I love Jeff Gerstmann. He is absolutely my favorite voice in gaming journalism. He is unapologetically Jeff and thats what makes him great.
@bates223424 ай бұрын
100%
@frankstalone64953 ай бұрын
And still a threat!
@TheTwit19952 ай бұрын
Agreed
@newblakestone11 ай бұрын
Yes when I learned he died it killed me. It still kills me. Giant bomb is a huge part of my life Maybe saved my life. I worked at a sweat shop and listening to yall helps. When I learned he died it was a gut punch. I was on my lunch at work, 2 days late to hearing the podcast. I was sad bc nobody I know was a fan Anyway I still miss him.
@Chefoso89 Жыл бұрын
I can't wait for the "tell all" book Jeff is gonna write in about 10-20 years. It's gonna be nuts. Heart goes out to Jeff. LOVE RYAN DAVIS!
@CharliePhair Жыл бұрын
Absolutely cannot wait for that book!
@Virjunior01 Жыл бұрын
Aw. KZbin erased my reply. For any mods or whatever, "Fuck Ryan Davis" is a loving meme from the GB community from the 00s
@musicjail3 ай бұрын
I really hope he does it!!!!
@Kevan_VG Жыл бұрын
Jeff and Ryan were the best duo in gaming ever old Giantbomb was amazing
@PhilW08 Жыл бұрын
Never could be replicated. Vinny & Drew was also great.
@Sammo212 Жыл бұрын
That era of Giant Bomb is peak Giant Bomb to me. The live shows, the humor, the output, etc.
@Virjunior01 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely. For real, when GBeast shuttered, I dropped Giant Bomb altogether. The vibe is a bunch of weird children that love Kingdom Hearts too much since Jan and Ben, sorry.
@Sammo212 Жыл бұрын
@@Virjunior01 I stuck with GB until Brad, Vinny, and Alex left. Then it was on life support. Even though I loved Jeff the vibes with Voidburger and some others annoyed the absolute fuck out of me. Jeff leaving sealed the deal of GB being a dead brand no matter who still likes it.
@Astrojammer Жыл бұрын
Those first 3 or so years were just something else.
@siphillis Жыл бұрын
This re-contextualizes a lot of Giant Bomb's history. I was under the impression that Ryan's passing nearly ended the site right as it was picking up momentum, and Jeff made previous comments that suggested they considered shuttering the whole site instead of continuing without Ryan. In reality, Ryan effectively saved the site and gave Jeff the leverage he needed to stay with the company.
@KaneRobot Жыл бұрын
It was so tempting to say "Ryan Davis died so Giant Bomb could live" but that seemed really corny to say...even if it is at least partially true.
@mmd3585 Жыл бұрын
@@KaneRobot It would have been better if GB died then. Ryan Davis and Jeff would still be buddies. They would find another route to do this, like they always did
@siphillis Жыл бұрын
@@KaneRobot Doesn't seem appropriate since Ryan obviously didn't sacrifice his life for the company. His death was just the dramatic moment needed for people to actually take stock in what Giant Bomb was. Much like a close friend discovering they have cancer, it's that helpful reminder that life is temporary and much shorter than you think.
@TheFingledorf Жыл бұрын
@@KaneRobot - well, more "tasteless" than "corny", but it sure seems like there's a lot of truth to that
@jonathanore8110 Жыл бұрын
@@KaneRobot Working at a place where it takes a coworker's death for the people in charge to realize you were doing good work and popular for it must have sucked beyond belief.
@Sammo212 Жыл бұрын
Ryan is one of the few times I've cried over the news of someone passing that I've never met. I remember driving to mow my dad's yard when I got an alert about it. Ryan's passing is STILL felt. Giant Bomb was fantastic after for MANY years (until a while after COVID hit) but nothing matches the Ryan Davis era of Giant Bomb and everything that they did. The live shows, TNT, Uprofessional Fridays, Big Live Live Shows, etc. Jeff never really laughed the same way after that, to me, even when he clicked pretty hard with Ben. Things change but I definitely miss Giant Bomb.
