Harry Potter Theory: The Truth About Felix Felicis

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  • čas přidán 24. 04. 2017
  • Today J dives into the wizarding world of Harry Potter to try and explain the truth about the mysterious potion Felix Felicis, commonly known as Liquid Luck.
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Komentáře • 6K

  • @sleepymushroom844
    @sleepymushroom844 Před 5 lety +4308

    After the battle under the astronomy tower, someone tells Harry (I feel like it was Ginny, but I'm not sure) "Every spell seemed to just miss us," which leads me to another theory....... The Death Eaters are actually Stormtroopers.

    • @alinekelley7214
      @alinekelley7214 Před 5 lety +73

      🤣🤣👌

    • @vedangratnaparkhi
      @vedangratnaparkhi Před 5 lety +95

      My favorite theory so far!

    • @lachlanjeffery2597
      @lachlanjeffery2597 Před 5 lety +18

      Of Romans and Greeks
      Except before that someone said we would have gotten hit without the luck potion

    • @inkpoint07
      @inkpoint07 Před 5 lety +10

      Lol

    • @keddethan
      @keddethan Před 5 lety +56

      Wait, so if the death eaters are stormtroopers, then is Voldemort Darth Sidious? Then which death eater is Vader?
      I’m probably overthinking this

  • @hellohello4075
    @hellohello4075 Před 6 lety +2698

    waizarding world: Felix Felicis
    Muggle world: Vodka

  • @omegadelta5479
    @omegadelta5479 Před 5 lety +3422

    Fun fact: harry was dropped in this stuff when he was a baby

    • @jeffo.1916
      @jeffo.1916 Před 5 lety +27

      🤔🤔🤔

    • @matthewlanoue9492
      @matthewlanoue9492 Před 4 lety +212

      So basically Achilles but way way better

    • @sophiehanna2069
      @sophiehanna2069 Před 4 lety +127

      So basically obelisk?

    • @yes9691
      @yes9691 Před 4 lety +75

      Achilles but you can’t actually hit him ever

    • @Yobyman
      @Yobyman Před 4 lety +61

      @@sophiehanna2069 eyyy Obelix from Asterix & Obelix, Nice!

  • @zacharyluck6589
    @zacharyluck6589 Před 4 lety +1817

    When your teacher promises to give you alcohol but just gives you water instead but you never had alcohol before and you think you're drunk.

    • @berrybuena
      @berrybuena Před 4 lety +12

      And what/how differently would you feel, that would let you think you were drunk?

    • @camhanguyen229
      @camhanguyen229 Před 4 lety +54

      Whait, this actually kind of happened to me.
      I had an ice cream and I liked it, I thought it was delicious. But then my mother said that there was a little bit of alcohol in it so... I felt sick because I knew there was alcohol in it. Before I knew there was alcohol in it I thought it was just an normal ice cream. (sorry for my bad English)

    • @EBestLetterE5
      @EBestLetterE5 Před 4 lety +16

      @Mohamed SHIRE placebo effect

    • @Lebecamie
      @Lebecamie Před 4 lety +6

      You mean a placebo?

    • @aishashaikh1888
      @aishashaikh1888 Před 4 lety

      Lol

  • @elizabell8705
    @elizabell8705 Před 7 lety +3955

    Dangerous recklessness and extreme overconfidence? Sounds like Gilderoy Lockhart was taking too much his whole life.

  • @sh33pboi
    @sh33pboi Před 7 lety +811

    I thought luck was literally an ingredient. Like how the laughing potion needs you to laugh at it during brewing. This explains why the brewing process takes so long and is so precise, you genuinely have to get lucky to make it. Snape is notoriously unlucky so would never be lucky enough to make it. This also fits with Snape's monologue from the Philosopher's Stone: 'I can teach you how to bottle fame, brew glory, even stopper death'. It's possible that this isn't just flowery language but literally a description of high end potions using concepts as ingredients.

    • @someoneelse1939
      @someoneelse1939 Před 7 lety +28

      hey, that's pretty good!

    • @jananihariram9703
      @jananihariram9703 Před 7 lety +10

      That makes so much sense!

    • @nathanielbrill1523
      @nathanielbrill1523 Před 7 lety +10

      Fits perfectly.

    • @harshadasamant6211
      @harshadasamant6211 Před 7 lety +41

      And Slughorn is a pretty lucky guy. That fits.

    • @crystalsilence2559
      @crystalsilence2559 Před 7 lety +28

      Both yours and the SCBs theories are plausible, but yours makes more sense and is even MORE plausible given the universe it's set in. So well done! You've put a lot of thought into it. :D

  • @krissisk4163
    @krissisk4163 Před 4 lety +641

    Here's a theory for you: a young and still-learning Snape once tried to brew Felix Felicis. It proved to be beyond the abilities of the talented but still learning 3rd or 4th year Hogwarts student. I say 3rd or 4th year because at that point he would have had time to realize his talent and get confident in his abilities but would not yet have learned enough to brew the most difficult potions or understand his limitations. And he got it horribly wrong, leading to a life filled with horrible luck.

    • @michaelastadler8423
      @michaelastadler8423 Před 3 lety +53

      that's so sad. no wonder he is so bitter.

    • @eschelar
      @eschelar Před 3 lety +41

      I had the same thought. Not sure if it holds water, but it's a good idea.

    • @helloworld6209
      @helloworld6209 Před 3 lety +20

      plausible theory, make a video on that!

