Game Theory: Cuphead's SINFUL SECRET Business! - YouTube

Channel: The Game Theorists

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*Snazzy music*
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Mmm Mmm Mmm
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Nothin' blows my wig quite like the keen sounds of a doghouse and gobble pie
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pitching woo to the beats of a skin tickler!
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Oh come on, don't be a tin ear!
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This platter is a ring-a-ding-ding, baby!
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*start rap music in background*
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Man, they talked weird back then.
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*phone rings*
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Speak to me bro.
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Oh, yeah. I know! Tonight's party is gonna be lit AF!!!
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I'm low-key excited to get turned up!!!
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We gonna get savage tonight!
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Hit me later with the DM fam. Stay woke!!
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*Game Theory intro*
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Hello Internet! Welcome to Game Theory!
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The thickest show in gaming.
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That's thicc with four C's, a K, and a silent Q U E.
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If you're looking for a break from these
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Well you're in the right place.
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In a year FULL of great games,
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Cuphead is easily one of the best or, at least best from a gameplay standpoint.
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On the theorize-ability side there seems to be a little less meat on the bone.
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I mean the story seems pretty darn straightforward
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Our heroes Cuphead and Mugman find themselves in hot water with the Devil after gambling their souls away.
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Since neither of them really want to lose their souls,
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they strike a deal with the Devil and are sent out to collect soul contracts
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from the other inhabitants on the island to give the Devil his due.
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It's all pretty cut and dry.
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But before you go running off to your kitchen to explain the dangers of the real world to your cutlery,
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I'm about to let you in on a secret that will completely
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shatter the way that you perceive our heroic bowl headed boys.
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For as innocent and heroic as Cuphead, Mugman, and Elder Kettle may seem,
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they're actually no better than the Devil himself.
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When you look at the evidence it is clear that these three are active criminals.
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Participating in an industry of sin. Not gambling like the Devil and King Dice, but instead illegal alcohol sales.
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That's right! Cuphead, Mugman and Elder Kettle are all moonshiners.
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Smack dab in the middle of Prohibition.
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Okay so you're probably wondering just how in Inkwell Hell did I figure that one out?
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So let's take a big gulp of liquid from our heads and start looking at the game.
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First it's immediately obvious that this game is set in the 1930s.
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I mean if the animation and music didn't already tip you off, the game reminds us of its setting VERY frequently.
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We've already covered this era of animation in our analysis of Bendy And The Ink Machine to death, so, no need to belabor the point here
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But, on this subject
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Here's a really fun fact:
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When called out on Twitter for the inconsistent coloring of Cuphead's hands and shoes,
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Sometimes white, sometimes yellow, brown, even the color of their shorts,
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The makers of the game, Studio MDHR, responded that it was to mimic the inconsistent coloring practices used by cartoons at the time.
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It's just another reason to absolutely love this game and its attention to detail.
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Anyway, the reason I bring up the setting of the game is because it has everything to do with the Devil's evil scheme
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on Inkwell Isle, and how Cuphead fits into that.
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You see, between 1929 and 1939,
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the world as a whole suffered from the Great Depression.
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An economic crisis that began in the United States with a crashing stock market
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but had devastating effects on markets around the world.
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In the US, the unemployment rate would eventually rise to 24.75 percent.
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Which meant that out of a workforce of 51 million people, 12 million people were left jobless.
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It was so bad, that the US Dollar wouldn't be worth a whole dollar again, until 1944.
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So you had prices rising, the dollar losing its value,
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and people losing faith in the government to help with this job crisis.
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With no hope in sight people started to look for hope in... other places
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Like a big win on the craps table or at the bottom of a stiff drink.
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Tobacco, alcohol, and gambling all saw huge up swings during this period
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And thus, America saw the rise of what became known as the sin industries.
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Businesses that got their name by exploiting human addiction to... less than savory practices
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Think it's a coincidence that the casino in Cuphead is run by the Devil?
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Absolutely not. In fact, the Las Vegas we know today
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owes itself to the sin industry boom of the 1930s.
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The legalization of essentially all forms of gambling happened in 1931.
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Everything from slot machines, to cards, to craps.
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And where have we seen all of those before?
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Oh yeah,
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Across Inkwell Isle.
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Tobacco use, meanwhile, took on a completely different tone from how we perceive it today.
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Cigars were associated with tough guys
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While smoking cigarettes was meant to make you look sophisticated and refined.
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Now look how we see smoking portrayed throughout Inkwell Isle.
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On the gambling boat with Ribby and Croaks, we see classy lady flies in the background
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And if you can make it out behind the fight with Mr. Wheezy, a living cigar,
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You'll see twisted images of mysterious men in trench coats all smoking together.
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And again, both those fights are tied to gambling in some way
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By proxy, the devil.
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This is the 1930s sin industries.
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But of the three sin industries during this era, the most interesting was alcohol.
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Because this was smack dab in the middle of Prohibition.
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For those of you who don't know, the Prohibition was a ban on alcohol
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that happened between 1920 and 1933 in the US.
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It was a governmental effort to reduce crime, solve social issues, and make Americans healthier
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By ceasing the production and spread of this so-called Devil's drink
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But it actually just ended up doing the exact opposite.