@INTRO173 Жыл бұрын
Ryan Davis was a real one. RIP. Thanks for sharing Jeff.
@JosephTavano Жыл бұрын
Also just want to say this was really hard for Jeff to share and really personal and I really appreciate him sharing this with us.
@jackwitty9776 Жыл бұрын
The "I live for a lot more shit now" hits a certain kind of way
@sirprintalot Жыл бұрын
man, Jeff's speech from 7:25 onwards really hit me hard as I try and figure out what I'm doing with mine. Thank you Jeff for your words.
@travismcnasty51Ай бұрын
I think my generation is largely hitting the wall, and it serves as a warning to the younger folks. People who are 28-38 need to hunker down and get serious about what life is going to be. Family, financial success, or dedication to something great that the self. Because the extended millennial adolescence from 2013-2020 was basically just a tragic, unfunny joke. I'm gonna get paid, I'm gonna buy a house, I'm gonna retire before I'm 55. That's my plan
@matthewkennedy57413 ай бұрын
Amazing that this man speaks truth to power still. He speaks of Ryan the way I still feel him in my heart. Ryan Davis spoke my name on a podcast a few weeks before he passed, and it is a lifetime highlight for me. Cathartic to see Jeff speak on this.
@TheFingledorf Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate Jeff being open about this, it was clearly difficult to talk about at points
@nickblomgren Жыл бұрын
As someone of a particular generation that used to watch both Jeff and Ryan from their Gamespot days in High School, the death of Ryan Davis really threw me for a loop. I remember learning about it, getting into my car to go get a coffee or something, and then having to pull-over to just cry a bit.
@ktmiddlestadt Жыл бұрын
Same here. I remember walking to school listening to the bomb Cast on my iPod nano. When I heard I had to go on break at work. It’s crazy how I still link about ten years later now in my 30s. Ryan was part of my youth.
@farks5138 Жыл бұрын
I can relate to this
@Astrojammer Жыл бұрын
Can relate, listened to the hotspot in school and then arrow pointing down and the bombcast, and was listening to these guys at a pretty formative time in my life. I've never been so upset by the passing of someone I don't know.
@MisfitToy4 ай бұрын
I cried more over Ryan Davis than the death of some members in my own family. He touched a lot of people and was just great at what he did.
@ajc9387 Жыл бұрын
GB was there for me in the years after I left home and moved to a new job in a new city where I knew very few people. It was lonely times, but their content during that golden era was so good that it felt like I had a close group of friends to hang out with every night. Never met the man, but I was devastated when Ryan died. I'm in a similar place as Jeff now, with a wife and a kid and another on the way. I'm happy he has his new thing going that allows him to live a more balanced life and spend time with family.
@defaultname7685 Жыл бұрын
I'm younger than Jeff (35) but watching what happened to him in Gamespot and Giant Bomb really influenced my own decision to start my own company and never be beholden to anyone. And I'm so thankful I did all those years ago, it's really paid off.
@ChubbyOddball4 ай бұрын
Jeff confirming what I always suspected: that Ryan's death made him take his life more seriously is so damn powerful. I'm so damn happy you're still here kicking ass, Jeff. And that you found the family you deserve.
@Duneadaim Жыл бұрын
Jeff sharing this info with us was such a wild ride.. super unprecedented and caught us off guard. We see these personalities we have grown up with (and love), as bigger than life a lot of times- but at the end of the day they are mortal, just like you and I.
@himself8094 ай бұрын
Coming back to this like a year and a half later. Realizing that seeing Jeff talk like this about his work might’ve given me some courage leaving a shit job back then (“Not for these people. Not for ANY people.”). Then thinking about how I started following GB folks a good 15 years ago, how much Ryan’s passing affected me in college. These folks talking about video games has had a bigger impact on me than I thought. I’ve realized it’s influenced how I approach work and how I think about how to have healthy passions.
