Far Cry 5 Easter Eggs — Discover a park from Primal. If you're hankering for more cool Hawaiian Bobbleheads, you can also get ones of villain Pagan Min and a Rabbid by spending Ubisoft Club points. It feels like all my efforts were for naught, and it even tarnishes a lot of the fun I had, since it all got blown up anyway. Everything goes boom, all is lost, terrible damage is done — maybe it even causes Bliss to enter the wider water supplies of North America — and it at least makes a tiny drip of sense! And your companions express horror that you are, because, well, it makes no sense to do so. It's funny to see Far Cry 5 make fourth-wall-breaking references like this, but it doesn't stop there. Meanwhile, you can unlock a Vaas bobblehead - he's wearing a cute dress, and a Pagan Min bobblehead! Meaningless, but cute in the way that a bad M. I knew how to have fun in this world, and step one was tuning out every human ever. We got our hands on an last year and were impressed with the huge arsenal and the other characters you can recruit to help you in your quest. Maybe, just maybe, there would be a reason for all of this grossness?
While exploring the big, chaotic world of Far Cry 5, you should keep your eyes peeled for more than just murderous cultists and bloodthirsty turkeys. Scattered around the map there are a number of hidden little references to other games, including earlier entries in the Far Cry series, as well as a few nods to movies and books. Below we've collected what we and others have found so far. There's sure to be more out there. Here are the Far Cry 5 Easter eggs we're aware of. Firewatch in Far Cry There's a fire tower on the starting island you'll likely run into. It doesn't get any more detailed than that, but because the player-protagonist of Campo Santo's Firewatch is named Henry, and his job is all about watching for fires in a lookout tower much like this one, it's hard not to read it as an overt reference. Blood Dragon lives on, sort of Guy Marvel is a director desperate to make his next hit film, Blood Dragon 3. You'll find him in the Herbane River region just east of the Hope County Jail on the ramshackle set of his film, cursing at his two underpaid employees. Help him out and you'll run through a series of missions that pays homage to the beloved Far Cry spin-off Blood Dragon—and at the end you get to hear him poke fun at critics of the series like ourselves. While we'd much rather have another playful standalone game like Blood Dragon, the missions are a fun way to remember what once was. Oh, and you get a rad outfit out of the deal. Wait long enough, and the scene above plays out. It's nothing special, but the blunt, unceremonious ending is a funny way to deny the Seeds' prophecy altogether. Ray Bradbury has a farm There's a callout to late author and screenwriter Ray Bradbury, best known for his dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451 and science-fiction classic The Martian Chronicles. Aptly enough, near Bradbury Farm is a crop circle, which in the real world are thought to be made by alien visitors with nothing better to do or by pranksters with boards tied to their feet with nothing better to do. Either way, a side-mission found in Holland Valley will shed some light on far cry 5 easter egg ending going on. I'd leap into that far cry 5 easter egg ending without a second thought. The definition of insanity I'll never forget the first time a bad guy gave an impassioned speech directly in my first-person camera face. Now, I can carry that memory with me wherever I drive in Far Cry 5 with my little Vaas bobblehead. You might remember him from Far Cry 3 as the dude that went on big rants about insanity and such. Everyone should have access to the guy by default, too. We'd recognize that hairdo anywhere. Far Cry Primal is canon Oros, the location of Far Cry Primal, wasn't some jaunt into alt-history, and this Far Cry 5 Easter egg proves it, as much as a fake book found in a fake place can prove another fake place is real. On bookshelves in a number of locations, you'll find a book titled Oros: A Mesolithic Paradise. In the fiction of Far Cry, at least, Oros and Primal are canon. Malaria is bad Another book, found on the floor of the prison in the Henbane River region, notes something that everyone who played Far Cry 2 has been thinking since 2004: malaria sucks. The disease, which you're stricken with for the duration of the Far Cry 2, was annoying, so much so that a book has been written about it. Malaria is of course much worse than just annoying in the real world, responsible for about a half-million deaths every year. Also, it made it hard to shoot bad guys. Hurk's old Far Cry shit Ah, good old Hurk. A character in Far Cry 3, a playable co-op character in Far Cry 4, he's now a companion in Far Cry 5. He lives with his cranky right-wing dad while attempting to be a bit more progressive himself, and behind Hurk's home in the Whitetail Mountains you'll find some boxes where he's packed up the things he's collected on his travels through the Far Cry-erverse, everything from 'Rook Island shit' to 'Kyrat shit' to, somehow, 'Oros shit. I kicked all the boxes but there was nothing inside, sadly. Or, who knows, maybe this unlucky guy just got fragged while making some eggs. He didn't leave a note. Far Cry 5 and I have a strange history, all starting with a fun letter I wrote to Ubisoft asking them to. Nothing really came of it, but a few months later I got to play a new slice of Far Cry 5, in which I stumbled upon Davenport Farm, a possible homage to the piece it's my last name. It's still intact in the final release and you can go investigate for yourself, but the video above should get you up to speed. Alex Jones wouldn't like bliss At a cabin near the southern edge of the map, you can find this note complaining that the bliss in the water is making all the animals gay. While it sounds like the ramblings of an isolated redneck, a reasonable guess, it's actually a reference to the wacky, out-of-touch host of Infowars' talk show, Alex Jones.