Skip to main content

MatPat Answers The Web's Most Searched Questions

MatPat, the semi-retired YouTube host of The Game of Theorists, joins WIRED to answer his most searched questions from Google. What are his favorite video games? What's he up to in "retirement?" Will he ever come back to YouTube? It's MatPat's WIRED Autocomplete Interview.

Director: Jackie Phillips
Director of Photography: Ricardo Pomares
Editor: Louville Moore
Talent: MatPat
Creative Producer: Justin Wolfson
Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
Associate Producer: Paul Gulyas
Production Manager: Peter Brunette
Camera Operator: Shay Eberle-Gunst
Sound Mixer: Kari Barber
Production Assistant: Brock Spitaels
Post Production Supervisor: Christian Olguin
Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
Assistant Editor: Justin Symonds

Released on 05/03/2024

Transcript

Hey, I'm MatPat

and this is the Wired Autocomplete Interview.

[upbeat music]

This is a journey in self-discovery today, my friends.

So join me.

[upbeat music]

Let's see what we got here.

What is MatPat's full name?

Matthew Patrick.

People to this day still ask me, what's your name?

And it's like, it's right there.

It's literally right there.

Wouldn't it be weird if it was like

Brandon Rogers or something like that?

So MatPat was one of those things

that came about in middle school.

So I grew up in Medina, Ohio

and at the time, two elementary schools

merged into middle school

and all the kids from the other elementary school,

they were like Matthew Patrick?

You're MatPat.

And all my friends from my original elementary school

were like, how did we never think of that?

And it just kinda stuck from there.

So MatPat became the go-to name.

What did MatPat gave the Pope?

So infamously about what, six years ago,

I was invited to be a digital ambassador to the Pope.

And so I got to meet the Pope,

and as representative of the online gaming community,

I gave him a Steam code for the game Undertale.

Not the physical copy, mind you, the Steam code.

For those of you who don't know,

Undertale is a game all about solving problems

with pacifist solutions.

Where it's not just about fighting and killing,

but actually coming to agreements with people

and finding out what they need and having conversations

with them, which felt like a really good example

of the positive messaging that gaming can have.

What is MatPat favorite game?

At this point, so much of the games that I play

have been for work,

things that need theories about or are popular games.

But my true favorite games are Chrono Trigger

and EarthBound from the Super Nintendo era.

Chrono Trigger is a game all about time travel

and manipulating the future

and saving the world from an alien threat.

And EarthBound is basically a wacky adventure

of you with psychic powers

going around your hometown fighting giant ants

and evil moles and again,

saving the world from an evil alien power.

What is MatPat known for?

I'm the nerdy guy online who says,

but that's just a theory, a game theory.

Or film theory, style theory, food theory, et cetera.

I'm the theory guy on YouTube.

I take science, math, history, and deep nerdy research

and fuse it with nerdy topics like movies, TV, video games,

things like that to come up with wacky solutions.

What is MatPat doing now?

I am retired.

I retired about three weeks ago as we're recording this.

It is great.

What does that mean?

That means that I have less time spent in a recording booth

polishing and writing episodes.

And it gives me more time to pursue things like

the podcast that I do and collaborations like this

and the mystery lo-fi project that I have going on.

Or creators in fashion where we spotlit

a bunch of different creators who are doing

amazing work in the apparel space.

So really at this point,

my job has transitioned away from online talent

and online personality

and into a creator who is telling cool stories

and trying to uplift the next generation of creators.

[whooshing]

Seamless.

Where did the MatPat PNG come from?

I was one of, if not the first PNG tuber,

that is you using a flat cutout

of yourself and animating it around on screen

so that way you don't have to appear on camera.

And that really was born out of, when I started my channel,

I was destitute in New York and in between jobs,

and I didn't have money for good camera equipment,

good lighting, things like that.

And so I didn't like the way that I looked online

and so I'm like, lemme just do everything in VO

and then just we inserted this little PNG

of me to represent me on camera.

So that image has persisted and withstood the test of time.

I think I can maybe do it again.

It's like.

I don't know if I'm getting the angle right,

but this is updated for 2024.

When did MatPat retire?

A couple weeks ago I did my last video.