@TheDungeonDive Жыл бұрын
Out of all of my decades on the internet, my para-social relationship with Ryan Davis is the strongest. I never met that dude in person, but I miss him like an old friend. It's very weird to me.
@davidb4935 Жыл бұрын
One of the best days of my internet life was when he liked a tweet i sent him
@katchafiah Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@wmredwine Жыл бұрын
Jeff, I've been with you since Videogamespot days. You are a hero and a champion. Thank you for talking about thus kind of personal stuff. Lots of us miss Ryan, but talking about him makes me feel so nostalgic.
@WhiskeyPieSometimes Жыл бұрын
This really got to me, in a good way. Jeff is so real here, and I have no doubt Ryan would be overjoyed knowing he's happy and focusing on the important things in addition to videogames.
@sba87107 ай бұрын
Jeff Gerstmann is still a threat. I remember when Ryan died. So tragic.
@luciger_globus Жыл бұрын
OMG I was just listening to ep 500 of the bombcast where Jeff was clearly talking around some of the stuff he is laying bare here.
@amirite4 ай бұрын
Wow thanks so much for lifting this clip. Very cathartic to listen to. Love this man and his passing comment about helping people out with his contract signing reminds me what a kind dude he is too.
@NytrikPG Жыл бұрын
Thanks for everything Jeff, really.
@Packman332 Жыл бұрын
It's wild to hear Jeff be so open toward the end of this video. Like others, I have spent countless hours watching/listening to content he's been part of. Literal years of my life. Way back to the Gamespot days, Arrow Pointing Down, beginning of GB, etc. I literally grew up listening to him, Ryan, Vinny, Brad, and all the other crew that came along the way. I wish him and everyone else the best of luck in whatever they do. And I'm glad Jeff realized there was more to life than what he was doing and decided to take action when he determined that's what he wanted. And it's crazy to see him have a family with (very soon to be 3 kids) and think back to those early days. I don't really watch too much Jeff stuff these days and never go on GB anymore since the GBeast split. My connection to the old GB days is through Nextlander right now and I feel bad I don't watch Jeff as much as I used to, but so much of his energy was feeding off other people as well and with him being solo, it just doesn't feel the same. But his wealth of knowledge and personality is second to none.
@EddieTHead22662 ай бұрын
I also been there for the damn near full ride as arrow pointing down was weeks in the rear view and there was the GIF of the crew all.colorful drawn and running. Cute image. I'm a couple years younger than Jeff so me personally jut loved that "old man gaming" perspective they had. Losing Ryan and the life events around it is heart breaking. Their forst lodqst after his death. Whoa. Never forget. I'm liking Jeff's stuff more and more. The format think of it as drive time talk show radio host. In that context the show works. The art bell of videogames.
@travismcnasty51Ай бұрын
Even nextlander is a pale imitation of what used to be.
@Packman332Ай бұрын
@@travismcnasty51 You're not wrong. I still watch quite a bit of their content, but I'm more selective. GB stuff I literally watched like everything. Even if he game didn't really interest me, I was there for the people and laughs and just nonsense that went on. All the inside jokes and the community. Twitch seems to remove a lot of that somehow. My god do I miss Unprofessional Fridays.
@GeekwithSwagg Жыл бұрын
I'll never forget being in my campus' library, studying for a test and learning about Ryan's passing while listening to an episode of the Bombcast. At first, I thought it was a weird joke, but once I found out it was real, I had to leave campus immediately because I was holding back tears. A few days later, I went to a girlfriend at the times house and started talking to her about it and just started crying. I felt so silly crying over someone I didn't even "know," but then my girlfriend reassured me that it's OK, since this person has been in my life for literal years. Anyway, thank you so much for sharing this, Jeff, and I understand completely what you mean about not wanting to fuck around anymore. I've always had immeasurable respect for you, but this put you on another level.