    • @Prokerboss
      @Prokerboss Před 3 lety +8

      Now that’s a good one

    • @VC-nk3oz
      @VC-nk3oz Před 3 lety +18

      My thoughts exactly! I figured that maybe his misfortunes could be a result of a felix felicis brew gone wrong before he eventually became the potions master he was known for

  • @DonatCallens
    @DonatCallens Před 4 lety +403

    Snape does says this in the first book:
    “I can teach you how to bewitch the mind and ensnare the senses. I can tell you how to bottle fame, brew glory, and even put a stopper in death.”
    -J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
    It makes me think it is actually liquid luck...

    • @bobthepickle3232
      @bobthepickle3232 Před 3 lety +18

      I really like this view on the theory, but I find it strange that Snape would admit to being able to teach them all that stuff, it's not like he actually seems to love teaching anyways...

    • @yiocho220
      @yiocho220 Před 3 lety +13

      @@bobthepickle3232 he didn't teach them thosepotions because they were probably OWL classes and snape never taught Owls too the group.

    • @Rick_Sanchez_G420
      @Rick_Sanchez_G420 Před 3 lety +9

      @@yiocho220 you mean NEWTs, OWLs were taken in the 5th year whilst Snape still taught potions. He taught Defence Against the Dark Arts during the Halfblood Prince.

    • @daphnejyothi4795
      @daphnejyothi4795 Před 3 lety +11

      You do realise that if there was a potion that could prevent death, Voldemort would have a backpack full of it wherever he goes.

    • @bobthepickle3232
      @bobthepickle3232 Před 3 lety +12

      @@daphnejyothi4795 It could be possible that this potion Snape mentions is specific to a certain situation or environment, such as a potion to cure even the worst burns from a fire. This would mean that the potions power has the potential still to be dwarfed by Volemort's own.

  • @onesimplefeather5948
    @onesimplefeather5948 Před 5 lety +1682

    Overconfidence and dangerous recklessness? Basically gryffindor in a bottle.

    • @zacksmith1163
      @zacksmith1163 Před 5 lety +15

      haha

    • @emilyclendenin3483
      @emilyclendenin3483 Před 5 lety +14

      I bet you're a slytherin."slytherins may be sleek and sly but Gryffindors are brave at heart!"

    • @tuxedocatsocks8668
      @tuxedocatsocks8668 Před 5 lety +14

      @@emilyclendenin3483 Yo I agree with @Lorinda Brooks . And I'm a Ravenclaw

    • @nerdfish7970
      @nerdfish7970 Před 5 lety +11

      That’s why being huddlepuff or ravenclaw (I’m literally in the middle) is best

    • @TactualBowl2535
      @TactualBowl2535 Před 5 lety +10

      I am offended being a gryffindor

  • @froggy904
    @froggy904 Před 7 lety +748

    Felix Felicis makes the students in your potions class work harder.

  • @TheEddie1910
    @TheEddie1910 Před 4 lety +461

    I really think Snape doesn't get enough credit for how great of a wizard he is. Imagine how skilled of a Occlumens one must be to deceive Voldemort on every occassion they meet. When Lucius Malfoy lies to him about how glad the family is to have Voldi as a guest in their house, he immediately recognizes the lie (which could also be because he just knows but I'm sure Voldemort is just as skilled an Legilimens to perform the technique at any given time because in his situation he just needs to know whether or not his followers are honest about their loyalty).
    Furthermore, Snape recognizes when Draco uses Occlumency against him but it seems Snape can do it without the Dark Lord recognising. Because when Voldemort recognizes Snape to use Occlumency against him, wouldn't he find a way around it to find the truth, like Imperius, Truth potion or sth else?

    • @TheEddie1910
      @TheEddie1910 Před 4 lety +33

      @@user-ed1xj9zc7w Yes, but if Voldemort would have ever been in doubt about Snapes loyalty, he would just have killed him, so my point still is, he just deceived the Dark Lord successfully on any given occasion they met. Especially when Voldemort tried to get the truth out of Snape with force and Snape resisted, he would immediately be dead. Snapes says himself once "The Dark Lord, for instance, almost always knows when somebody is lying to him." He says almost, because he knows perfectly well that he himself is able to lie to Voldemort without him recognising. Thats simply something no other wizard can do, as far as our knowledge goes.

    • @TheEddie1910
      @TheEddie1910 Před 4 lety +18

      @@user-ed1xj9zc7w As I said, Snape can use Occlumency against Voldemort without him noticing that he does, which is proven by the fact that Voldemort never killed him out of doubt in his faith. Snape is particularly skilled in this specific part of magic (and many others, I'm sure), which is why Voldemort did never lose faith in him and which led to the events happening as they happened. That was the point I was making that led me to say Snape doesn't get the reputation he deserves when it comes to magic skill.

    • @cecile436
      @cecile436 Před 4 lety +16

      I think the reason wy Snape see Draco uses occlumency is because he was able to get in his mind before, but not anymore.
      I'd say Snape always was an occlumens, already before he was a Death Eater, maybe at first Voldemort was suspicious, but after Snape showed him to be a faithful servant times and times again, the doubt was slowly dissipated.
      Remember how Bellatrix keeps doubting him.
      Remember how important it was for Dumbledore that Snape gives at least partially correct information to the dark lord so he trusts him.
      Remember how he said after Snape kills him he will be sure of his allegiance.
      I believe that Voldemort had doubts regarding Snape, often, they just were less with time, because he could base himself only on Snape's actions to judge him and he was good to give the change.
      That would have been way more suspicious if voldi could enter Snape's mind at first, but not later on.

    • @arabic7boy
      @arabic7boy Před 4 lety +6

      @@cecile436 really good point, he was probably using occlumency from the first day voldi met snape.