It was March 9th, 2023, 2024.

And it has been great.

It has been so wonderful and celebratory to have this time,

and so thank you, thank you for 13 years,

and I'm so excited for what the next couple have to offer.

Why is MatPat so smart?

I feel like that is not necessarily

a sentiment that is shared across a wide swath

of the internet, so thank you.

What I would say is I was lucky enough to have parents

and teachers that really fostered

a sense of curiosity in me when I was growing up.

They told me that school was my job

and that the best thing to be in life is a lifelong learner

and to question everything.

I recognize that I was in a really fortunate position

where not a lot of people have that support around them.

And so if I can serve as that to the next generation

of people watching online video, that's awesome.

How does MatPat edit his videos?

Poorly and slowly.

I believe the videos that I edited myself were compared

to a bad PowerPoint presentation at one point.

[laughing]

That's why we hired on a lot of editors, my friends.

I recognized early on about maybe two

or three years into my YouTube career

that I was not an editor.

And for me to actually make the show

what I had always envisioned it could be, I would need years

of practice and training and I just didn't have that.

And so that's when we partnered up with

one of my earliest collaborators.

His name was Ronnie Edwards,

and he was an expert in flash animation

and he was the man who truly made Game Theory

look the way that I always wanted it to look.

And together the show was able to really thrive and grow,

and at this point now with us producing

between 11 and 13 videos every single week.

So that's unsustainable and why I had to retire.

[laughing]

At this point, we have an army of around 20 editors

and they are fantastic.

They're some of the most talented people in the world.

And as a result, it's one of those things

where the editors now have their own editing school

where they train up the next generation of editors,

and it's kind of a rite of passage in a lot of ways

to bring in kind of the upcoming group of editors.

[grunting]

Smooth.

[chuckling]

Is MatPat coming back to YouTube?

Yes and no.

Yes, in so far as I'm popping on for new projects.

I just did this fashion show over on Style Theory

and Game Theory where we spotlit a bunch

of creators doing awesome work in the apparel space.

There's a new project

that's gonna be launching in a couple weeks.

It's this music mystery project where it's a lo-fi channel

and you can lean back and relax and do homework to it,

but hidden in the cracks of it,

there's a mystery and a narrative attached to it

for all you lore hounds out there.

So is there a day where I might start a new channel?

Maybe, but not for a long, long time.

Is MatPats?

Is MatPat on Jeopardy?

No.

500,000 people signed a petition to get me on Jeopardy.

Nothing.

Not even the college tournament.

The kids tournament, come on, throw me a bone, man.

[chuckling]

It has always been a life goal of mine

to be a game show host.

I think it would be super fun.

I love playing games, but I also love hosting games,

and then someone else connected us

with people from Jeopardy

and they never got back to our emails.

[chuckling]

So, I feel like that ship has sailed.

Is MatPat a millennial?

Very clearly, yes.

You can tell a person's generation

by what they call Instagram,

but I'm not cool for any of

those so I just call it Instagram.

[chuckling]

But we have members on our team

that keep me hip with the trends.

We have Ash on our team who's our resident Gen Z.

And so anytime I'm like, hey is this cheugy to say?

She's like, the fact that you called it cheugy is cheugy.

All right, duly noted.

Is MatPat in the new FNaF movie?

Yes, yes I am.

It was an incredible experience.

Never before in my life would I have imagined

that I would be able to be on an actual film set

of that size, of that caliber.

And not only to be in a movie,

but then to see reaction compilations

of people seeing me in the movie

and theaters erupting in cheers.

I am at 28 minutes and 22 seconds into the movie

and the go-to line there is the classic line

that I say all the time.

But hey, you know, it's just the theory.

And audiences really enjoyed that.

Will I be in the new FNaF movie?

I don't know, time will tell.

My schedule's open, Scott.

Transition.

[whooshing]

All right, does MatPat have a podcast?

Kind of.

Our GT live channel, which is our live streaming channel,

I've always kind of run as a podcast where yes,

there's gaming attached to it,

but really I want there to be

a large conversational component

at the beginning, at the end.

So that way it feels like

you're just hanging out on the couch.