@GreatistheWorld Жыл бұрын
It’s cool you were willing to be vulnerable about it and it’s cool your girlfriend gave you the right feedback. It’s healthy to mourn what we’ve valued. Thanks for sharing man
@Zafarnama111 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing, Jeff. Those truly were the days. RIP Ryan
@Rocketmanrun2 ай бұрын
I come back to this video sometimes. Like everyone in the comment section I long for the glory days of GB. But life moves on. I really admire Jeff’s honesty in this. You can hear the pain in his voice though.
@ksutton1207 Жыл бұрын
Always admired Jeff. As a dad of two boys 3 and 1, I couldn’t agree more with his take on prioritizing fatherhood while they’re young. You quickly realize most things work related just don’t fucking manner.
@greywillowgaming2366 Жыл бұрын
Mad props to Jeff for being totaly real about it all. I enjoy what Giant Bomb is currently, but man, do I miss him and the older crew who are no longer there. Stay real, Jeff. We love ya.
@benvids Жыл бұрын
I still think about Ryan often. I watched this crew since the Gamespot days. Very sad.
@Arenow6 ай бұрын
Damn, that was intense. I had missed this, I don't usually endure Jeff's solo podcasts. Honestly I've been missing his rapport with others and I wish he did something with the Nextlander guys someday, but this video settles it so clear, I can only be happy for him and wish for him to enjoy life as much as he can. He deserves it so much.
@aawells07 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely miss those days back then during this era he's talking about. I used to love listening to them on the Giantbomb podcast and wouldn't miss a single episode. They had a chemistry together that couldn't be matched by anyone in the gaming space. I'd bust a gut listening to Ryan laugh at a joke or something as his laugh was contagious. Damn I can't imagine how badly it killed their spirits when he passed. I wouldn't dare miss their E3 episodes for nothing as that to me was some of their best content. I just enjoyed their community and their sense of humor. It's sad that we'll never experience that combo of people again. Ahh man thinking back on their reviews and the famous "don't shake the baby" bit lol. They're the only group of people who I actually went and purchased something from their website to support them. I bought a Giantbomb hoodie and still have to this day. One of the elbows is a little worn out from me playing games for hours back then with it on from my elbows resting on my knees while gaming lol.
@VinceLyle2161 Жыл бұрын
I re-listen to the Ryan podcasts just to hear his voice again. They're the only podcasts I can listen to. I'm turning into a historian of 2008-2013 video games. Rest in peace, Ryan.
@aawells07 Жыл бұрын
@@VinceLyle2161 Cheers!!
@KennySchafer3 ай бұрын
There was such a huge shift in the podcast after that. So many episodes where Ryan, Jeff and Vinny would just go into these wild skits and act things out. I was a janitor at the time and would always be cry laughing along with them. It helped me get through so many nights at that job. Listening to the episode after Ryan passed was so difficult. That was one of the first times I heard Vinny out of his normal happy self. I had to stop working a few points throughout that episode. That was the best thing about podcasts like the Bombcast. I felt like a small part of that group. Not many podcasts give me that feeling anymore. I could just be getting older, and at that time in my life I was more reliant on podcasts to get me through work/life, but it was just so unique.
@murrethmedia3 ай бұрын
There are certain moments in life you always remember, and finding out Ryan had passed away was one of them. I was sitting not far from my house in the rain waiting for a tow truck to come jump my shitty Suzuki Esteem because the alternator in it was fucked. I checked my phone and saw the news and it was like a kick in the stomach. As for Jeff saying "This business" about the gaming industry, it's not the gaming industry that will eat you if you let it, it's ALL big business. Corporations are soulless demons we as a society created that have done us all a lot of harm.
@WT83 Жыл бұрын
Nice clip. Do your thing Jeff.
@JosephTavano Жыл бұрын
I hope in 9 years he's able to share what went down last year.
@dancinginfernal Жыл бұрын
He's said already. They weren't letting flex in a way he wanted, and he was going to quit. When he said that to them, they fired him.