    • @fatilumkins8730
      @fatilumkins8730 Před 4 lety +12

      I think if Voldi could read Snapes mind at any point he would doubt Snapes ability to deceive Dumbledore, in a weird way the fact that Snape was so good at blocking Voldi out probably made him more trustworthy.

  • @lesfeckingo
    @lesfeckingo Před 4 lety +71

    *“Makes you feel positive, lowers your inhibitions and just gives you more confidence”*
    So it’s alcohol, Felix Felicis is just alcohol. It just gives you liquid courage.

  • @emmab4587
    @emmab4587 Před 7 lety +224

    Slughorn might have kept some liquid luck with him. Being chased by death eaters and constantly escaping is no easy task.

    • @thatyoutubechannel9953
      @thatyoutubechannel9953 Před 7 lety +10

      SketchNI He may just haul it around. Hermione has a huge ass place inside her purse. At the big quidditch games, the tents were entire houses.

    • @19TheFallen
      @19TheFallen Před 7 lety +4

      There's also the inside of Newt Scamander's briefcase to be taken into account....Multiple spacious areas and enclosures for the various creatures contained inside, all magically created to suit the needs of the creatures in them while retaining the look and weight of just your average briefcase.....Hauling around a cauldron full of potion in a flask magically enchanted to be the size/dimension of a cauldron on the inside while magically retaining its normal size and weight on the outside.....CHILD'S PLAY, in comparison!

    • @JulianVJacobs
      @JulianVJacobs Před 7 lety

      ER Bram what I said yass

    • @kittykat1723
      @kittykat1723 Před 6 lety

      But slughorn also brewed all of those other potions as well. Polyjuice potion, and the love potion. Why would he need a love potion

  • @headlessguy98
    @headlessguy98 Před 5 lety +585

    Snape probably did use it though, on the day he died. Voldemort still thought of him as a good servant, so why would he subject Snape to a painful snake bite death instead of killing him instantly? Why didn't he have the snake then eat him? Why would Harry remove the cloak? Snape got very lucky that he was able to give Harry his memories. And at that point he had nothing to live for, and probably wanted death so that's why the potion didn't save him.

    • @heroo234
      @heroo234 Před 5 lety +62

      this is actually a nice theory

    • @oliverlisker8402
      @oliverlisker8402 Před 5 lety +50

      If you think about it, that makes a lot of sense and explains a couple of plotholes

    • @kawaiiconcept7479
      @kawaiiconcept7479 Před 5 lety +12

      I love this

    • @OptimusPhillip
      @OptimusPhillip Před 5 lety +27

      Reminds me of the Seamus theory that Aberforth slipped the trio some Felix

    • @4orce4u
      @4orce4u Před 4 lety +19

      Well nice
      But why it did not save him
      Because he did want it
      So that he can get the forgiveness from Harry and feel peace while having the chance to see Lily and offer her what he did for Harry to forgive him

  • @amokriinprolgiid3409
    @amokriinprolgiid3409 Před 5 lety +509

    I still think Harry just deciding to go to Hagrid's and happening to run into Slughorn as he was stealing leaves, rather than where he was supposed to be, was a stretch to just be a placebo. That part was definitely some luck.

    • @HyperLexus
      @HyperLexus Před 4 lety +8

      well slughorn did brew the potion and wanted to gain harry as a friend. So maybe he was there because he knew Harry would believe it to be luck, but rather slughorn just went there knowing he would give away his memories

    • @centrifugedestroyer2579
      @centrifugedestroyer2579 Před 4 lety +16

      @@HyperLexus That makes sense. I bet he wanted to get it off his chest for a long time, but couldn't just do it without forming a bond first. I think this is partly why he agreed to treach at Hogwards. He only agreed because deep down he was tired of running from it too. He was propably subtlety reaching out to Harry he whole time as well and knew about his mission too.

    • @jayvonpryor1956
      @jayvonpryor1956 Před 4 lety +12

      @@HyperLexus slughorn wouldnt have known when harry took the potion. even slughorn knew what day harry took the potion then slughorn still would not know where harry would be

    • @FabricatedPheonix
      @FabricatedPheonix Před 4 lety +7

      HyperLexus That’s cool and all, but slughorn wouldn’t have known when he took it. He just happened to be in the right place at the right time, which seems too coincidental

    • @Clara_Page
      @Clara_Page Před 4 lety +9

      I suspect that the potion probably boosts intuition a bit in order to help the drinker to have convenient encounters and dodge spells more easily ect but that it is mostly mystery & placebo with a bit of a happiness and intuition boost thrown in to help the drinker experience "Good luck"

  • @bigghae9553
    @bigghae9553 Před 4 lety +179

    You cant ignore how the book explains it though
    Harry was hearing and following a voice different from his own that guided him in the absolute right directions that night
    So on top of giving you a mood boost it tells you the most logical and correct actions to take

    • @gur262
      @gur262 Před 4 lety +3

      It really... Well. Guess comments would be boring if he split into an insanely sceptical and not so much view. Maybe harpies are so rare and dangerous and breed so slow, there can't be much of the stuff. Like killing 30pandas for one Portion of everything cure. +maybe because nobody took it all that much or regularly, theres worse side effects or it wears off or you deal with a stream of less severe but constant bad luck for a while . Could be alot.