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Organized crime and gang violence surged during this period
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as underground booze trafficking became big business.
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It was just... a total failure across the board.
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Just because it was illegal, people were still finding ways to get a hold of their alcohol.
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And if you pay attention to all the little details in Cuphead,
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you'll notice that the only places you see alcohol are in areas owned by the Devil.
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The aforementioned gambling boat, and the Devil's casino where you actually throw fisticups
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Haha, fisticups. Couldn't resist.
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Fisticuffs against whiskey, rum, and a martini.
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But remember, this is 1930. It is literally in the middle of Prohibition.
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All of this is illegal. It would make sense for the Devil to be breaking those anti alcohol laws
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But it would be something else entirely for poor, innocent Cuphead to be doing it.
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Sadly though, that's exactly what he's doing.
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Cuphead, Mugman and Elder Kettle. Heroes by day, and moonshiners by night.
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Moonshiner was the name given to someone who made homebrewed illegal alcohol during the Prohibition.
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And while many were unsuccessful,
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And I mean REALLY unsuccessful, we're talking "65,000 people dying from poisoned liquor in one year" levels of unsuccessful.
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Eventually the science did become refined enough that alcoholic beverages were being produced
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that didn't necessarily need to include: "May cause death" on the label.
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Since making the stuff was illegal, most moonshiners tended to work far into the woods, near a water source,
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and in places that only they would know how to get to.
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You can make moonshine using practically anything,
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But at its most basic, all you need is a pan, a kettle, and a rubber hose.
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Once you have your juice it would be placed into jugs
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marked by X's to indicate how many times they were distilled,
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AKA how much punch your moonshine was packing,
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and then they were delivered in secret to various businesses.
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From there, it would be common for your drink to be served by tea kettle or coffee pot
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into a tea cup or coffee mug to avoid suspicion.
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Now where have I seen all those things before?
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Moonshine, made using a kettle served in tea cups.
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But that's not all. Think about where Cuphead starts his journey: Elder Kettles' home.
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The only place that's away from town and completely surrounded by woods.
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Just like where the moonshiners lived during the Prohibition era.
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And right next to a water source. Coincidence?
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Maybe, but consider this:
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You ever wonder why Cuphead lives on an island? It seemed like a weird choice to me,
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that Inkwell is just a series of small interconnected land masses all sharing the same name
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Well, the size, shape, and general topography of Inkwell Island is actually fairly similar to the Bahamas,
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a series of closely connected islands just off the coast of Florida.
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Now, have you ever heard of rum row?
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It was an alcohol smuggling operation that ran between Florida and the Bahamas during the Prohibition.
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They were producing alcohol at the edges of the Bahamas and using boats to smuggle that booze into the mainland, US.
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Now those boats around Inkwell start to seem like they have a real purpose.
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And it doesn't just end with a few geographic similarities.
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Let's stop for a minute and examine the fluid in Cupheads' head.
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Some have speculated that it could be a Non-newtonian fluid,
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the kind that acts like a liquid, but when force is applied to it, hardens like a solid.
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Others have said that it could be similar to the water of life that Japanese Kappas have in their heads,
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But given the circumstances, it's incredibly unlikely that the fluid is something magical.
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it behaves just like any other liquid in the game.
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You see it splash when the characters are hit, or do anything that shifts from side to side.
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In the opening scene, they're kicked out of the casino
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and we get the best view into Mugman's head,
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and we see that the liquid is white.
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Seeing a white liquid makes you immediately think it's milk, right? Or... eggnog, I guess, but that would be really weird.
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Well, it's not necessarily either of those.
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Researching animation techniques you immediately learn that when drawing a clear liquid,
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white is the color of choice for just about any artist.
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Given this old-timey style of animation, one that doesn't use transparency,
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If they didn't color it in, it would just look incomplete.
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Or on the flip side, if they were to use blue it would be more reminiscent of water,
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so cartoonists of this era tended to use white.
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In other words, yeah, it could be milk,
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but it could also just be any form of clear booze, specifically moonshine.
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Now consider this: before a fight the timid Mugman takes a huge gulp from his head to get himself pumped for battle.
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You're not taking a swig of milk, and then suddenly being infused with courage and doing flips.
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But there is the stereotype of taking a stiff drink of liquid courage, alcohol, before a fight to get yourself all charged up.
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But for super solid evidence we need to keep looking back to the past,
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but this time not as far back as the 1930s.
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Instead back to 2015's trailer of Cuphead,
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where he pours white liquid from a jug marked with three X's into his head.
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Three X's, the mark of bootleg alcohol.
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A triple distilled jug of moonshine. Which, in 1930, is expressly outlawed.
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So there you have it. Our innocent heroes are actually no better than the Devil in his casino.
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They're agents of one of the Prohibition eras most nefarious sin Industries:
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Distilling illegal booze with Elder Kettle in their secluded shack in the woods on the outskirts of Inkwell.
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Can't make it anymore black and white than that.
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But the editors can!
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But hey, that's just a theory.
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A Game Theory!
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Thanks for watching.
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*Jazzy outro*