@JosephTavano Жыл бұрын
@@dancinginfernal I didn't know that. Which stream is it on?
@JosephTavano Жыл бұрын
@@dancinginfernal kind of weird they didn't let him quit. Corporate usually prefers quitting because they don't have to pay out
@dancinginfernal Жыл бұрын
@@JosephTavano Other way around. If they fire you, you lose your benefits.
@dancinginfernal Жыл бұрын
@@JosephTavano It was one of his streams back in July I think. I can't recall specifically. If you look around I'm sure you can find it. Either that or it might have been in his interview by Ben Hansen after his departure.
@dancinginfernal Жыл бұрын
Big love to the Jeff man. Keep it real. Everyone take care of yourselves.
@ChichiNaka Жыл бұрын
I'm so bummed we never got a Patreon group setup thing with at least Jeff Gerstmann and Vinny, and that he doesn't do anything with Nextlander so far. Everyone was fine but I could listen to Gerstmann and Vinny for the rest of my life they counter each other so well. Did the public ever find out what happened with Ryan? I remember at the time it was assumptions of just not having his sleep apneia whatever machine while on his honeymoon which is nightmare fuel
@CleafKnowsVLOGS_nl Жыл бұрын
We kinda grew up w Jeff, and I'm happy he is still around. I really appreciate this guy! I think we all do.
@HerrWeinachten8 ай бұрын
I had no idea GB was risking being shuttered before Ryan died. Giant Bomb was ahead of its time with the emphasis on personality driven content.
@cherrybloodflavor4 күн бұрын
I was on a road trip / vacation the week Ryan died, I didn’t have a smartphone or internet access the entire time and was just hanging out with my family and enjoying nature. I got back and the first thing I watched I got on the computer was a giant bomb video after Ryan had passed, there were flowers overflowing in the office and I checked the comments confused to see ”RIP Ryan”. I thought it was a joke. What a fucking loss, man. I never met the dude and I still miss him. Bro seemed like a one of a kind person.
@808mate Жыл бұрын
Loved the Whiskey Media days. Ryan was a legend ❤
@RandomShinigami7 Жыл бұрын
I hate to say this but it was Ryan's death that made me aware of Giant Bomb in the first place. I never heard of it before, the issues that happened at GameSpot all happened before I started paying any attention to any video game website or personalities. But I did start to get into podcasts around 2011, one of which was IGN's Podcast Unlocked. On that they took a moment to talk about Ryan and his then recent passing, to acknowledge his contributions to game journalism and such, and during that they mentioned Giant Bomb. That, in turn, was what led me to the site and the crew. I probably would have found Giant Bomb on my own eventually regardless if they talked about Ryan then or not, and Giant Bomb would very quickly become one of my favourite video game related media, but I will always feel bad that it was Ryan's death that brought me to it. I wish I had found it under better circumstances, that I had found it and enjoyed Ryan at a time before his far too early death.
@RiskyFriskyHandle Жыл бұрын
He should just do a history of the behind the scenes stuff, I’m sure there would be interest
@TheFingledorf Жыл бұрын
I do wish Jeff would appear on Nextlander occasionally, few times a year or something.
@travismcnasty51 Жыл бұрын
I think there's bad blood between Brad and Jeff.
@Ashley_Schaeffer Жыл бұрын
Yeah that won't happened... Jeff was pissed they all left, kinda blindsided him. One of the reasons he ultimately left GB...
@devrongrant2183 Жыл бұрын
@@Ashley_Schaefferwhen it happened (I remember the podcast when they announced it) it was like, “Hey - Brad, Vinny and Alex are heading out!” and we were all like, “Gee, who is the only person NOT leaving??” It was super odd. I do hope that they reconcile at some point. When they were on back in those days - “Brad, Jeff, Vinny, Ryan” - every Tuesday was MAGIC. I really really miss it - selfishly. You could hear the tension in Game of the Year stuff. Jeff’s wanting to put his opinion over all others always felt like it was crushing everyone else. But I hope they just can have some reconciliation.