    • @Jonathan-A.C.
      @Jonathan-A.C. Před rokem +11

      Perhaps it was actually just his own, or a different voice, but he was just imagining it to be real.
      That's not to say it inherently is true or not, just to posit a possible counter

    • @MrPrideHyde
      @MrPrideHyde Před 10 měsíci +5

      What if the actual effects of the potion were just that, making people to do and try stuff they'd never do under normal circumstances. Assuming anyone with the potion would be saving it to use in the most difficult day of their life, and by drinking it they just throw all the stress off of themselves and come up with many creative ideas. In other words, bolsters one's mental abilities (concentration and focus) and also their belief in themselves (as mentioned earlier).

    • @C.C.369
      @C.C.369 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Ever heard about the voice of intuition? - which is clearest when you don't doubt yourself constantly (which you don't when you assume that you're the luckiest for now)

  • @WanderingRagabond
    @WanderingRagabond Před 7 lety +1032

    I'm not convinced, because in the books it's stated that while under the effect of Felix Felicis, Harry seemed to just KNOW small things to do that would lead to the ideal outcome. I'm betting less on a Placebo effect (which was what happened to Ron) and more of an artificial boost to a wizard or witch's Divination ability. We know it's a really inexact magical discipline, and it seems to just work for magic folk who have a natural affinity for it, and even then it doesn't work exactly when they want it to. Hence Prof. Trelawney.
    What I think Felix Felicis does is amplifying a wizard's sensitivity to possibilities of the future. You know what small actions will have what changes in the future, even if you can't fully process or see it all clearly. In addition to that, maybe the potion gives you an autonomous mental guide, which sifts through this myriad of future possibilities and finds the shortest path to your goal, giving you "hunches" of what to do to make sure that future comes to pass. How else would Harry know that somehow visiting Hagrid would lead him to getting the info he wanted out of Slughorn?
    Of course, this doesn't mean it's an all-powerful potion, because for one, you can't see all these future possibilities clearly, you're just told in your subconscious that doing this seemingly unrelated thing will help. Secondly, the potion would never be able to let you do something objectively impossible. It might end up either not working for you at all if your goal is completely out of your reach, or just veer you into a route that leads you to realize the futility of your endeavor in a less painful manner.
    And then comes the fact that if you ingest it too much, you'll have some wonky and permanent side-effects, which one would expect from having their "future sensitivity" fully open so often. It would mess up with your mind horribly, so definitely choose the times to use it carefully.
    Just my theory, though. Whatcha think?

    • @lr7845
      @lr7845 Před 7 lety +20

      WarmageRagnar Nice theory. I agree

    • @rosswinchester4367
      @rosswinchester4367 Před 7 lety +23

      I think this is a very interesting and insightful take and definitely a plausible theory.

    • @EvanMorgan0
      @EvanMorgan0 Před 7 lety +9

      my thoughts exactly, well said

    • @miimiimullen7373
      @miimiimullen7373 Před 7 lety +15

      WarmageRagnar hmm I really like this theory! my theory was either it is just nothing or its alcohol. BUT this is a ton better!!!

    • @snaggerdoodle4303
      @snaggerdoodle4303 Před 7 lety +3

      That's along the lines of my thoughts

  • @winnieye5017
    @winnieye5017 Před 7 lety +5632

    Just use Felix Felicis to brew Felix Felicis.

    • @dwijv8750
      @dwijv8750 Před 7 lety +189

      For everyday during the six months?

    • @isaacs8783
      @isaacs8783 Před 7 lety +58

      Dwij Vasisth bollocks, go and ruin it

    • @amzomolhic
      @amzomolhic Před 7 lety +8

      nice

    • @johnp-g9892
      @johnp-g9892 Před 7 lety +14

      Jan Janssen LOL! I really love channels like this because they read my name!

    • @pewpew1645
      @pewpew1645 Před 7 lety +114

      Felix feliception

  • @survivordave
    @survivordave Před 4 lety +396

    I always assumed that Slughorn hadn't actually just finished brewing the Felix Felicis when the kids walked in. I figured he just took some he already had in stock, threw it in a caldron and heated it up.
    While I do think the placebo effect could have something to do with it, there's also the fact that wizards can do unintentional magic that comes at opportune times. Neville bounced when he was dropped out a window. Harry ended up jumping on the roof when Dudley was after him. Maybe Felix Felicis doesn't affect probability (grant luck) so much as allow the wizard's own innate unconscious magic to work more powerfully and more frequently.

  • @alexross1816
    @alexross1816 Před 4 lety +185

    My reasoning as to how Slughorn had some on him:
    He was trying to avoid Death Eaters before Dumbledore stepped in.
    The Liquid Luck was in case he was found and needed something to escape and evade the Death Eaters.
    After Dumbledore reinstated him as Potions Master, he had no further use (since he was in the safest place in Britain) for it and figured he'd offer it as a reward.
    This is assuming, of course, that Felix Felicis is an actual potion and not a placebo.

    • @virgilmcmath6363
      @virgilmcmath6363 Před 4 lety +5

      can we just put supposedly next to safest place
      because all the books/movies point to the opposite being fact

    • @Zenith_682
      @Zenith_682 Před 4 lety

      But why would he have some on stock. He wouldn’t have known Voldemort would come back. He had some in his youth and that was it. He would be brewing some for no reason

    • @Abysalss
      @Abysalss Před 4 lety +4

      Matthew Wu he was already aware of it and has been paranoid about Voldemort for years already

    • @Sonny_little_things
      @Sonny_little_things Před 3 lety +1

      Safest place in Scotland.

