On May 8, 2020, Skeppy officially changed the Trio channel to SkeppysLab, another channel where he plays Minecraft. Regardless, I love Bad & A6D so much :) Don’t feel too bad we will probably still make videos together, and we’ve really only posted twice on The Trio channel." Skeppy changes the Trio to SkeppysLab He later finished the discussion in a final tweet by saying "Of course there were other reasons too, but we don’t really need to get into it. It was really draining for me, and that’s something I don’t really want to be a part of." He later explained in another tweet that BadBoyHalo agreed with the idea to disband The Trio, however, he didn't get a hold of A6D about the situation yet. įollowed by "There were so many times where I distanced myself from drama, but always found myself affiliated with it because of The Trio. On February 1, 2020, Skeppy officially announced that he temporarily left The Trio by tweeting on his second twitter account, "This isn’t an easy post for me to make, however, I’ve decided to step back from The Trio". In their first Q&A live stream (aired: October 12, 2019), the Trio talks about how they all want their channel to mainly have live streams of the three and the occasional podcasts. It is also one of the times where BadBoyHalo reveals his face to the audience. The Trio Podcast (BADBOYHALO FACE REVEAL) (aired: October 5, 2019) is the Trio’s first podcast where Skeppy, a6d, and BadBoyHalo mainly talk about how they met and about the current state of YouTube and competition in the platform. The Trio is also commonly the name of the group the three YouTubers were in. The channel originally had the name Muffin Squad, a name BadBoyHalo had come up with, before being changed to the current name. The Trio was originally created on June 12, 2019. 1.3 Skeppy changes the Trio to SkeppysLab. Was there a better way to handle this reveal? To answer that question, we have to go back to the other major sci-fi show about a guy who hides his face behind a helmet. In just one episode, Halo on Paramount+ takes that experience away from us. Sure, various Halo books and other supplemental materials showed us what lurked behind the mask, but it’s possible to play through the entire mainline video game franchise and never have to find out what Masterchief actually looks like. That’s why the games never broke that rule even as the plot became increasingly more complicated. Gamers could project themselves onto Masterchief’s unseen face. Cutting out things like plot, three-dimensional characters, and even a face for their protagonist was a necessary evil.īut in the long term, it turned out to be a stroke of brilliance. When the first Halo game was in development, its creators were under immense pressure to make an Xbox game for a console that didn’t even exist. This was a choice made mostly by necessity. On the other hand, this totally misses the point of Masterchief in the first place.įrom the very beginning, Masterchief’s face has been shrouded in mystery. On the one hand, it kind of makes sense that the hero of Halo just looks like the random guy you see at the gym. Nothing against Pablo Schreiber (who, in case you were wondering, is indeed related to Liev Schreiber, his paternal half-brother) but never in a million years is this what I imagined Masterchief looks like.
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