@Ashley_Schaeffer Жыл бұрын
@@devrongrant2183 Agreed... I was an old time GB paid member... Before they were bought by CBSi... UPFs were the highlight of my week... Some of the best podcast/live-stream moments of the modern gaming era.... Now it feels like their brand was diluted into oblivion... Vinny, Ryan and Jeff were the dream team... Honestly I feel like the writing was on the wall when Drew left...
@devrongrant2183 Жыл бұрын
@@Ashley_Schaeffer Sigh. Now I’m depressed. UPF. What a great fun way to end the week. Damn.
@albertwesker2283 Жыл бұрын
God bless ya. Jeff your a real dude
@sean202 Жыл бұрын
Poor Jeff
@x-bigbig-x5 ай бұрын
Jeff is the realest in the game. Dude is the only voice these days in games that I trust outside of skillup
@funwithphobias Жыл бұрын
Damn, heavy stuff. Wish I could just give Jeff a big hug
@pliskinn0089 Жыл бұрын
I wasted my 20s and now in my 30s i feel in running against the clock. After the 7min it got me deep.
@APEGantz Жыл бұрын
Man. I took a picture at work of a order with the name Ryan Tazewell. I shed a tear.
@HiCZoK Жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing. This is important. gb was never the same. I always thought gb should've been independent. Even whiskey days weren't so strict as cbs
@dancinginfernal Жыл бұрын
It's hard to go fully independent though. Especially with their format.
@ndonegan1558 Жыл бұрын
Love you, Jeff. Never change. RIP RTD.
@youngzeus87 Жыл бұрын
I love(d) Ryan and Jeff. I miss Ryan and will follow Jeff in this gaming shyt until he quits for good.
@Vub.6 ай бұрын
Wow that was heavy. Much love to jeff and the giant bomb and gamespot crew. They were the gaming community i wanted when there was none on the internet. My gaming enthusiasm and love for learning about everything comes from all of them. But what Jeff says rings true in this video feom about 7:20 on. Once I had my son, i pumped the brakes hard on gaming, because this is a hobby and my son and wife are my life. Everyone please learn to have a balance.
@barberforce4 ай бұрын
It's a sad and happy thing to know that from the passing of Ryan, Jeff managed to get his life back on track and quickly get married and have kids. Death certainly puts a perspective on things x
@chillhopdrumz1862 Жыл бұрын
God damn I love Jeff so much
@blue-steel7177 Жыл бұрын
I loved the original Giant bomb/arrow pointing down. It sucked when he passed
@samur99 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Jeff
@SuperHoldenC Жыл бұрын
Thankful for the insight
@Slop_Dogg Жыл бұрын
i still miss him.
@MrStalepunch Жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the great molements, jeff
@Dr_Mel Жыл бұрын
I had a similar thing happen to my friend group. We were a large ish group of high school kids and one summer two of us died in a freak accident. It ended up bringing the group together more than they were before.
@davidb4935 Жыл бұрын
Same shit happened to my friend group, two of the group died the summer before my senior year and there was always a clear delineation between the "before" times
@OzempicRage3 ай бұрын
cannot wait for the book jeff was the man for a while
@guskalo19815 ай бұрын
Nice upload.
@jacobp8306 Жыл бұрын
Nice to learn, outside of it being a shock there wasn't a lot of finer details ever. Sure Jeff's leaving out like 10 years about his relationship(s) but that doesn't matter, heh.
@Harrysound11 ай бұрын
Ryan passing was a massive shock at the time. it's really sad all these years later. I just wanted to see his face and hear his dumb voice goofing off on a quick look and I find this. man, what Jeff is talking about at the end there is exactly what I've been dealing with for the last 6 weeks.....