    • @10503.
      @10503. Před 3 lety

      Matthew Wu I think dumbledore anticipated Voldemort returning and warned slughorn

  • @kelliehorn1082
    @kelliehorn1082 Před 7 lety +517

    "I'm addicted to placebos. I could quit, but it wouldn't matter." --Steven Wright

  • @mischievousone9999
    @mischievousone9999 Před 6 lety +772

    In response to Snape's bad luck, we are told that if brewed improperly, the effects can prove disastrous. So what if a potions student who is constantly improving recipes decides to mess around with the luck potion, confident he knows better than the one who made the original recipe,and it goes horribly wrong? So wrong in fact that his luck was changed forever for the worst?

    • @itsmelive
      @itsmelive Před 6 lety +67

      Ohhh i really like this. Whether the theory that Felix is simply enhancing the drinkers intuition and decreasing inhibition is true or if the potion truly alters things to the drinkers needs (which seems more complex - like what if 2 people with conflicting interests take it at the same time???), Snape's misfortune could definitely be influenced by a bad attempt at it. As a teenager we know from HBP he's extremely gifted to the point of correcting the textbooks. What if, in an attempt to finally defeat James Potter and his gang and win back Lily Evans and overturn what he saw as a life of misfortune, he brewed the potion wrong and his luck went from bad to worse when he let Lily slip away and turned over half heard information that lead to her death until finally he then misjudged Voldemort's next move to get the elder wand and ended up dead because of it. Either the bad potion or bad attempt made his intuition even worse and made him even more inhibited (meaning he is rarely happy and is always self conscious, which I think is in keeping with his characterizations), or it really just made the situations touching snape go badly for him through some kind of negative magical aura he had bc of the bad Felix.

    • @mischievousone9999
      @mischievousone9999 Před 6 lety +39

      Olivia Raney that's exactly the wave length I had in mind. I personally have no sympathy for Snape. I understand why he does what he does, but we are all accountable for the choices we make, and in regards to Lily Evans, he doesn't love her, he obsesses. But I digress. Anyhow yes the idea that his bad luck is worsened by the fudged luck potion makes a lot of sense.

    • @akshataprasad7704
      @akshataprasad7704 Před 6 lety +25

      This is the most plausible explanation . That Snape would have wanted to charm Lilly and he would have brewed it only to show off his skills and test his ability to make the portions the way he wants it . And it turned out to be very bad and that is when Snape realized that his overconfidence in his ability is stupid and dangerous this may be the reason why he works harder.

    • @aerobicphobic9857
      @aerobicphobic9857 Před 5 lety +1

      That is a very convincing argument

    • @aerobicphobic9857
      @aerobicphobic9857 Před 5 lety +6

      @@mischievousone9999 Snape saves the story couldnt u have at least A LITTLE sypathy for him?

  • @jordanp3000
    @jordanp3000 Před 4 lety +246

    Slughorn is a potions master that has stocks of everything he needs. He probably started brewing the potion when the death eaters started looking for him. He probably thought he would need it soon. Also, Slughorn was a potions master who took pride in how good he was. I do not believe that he would waste his time making a potion that doesn't actually do anything. We need to remember that magic isn't an item; it is more of like a "Being" who is all knowing, but doesn't, or can't, control how things should go. Liquid Luck is almost like a potion that lets magic control the situation. It takes what the drinker wants most and makes it happen. Harry needed the memory, but had no idea how to make it happen. Magic knew and when Harry drank the potion, Magic took control of the situation. Harry mentioned many times that "felix" was urging him to do things and even made it so he could perform spells that he couldn't do before. Also, when magic took control after Harry's friends took the rest of the potion, it made it so the death eaters spells could not hit them. Because that it was they wanted most. And that was their "Luck."

    • @beathewanderer7418
      @beathewanderer7418 Před 4 lety +7

      So a magical maual override of the situation?

    • @eduardof7322
      @eduardof7322 Před 4 lety +6

      @@beathewanderer7418 More like a magical autopilot.

    • @carterdc3576
      @carterdc3576 Před 3 lety +8

      Expect that Harry could do the magic, he was just confident from the Felix that he could do it then and there, even when he didn’t practice the spell. If the potion was a placebo, then it makes sense that the “Felix” telling him what to do was just Harry’s mind. It’s just like with Ron where he just needed to believe he could be a good Keeper and his actual ability carried him the rest of the way. If Felix actually worked, it still wouldn’t change the magical capabilities of Harry.
      The other two points are solid though, especially the fact that the DA wasn’t hit by any of the Death Eaters curse, even though one of the Death Eaters died from one.

    • @10503.
      @10503. Před 3 lety +8

      I think this is mostly true but the magic in this situation is simply guiding very slightly, like getting a tiny hint in a puzzle that allowed you to completely solve it

    • @blue-eyeswhitekirbo2543
      @blue-eyeswhitekirbo2543 Před 3 lety +7

      @@10503. wasn’t it in the book that Felix felicies essentially guides you to the circumstances that could already happen? It’s why Hermione told Harry it was pointless to try to use it to get into the room of requirement because Harry even with extreme luck would never figure it out normally.

  • @Sakaralchini
    @Sakaralchini Před 2 lety +24

    I have two problems with this theory: On the one hand when Harry takes Felix most things can be explained with regular luck and confidence but not the fact that Filch forgot to close the main gate. Filch is the one character who would never forget something that important. On the other hand you said that Snape would not be a believer in the effects of the potion. The problem is that they read his textbook about this specific potion and there is no mention of him writing something about it being useless. When it comes to antivenoms for example he straight up crosses things out and says to just use a bezoar. I would imagine him to cross out the whole recipe for Felix and write 'does not work, don't bother. Made me said when I tried to ask Lily out while using it.'