So that is probably the closest thing that we produce.

I am also the official host of Like & Describe,

YouTube's first official trends podcast.

But no, do I personally have an official podcast?

No, I don't.

I host one, I have a live stream, but I do not have one.

Does MatPat regret selling his channel?

For context, I sold the Theorist brand

and the Theory channels

to a company named Lunar X at the end of 2022.

Do I regret it?

Not in the slightest.

It was the single best decision

that I could have possibly made.

The ability to kind of scale out what we've been doing

and have more resources to attack more of these projects

that were outside of my personal expertise,

our team's personal expertise,

our wheelhouses, has been wonderful.

One of the things that you don't really appreciate

until you're in the position is when you employ people,

that's a heavy burden

and that's a huge responsibility to take on.

And so to be able to offload some of

that responsibility onto a separate company

and to know that there was financial stability there,

to know that they were experts in hiring and processes

and this and that has been tremendous.

MatPat movies and TV shows.

The Five Nights at Freddy's movie

is probably one of the biggest ones

and the most known of all of those.

I also did another movie called Hero Mode

where I played myself

as an online commentator talking about,

oh, this game company's making terrible decisions.

I'm in two Transformers series,

two animated series featuring the Transformers.

And that's a huge deal.

In fact Mark Hamill is one of the voices

in one of those series.

So it's like, oh my gosh, I did a project with Mark Hamill,

if you squint at it.

We were at booths in probably separate parts of the world

at two very different times, but we worked together.

MatPat sub count.

I honestly don't know, we have so many damn channels.

I think my last total ended up being about

41 million across the YouTube channels.

And then on Twitter, I think I'm like 5 million followers.

And then on Instagram, it's 1 million.

And so in total, it's probably around 50 million.

At the end of the day, the thanks goes back to you.

Without you watching, without you subscribing,

without you clicking on that video giving us a chance,

we wouldn't be able to do this.

I wouldn't be able to employ all those people.

I wouldn't be able to have a team of 20 editors

and a full staff of 40 people around us

to make the videos that we do.

So you're welcome.

Without you, none of it's possible.

So thank you guys.

Transition.

[whooshing]

And I think this is the last board.

Who did MatPat married?

I married a beautiful woman named Stephanie Cordato,

now Stephanie Patrick.

She's my best friend.

She's my partner in everything.

We met in college.

We met programming video games together, funny enough.

We both needed an extra math credit in college

and neither of us wanted to take calculus.

It would've been 3D calculus and it's like, why?

That's stupid.

So instead we took this course that was considered

to be an easy A, it was video game programming.

We ended up sitting next to each other in the class.

While everyone else was coasting through the class

because it was very much an easy A course,

Steph and I were the try hards of the group.

[chuckling]

The two of us kept trying to out compete each other

for best game in the class every week.

But the final project was you had to partner

with someone in the class.

We ended up partnering with each other.

Everyone else did one level of a basic mini golf game.

We did a five level quest with eight enemy types,

all with different attack patterns, scrolling backgrounds,

and a final boss battle with multiple phases.

It was the second half of freshman year in college

and we've been hanging out together ever since.

Who bought MatPat's channel?

Yeah, who bought MatPat's channel?

It's a company named Lunar X.

They see YouTube brands as kind of the next generation

of the biggest brands in the world,

both entertainment wise and product wise.

And they're able to kind of deliver the resources,

manpower, and expertise of really scaling those out

and doing things that we ourselves always wanted to do

but were holding ourselves back on.

And last, last and hopefully not least,

who is Ash to MatPat?

Ash is our resident Zoomer.

Ash is 24.

They are my co-host and producer on our GT live channel.

To me, our relationship is one of older statesman

and younger person teaching me

how to stay up with the times.

They tell me when I have

to transition away from using the word drip.

[chuckling]

And just in general, keeping me up to date

on all the spiciest of TikTok memes.

Awesome, we're gonna toss it slightly off camera

so I don't knock any.

Oh, I definitely ruined something

behind the camera at this point.

Thank you Wired for this Autocomplete Interview

and I will see you next time.

And that's not a theory.

That right there, that's a fact.

See ya.

[upbeat music]

Up Next