@jaryd12345 Жыл бұрын
This is surprising to hear in one way but in another not at all because I am literally one of the people who started following Giant Bomb in the aftermath of Ryan’s death. I have just gone back and listened and watched so much Ryan content since then that I forget that sometimes!!
@EddieTHead22662 ай бұрын
"HEY EVERYBODY IT"S TUUUUUESDAY!"
@BackwardsCombatable Жыл бұрын
I wish he would talk about what happened when Vinny, Brad and Alex left GB. From an outsider's perspective they worked together for so long that it seemed like a betrayal to leave Jeff like that, but there was obviously more going on there.
@dancinginfernal Жыл бұрын
They've all been very transparent. The production method wore on then, and after 15 years they wanted to try something different. Their momentum just happened to align. No bad blood or anything, just exhaustion with management and ownership deals, etc. Vinny elaborates in the MinnMax interview.
@BackwardsCombatable Жыл бұрын
@@dancinginfernal Oh I didn't see that, i'll check it out thanks!
@TheFingledorf Жыл бұрын
@@vpofrentemspoons2278 maybe, but I can imagine them becoming "woke" as the culture has shifted too (similar to RoosterTeeth). (I assume Trump's election legitimately terrified a quite a few people - especially those in lib-dense areas like LA and NYC - and help accelerate "woke" culture; being terrified of Trump tbh is absurd to me)
@the-four-seven Жыл бұрын
@@TheFingledorf what
@PlaylistGeneral Жыл бұрын
@@TheFingledorfdefine "woke culture". But silently to yourself. Nobody gives a fuck.
@EddieTHead22662 ай бұрын
Miss Ryan so much.
@bates223424 ай бұрын
Ryan was so funny. I miss him.
@JasonSmall Жыл бұрын
There does come a point in your life when, once you've dedicated so much time and love to games, you have to let other things in. Happened to me.
@ArsicPlays Жыл бұрын
He’s got a great voice - if he branched out from gaming he could do voice overs or radio haha. Such a rugged voice.
@ShinYaguchiSama Жыл бұрын
Jeff doesn’t want the next generation to suffer the same way as he did 11:43 That’s why you can’t beat 100 percent
@michaelfingers7726 Жыл бұрын
100 percent is what turned him into the self loathing Jeff we all saw and grew to adore in the early days of Giant Bomb. 100 percent is part of the reason why Ryan died 100 percent is why Drew left. 100 percent is fucking toxic bullshit thats been shoved down our throats and maybe, hopefully we're gonna stop teaching that to our kids
@kingmanor5 ай бұрын
I forgot about this. The algorithm reminded me.
@TheM00ndawg4 ай бұрын
parasocial relationships are weird. having said that, super happy Jeff found what he was after.
@British Жыл бұрын
I still care about Ryan, RIP..
@ArrestedDeveloper Жыл бұрын
Jeff’s Beyond the Mat moment
@mannyichi Жыл бұрын
Miss the old Gamespot crew ❤
@mr.storms71713 ай бұрын
Man, I been living under a rock. He passed away 10 years ago. Back in the day of Gamespot. He and Jeff was the best. But then again, I was in a new relationship and moving from NY to Colorado at that time, so I probably had a lot going on. Rip Ryan.
@Virjunior01 Жыл бұрын
I can't forget... That Bombcast with the announcement was released on my fuckin birthday, July 9th. I was all amped to listen to the show, and then a ton of bricks got dropped on my head. Seriously, it was the first time I ever cried over an entertainment personality's passing, and the second was David fucking Bowie. Never happened since.
@troyisfilming Жыл бұрын
🥹 Love Jeff
@littlecurrybread2 ай бұрын
rip ryan
@Kiddo311 Жыл бұрын
I'm always interested, what you have to say.
@PassToPlay Жыл бұрын
Still the goat
@Jesuslolowns Жыл бұрын
even in death he serves
@BlaizeV4 ай бұрын
In a different timeline we probably woulld've got a Jeff and Ryan show, I wanna exist there
@Rioraku Жыл бұрын
It'd be cool if he hired Jason.