  • @Matthew_Baratheon
    @Matthew_Baratheon Před 6 lety +1053

    You know what bothers me the most about The Half Blood Prince? Everyone who is using the official text book basically fails, except for Harry who is using Snape's book, from when Snape was a teenager. This means that a Teenage Snape was better at potions than the writer of the text book. Isn't that a bit odd? Like, why on earth would they keep using the same book after Snape becomes a potion teacher? Why wouldn't he be like." Oh no these instructions are rubbish. Do exactly as I say." or write his own version? Boggles the mind.

    • @takatamiyagawa5688
      @takatamiyagawa5688 Před 6 lety +126

      Perhaps Snape would have selected a more modern textbook if he had still been in charge of potions. Reminds me of high school chemistry a bit: The instructions said to slowly add a small amount of each reagent to the test tube, then tap it to mix them. For me, quickly squirting the second reagent into the test tube caused them to mix much more thoroughly.

    • @Matthew_Baratheon
      @Matthew_Baratheon Před 6 lety +60

      The fact that they had the extra copies on hand made me think that maybe those were the traditional textbooks for that class.

    • @SeleneDethly
      @SeleneDethly Před 6 lety +208

      Its been awhile since I read the books, but I felt that this was the book Slughorn specifically choose for the class, the one he knows and used to teach from. Snape probably used different ones, but he also seems to be a much more 'hands on' teacher in the he explains and shows the potions rather then just relying on a book; probably because he knew the book his Potions master used (Slughorn) was practically useless. Slughorn seemed to just be content to let the students brew from the book and let that be that, Snape always seemed like he was moving around the class watching what they were doing and commenting on it. Again, I could be miss remembering things, but this is how I remember it.

    • @MegaKhelditia
      @MegaKhelditia Před 6 lety +221

      I remember that he *always* wrote the instructions on the board, that taking out the textbooks was rarely necessary. Presumably, he was writing the better versions, but he never wrote his own textbook.

    • @surirampersad8711
      @surirampersad8711 Před 6 lety +54

      Voldy's Book Shop: Author of The Week:
      SEVERUS SNAPE, FOR HIS POTIONS TIPS FROM WHEN HE WAS A TEEN, THAT SMART MAN.
      Snape: Sorry Voldy, I'm still in love with a member of the Order of the Phoenix, you still wanna hire me now?
      Bellatrix: So much for my novel: HOW TO KILL YOUR SISTER'S FAMILY.

  • @Rose-nc1ps
    @Rose-nc1ps Před 7 lety +447

    So, it's not so much liquid luck as it is liquid confidence. So it's alcohol.

    • @chillsahoy2640
      @chillsahoy2640 Před 7 lety +81

      That actually makes sense. It's not as obvious in the book but in the movie it looks like Harry is slightly tipsy or high. Just enough to lower his inhibitions and help him take risks.

    • @anthonym28
      @anthonym28 Před 7 lety +31

      Mi S Ever since I saw that liquid luck scene in The Half-Blood Prince, I've been saying "that's vodka. Harry just took a shot of vodka".

    • @matthewpomes952
      @matthewpomes952 Před 7 lety +6

      That also explains the dangers of overuse: alcohol addiction / getting drunk.

    • @CWGminer
      @CWGminer Před 7 lety

      so wizard whiskey or something?

    • @jutjubow
      @jutjubow Před 5 lety

      Curiously enough, Daniel Radcliffe was little bit tipsy while filming that. He confessed to his problem with alcohol during that time.

  • @imperfectisperfect9630
    @imperfectisperfect9630 Před 4 lety +46

    You could also argue that it's a literally magical version of the placebo effect. The drinker may be preforming accidental magic to alter their situation without even realizing it, that could be what the potion does.

  • @tangosimons8903
    @tangosimons8903 Před 4 lety +20

    i think that the reason snape doesn's use it is because he is constantly blocking out voldemorts mind invading/reading magic. perhaps felix felicis lets that guard down and then voldemort would know of snape's double agent thingy.

  • @________dQw4w9WgXcQ
    @________dQw4w9WgXcQ Před 7 lety +1409

    i bet snape tried to make liquid luck, but failed and cursed his whole life

    • @isaacs8783
      @isaacs8783 Před 7 lety +46

      Austin Brancheau that's good. Really good

    • @jak9926
      @jak9926 Před 7 lety +3

      Austin Brancheau
      YES YES YESN

    • @nihashinag238
      @nihashinag238 Před 7 lety +5

      great Idea but I think Liquid Luck is fake and is just water with rare stuff for taste and has a spell under it

    • @sampaige9468
      @sampaige9468 Před 7 lety +42

      My thoughts exactly! I bet as a young student with a horrible home life he heard about this potion and tried to make it failing miserably (like Hermione with her first dose of polyjuice potion.) So from then on he studies every aspect, every ingredient in potions to make them better and more effective and less likely to get messed up (hence the textbook notes.) However he's never able to reverse the effects of the poorly made Felix Felices. My new headcanon right here.

    • @sesshomaruslover1
      @sesshomaruslover1 Před 7 lety +15

      or maybe he did make it and over used it causing something really bad to happen so he vowed to never use it again

  • @christadros6600
    @christadros6600 Před 7 lety +1016

    If only I had liquid luck to help with finals and AP tests!!

    • @TheCobCAP
      @TheCobCAP Před 7 lety +9

      AP exams in 2 weeks!

    • @haileyfong6705
      @haileyfong6705 Před 7 lety +8

      The SATS too!

    • @jaybae1539
      @jaybae1539 Před 7 lety

      Chris Tadros and if you live in New Jersey and I think Massachusetts(?) PARCC tests.

