![]() The other thing I noticed in the game was the Raccoon emoji to depict ‘burglary’. You should at least disguise yourself if you were going to do some crime. I instead found my character looking like he normally would if he tried to rob a house-which was a weird thing to do in real life. But despite me re-playing the app, I wasn’t able to find the emoji. For example, if I decided that my character wanted to be a criminal and rob a house, I’d see my character’s emoji turn into a robber emoji similar to the emoji depicted above. I remembered that I would see Bitlife emojis being used during the game. Seeing as I used to be an avid player of the life-simulation game, I thought it made sense, too. Could it come from Bitlife?Īnother theory is that the robber emoji does actually exist, but it was from a game app called Bitlife ( Android, iOS). The robber emoji could be a victim of this phenomenon. However, scientists suggest that false memories can be shaped by a mixture of incorrect memories, false news reports and misleading photographs. Some theorise that the Mandela effect phenomenon might be evidence that we are living in an alternate reality. Other false memory phenomenon examples include memories of the “Berenstain Bears” being spelled “Berenstein”, and the existence of a 1990s movie titled “Shazaam” starring Sinbad as a genie (which I personally do believe I’ve seen a poster of it in a magazine when I was younger!). However, Broome claimed that the ‘memory’ was shared by “perhaps thousands” of other people. The claim was far from the truth-as Mandela was still alive in 2010. The name came from a false memory phenomenon from 2010 when self-described ‘paranormal consultant’ Fiona Broome said that the death of South African leader Nelson Mandela was in the 1980s.
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