@JazGalaxy3 ай бұрын
I noticed a night and day difference in Jeff after Ryan passed. It was really strange. (which is weird to say as someone who only knows him from listening to podcasts.) But everything he says here was pretty noticeable from even just the way he conducted himself on the podcast. For people not knowing what I'm talking about, it's MOST noticeable when he is on a podcast with Dan Rykert and Jeff SO DESPERATELY wants to one-up Dan in terms of degenerate behavior but he can't because he's just not that guy anymore.
@123mightywarriorАй бұрын
What did Ryan die from?
@TheGingerExpress243 Жыл бұрын
8:16 is some real shit.
@BeRkStAh Жыл бұрын
Been watching Gamespot / Giantbomb since the hey day. Cool to listen Jeff being real. Rarity.
@FrankieBeanss Жыл бұрын
wow
@zedmanatutube Жыл бұрын
Why isn't Jeff with nextlander
@farristhewheel Жыл бұрын
Because he doesn’t want to
@KaneRobot Жыл бұрын
Glad he's not. I miss Vinny once in awhile but the rest I can take or leave. Jeff doing his own thing is much more appealing.
@TheFingledorf Жыл бұрын
I wish he'd occasionally collab with them but I understand why he's not there full-time.
@djtomoy Жыл бұрын
Poor old Jeff 😢
@salvadordelgado8608 Жыл бұрын
In spite of having been personally attacked by Jeff in a review, I have to say I sympathize with the sentiments.
@ordovicianscourge95204 ай бұрын
Title: Ryan Davis's Comeuppance Summary: Ryan Davis, a prominent figure in the gaming community, known for his sharp wit and humorous critiques, finds himself at the center of a dark, supernatural retribution story. This creepypasta weaves a tale of mysterious disappearances, ghostly messages, and eerie gameplay sessions that seem to blur the lines between reality and the digital world. Introduction: Ryan Davis, co-founder of Giant Bomb, was beloved by many for his unfiltered commentary and infectious laughter. However, like any public figure, he had his share of detractors. One day, after a particularly harsh critique of a niche horror game, strange things began to happen. The Unsolicited Package: It started with a package. No return address, no sender information-just a plain, brown box left at the Giant Bomb office. Inside was an old, dusty VHS tape labeled "For Ryan Davis." Curiosity piqued, Ryan decided to watch it. The Haunted Tape: The tape contained footage of a low-budget horror game, one he had reviewed years ago with scathing criticism. As the game played on the screen, Ryan noticed something strange: the in-game character bore an uncanny resemblance to himself, right down to the clothes he was wearing that day. Disturbing Messages: As the game progressed, the character began to receive messages-cryptic, threatening, and disturbingly personal. "You think you're safe behind that screen?" "Critique all you want, but you can't hide." The messages were typed out in real-time, as if someone was playing along with him, watching his every move. The Unseen Player: Ryan tried to turn off the tape, but it wouldn't stop. The screen flickered, and suddenly, he was controlling the character. Every movement he made with the controller was mirrored on the screen. He was trapped in the game, forced to navigate through a twisted, nightmarish version of the office he worked in. The Colleagues' Disappearance: Days passed, and Ryan's colleagues at Giant Bomb noticed his absence. They found him in the office, staring blankly at the screen, hands gripping the controller. No amount of shaking or calling his name could snap him out of it. One by one, they began to disappear as well, their faces appearing in the game as haunting, ghostly figures. The Final Message: As Ryan's health deteriorated, the final message appeared on the screen: "You laughed at our pain. Now you understand. This is your comeuppance." With that, the game shut off, and Ryan collapsed, lifeless. Epilogue: To this day, the tape remains in the Giant Bomb office, untouched and unwatched. No one dares to play it, fearing the same fate that befell Ryan Davis and his colleagues. Whispers among the gaming community suggest that the tape is cursed, a digital ghost story born from the depths of the internet's darkest corners.