    • @heyitzmae
      @heyitzmae Před 7 lety +3

      Like he said, try the Placebo Effect. Give them a glass of allergy medication or something an say that it's some kind of miracle drug that brings out your genius side.

    • @CheshireCat-cm1si
      @CheshireCat-cm1si Před 7 lety +3

      Or, try giving them a glass of water, add a mix of sugar and lemon juice (mixed beforehand) and rescue them that the powder is some recently-discovered herb that increases memory. Then, make them study. They will think it's real and their studying will be twice as effective.

  • @karthikayanedathodathu1337
    @karthikayanedathodathu1337 Před 4 lety +83

    11:08
    But harry does take a detour while going to Hagrid's where he finds slughorn.....he was getting some leaves(can't remember which) for his potion classes and harry had no idea he would be there.
    Sooo Felix did do something
    Also harry bumbs into Ginny at the potriate hole...which causes her to break up with Dean... Which he did not do intentionally and wanted for a long time
    Coincidence??I think not

    • @forrestlukea.5066
      @forrestlukea.5066 Před 4 lety +6

      I'm happy you mentioned the Ginny thing. Definitely not placebo

    • @danielc7581
      @danielc7581 Před 4 lety +11

      He also makes Ron and whatsherface break up (also not planned). The front door left open by Filch...with tightened security...after 2 students already almost died...
      It's an interesting theory and all, but doesn't really hold.

    • @karthikayanedathodathu1337
      @karthikayanedathodathu1337 Před 4 lety +1

      @@danielc7581 exactly

    • @najminajay
      @najminajay Před 3 lety +2

      I thought slughorn was in the herbology greenhouses stealing pods or seeds from Sprouts venomous tentaculas, which are highly regulated by the ministry. Then he realizes Harry is going to see hagrid for aragogs funeral and seized the chance to milk the giant dead spider for some extra cash.

    • @karthikayanedathodathu1337
      @karthikayanedathodathu1337 Před 3 lety +3

      @@najminajay in the movies he was stealing but in the books he was with professor sprout getting the leaves for his third year potion students.

  • @imaginarycorgi7312
    @imaginarycorgi7312 Před 5 lety +136

    Slughorn is a collector of rare ingredients, that may also include potions of a rare variety.
    And the potion’s effect on Harry debunks the Placebo theory.

    • @riripari2042
      @riripari2042 Před 5 lety +13

      I don't think it's a simple placebo, but rather it lowers your inhibitions. There's a TV show called Legacies that's focuses on a school of supernatural children and their various adventures. In one episode they had to deal with mind controlling parasites that lowered the inhibitions of the victims, making them bold, really happy risk takers. The victims did things that they usually wouldn't do. A shy girl showed up her more popular sister at their talent show and surprisingly hit on her ex, explaining that she was tired of taking care of others and wanted to do something for herself for once. Lowered inhibitions lead to people acting out and doing risky things without caring at the moment which is precisely what Ron and later on Harry did.

    • @SeraphimCramer
      @SeraphimCramer Před 4 lety +15

      Actually, the way it affects Harry is very solid evidence _for_ this theory because when Ron was placeboed into thinking he'd taken it, the effects were _exactly_ the same to the point that Ron could perfectly describe what it felt like to be under its influence.

    • @matthewpippin2502
      @matthewpippin2502 Před 4 lety +7

      @@SeraphimCramer That's a very far stretch. Ron gives a very basic overview of his perceived effect, the same as you or I would haven never taken it but believing we know what it does. The effect it has on Harry is described very thoroughly and specifically.

    • @mikechaves1592
      @mikechaves1592 Před 4 lety +3

      Liquid courage. Aka liquor...

    • @gabegabe921
      @gabegabe921 Před 4 lety +3

      @@SeraphimCramer that's because Ron had the talent he was just lacking self confidence where as Harry headed to hagrids instead of where slughorn was supposed to be therefore finding slughorn where he never would have and got the memory from him

  • @seanyb5289
    @seanyb5289 Před 7 lety +762

    It's vodka mate

  • @rat8134
    @rat8134 Před 7 lety +243

    Conclusion: Felix Felicis is just straight up alcohol

  • @richterman3962
    @richterman3962 Před 5 lety +77

    Makes u wonder who discovers these potions and the science behind discovering them., especially if it takes 6.months

    • @Mrcreeperdead
      @Mrcreeperdead Před 5 lety +17

      crackheads looking for selfmade drugs to give it a shot

    • @kittenlove1471
      @kittenlove1471 Před 4 lety +1

      Damon Richter 8 months

    • @GaladorLP
      @GaladorLP Před 4 lety +8

      Well look at muggle drugs. Like LSD is also increadibly hard to make, but Hoffman still manifactured it

    • @Doctor_Straing_Strange
      @Doctor_Straing_Strange Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah, like the first person to brew it KNEW what it was going to be: a luck potion. Because they used "felixempra" in the process. How do you know which ingredients to choose and all?

    • @eduardof7322
      @eduardof7322 Před 4 lety +1

      According to the Wiki, it was created by Zygmunt Budge, a crazy, eccentric and hermit master of potions of the XVI Century who isolated himself his whole life on a remote Island in the Northern Sea to master the art of potions and developed some of the most powerful and demanding potions ever made. So, I guess, he had plenty of time to create something like that.

  • @cassondrajanson6401
    @cassondrajanson6401 Před 4 lety +14

    Felix Felicis is like a “phantom curse”. The thought of a curse or ghost makes everything you see or hear prof of the curse or ghost. It’s also like when you learn a new word and you start to hear it everywhere. It’s because you notice certain things more.

