! Thanks for watching. "(gasp) Rather than offer you the illusion of free choice, I will take the liberty of choosing for you." Subscribe. Listen to the G-Man. He would smash that subscribe button for you if it wasn't for his tiny, weird, vestigial, baby arms. So do him a solid, punch that subscribe button in the next five seconds, and then comment below what other classic game franchise you want me to cover. 5 . . . 4 . . . 3 . . . "In the meantime, this is where I get off." (footsteps)
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Channel: The Game Theorists
Views: 5,928,245
Rating: 4.7106128 out of 5
Keywords: half life, half life 2, g man, half life 1, half life 3, half-life, half-life 2, half life speedrun, half life 2 speedrun, half life 2 gameplay, half life 2 soundtrack, half-life 3, gman, who is the g man, game theory, matpat, game theory half life, game theorists, the game theorists, half life matpat, mystery, half life secret
Id: BgYzOLQ8sU8
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 15min 13sec (913 seconds)
Published: Tue Aug 15 2017
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