  • @scottycubes9589
    @scottycubes9589 Před 7 lety +254

    Hey brother!
    I think you missed a trick by not talking about how Snape clearly made this potion. His textbook shows that he must have attempted it many times in order to allow him to refine the method. This would have fitted well into how a young Snape would have desired liquid luck so much that he would try and make it, and then re-try with his potions expertise helping it work better! Also if there was one time in Snapes life when he would ever have wanted luck it would have been when he was so desperate that he went to ask Dumbledore for help. If he had any way of using liquid luck he most definitely would have the night Lilly Potter died. This could be why he no longer believes in Felix, because it failed him when he needed luck the most.

    • @synaptotagmin69
      @synaptotagmin69 Před 7 lety +7

      Thats a genuinely sweet and heartbreaking theory but sorry when do we find out about him trying to make Felix. As far as I remember we never learn anything about the page about Felix Felicis in the textbook of the Halfbloodprince. Where was it?

    • @aditzyp9552
      @aditzyp9552 Před 7 lety +14

      Toby lerone actually he refines the draft of living death not Felix felices

    • @lizzie4972
      @lizzie4972 Před 7 lety

      Aditi Devnath He does it for almost every potion in the book

    • @scottycubes9589
      @scottycubes9589 Před 7 lety +3

      You spotted my deliberate mistake . . . . I got carried away and did think in my head that it was felix that he had refined in the book.
      But even without this crucial piece of evidence I still believe my theory has some merit.

    • @lizzie4972
      @lizzie4972 Před 7 lety +2

      Toby lerone He refined almost every potion in the book remember? That's how Harry did so well in potions unless it wasn't actually in that particular year's curriculum and wasn't in the book at all

  • @Uaithne
    @Uaithne Před 7 lety +115

    We can easly explain WHY Snape didn't use Felix Felicis. Just think about Tom Riddle Jr. and his mother - the witch who used Love Potion to make Tom Riddle Sr. love her. What did that do? Gave born to the greatest dark wizard in those times. If Snape used Felix Felicis to make Lilly love him, it could have really bad concequences - maybe even the death of James? This is bad, not like Ginny breaking up with her ex-boyfriend to make it with Harry. There were many times said that if you use magic to only get good stuff from that, while you are harming people, it's gonna bounce back on you - mostly works with overusing black magic, but still...

    • @jjrulez1596
      @jjrulez1596 Před 7 lety +13

      mrokpolnocy mabye snape tryed to brew felix felicis once and messed up and that's why alot of things seem to go wrong for him?

    • @Uaithne
      @Uaithne Před 7 lety +4

      That's may be an option as well.

  • @ruhaanaggarwal1474
    @ruhaanaggarwal1474 Před 3 lety +21

    Slughorn tells why dont they take it all the time
    "Why don't people drink it all the time, sir?" said Terry Boot eagerly.
    "Because if taken in excess, it causes giddiness, recklessness, and
    dangerous overconfidence," said Slughorn. "Too much of a good thing, you
    know. . . highly toxic in large quantities. But taken sparingly, and very
    occasionally . . ."

  • @aa-bm9ln
    @aa-bm9ln Před 4 lety +32

    9:30 Well he could've made it many years ago and just kept a bottle of it (or even more) just for special events!

    • @fremzzplum5083
      @fremzzplum5083 Před 4 lety

      Just what I was thinking!!!

    • @MohamedIbrahim-uc9bz
      @MohamedIbrahim-uc9bz Před 4 lety +2

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe it was still brewing when Harry sees it for the first time.

  • @jenniferclaus7811
    @jenniferclaus7811 Před 7 lety +196

    "Are you sure they're not drinking tequila?" Lmao 😂😂

    • @twisharma26
      @twisharma26 Před 7 lety

      Jennifer Claus i

    • @Norsto5194
      @Norsto5194 Před 6 lety

      Do it right w/ Twisha Great comment, really intuitive.

  • @flamenadoozjack8581
    @flamenadoozjack8581 Před 7 lety +770

    I was watching this video and suddenly realized that Felix Felicis is called liqiud luck, not liquid good luck so it could actually be a 50/50 chance on being good or bad luck so that might be why Snape seemed to have bad luck

    • @warlock7749
      @warlock7749 Před 7 lety +46

      Flamenado ozjack Gooooood point....

    • @eriks1765
      @eriks1765 Před 7 lety +48

      Flamenado ozjack maybe he unknowingly messed up making felix felicis and it gave him permanent bad luck

    • @bleptomaniac
      @bleptomaniac Před 6 lety +4

      Um did u guys even watch the video? it dose nothing.

    • @melodycampbell6204
      @melodycampbell6204 Před 6 lety +2

      Maybe genetic?!

    • @melodycampbell6204
      @melodycampbell6204 Před 6 lety +6

      Erik S DO YOU KNOW SNAPE?!??!

  • @jaimemassa4085
    @jaimemassa4085 Před 4 lety +30

    I’ve always had the same issue with Time Turners. Would come in handy for basically everyone wouldn’t it.

    • @shruthilakshmi7090
      @shruthilakshmi7090 Před 4 lety +5

      Well, that's not the case for the time turners in the wizarding world, right... you can't actually change anything unless it already is gonna end that way so...

    • @shruthilakshmi7090
      @shruthilakshmi7090 Před 4 lety +4

      @@acommunistcrab3366 yea but it's not exactly changing anything. It's just...helping things to happen the same way it did. You couldn't have went back and saved james & lily from dying even if it was yesterday cuz, that's exactly what was supposed to happen.....

    • @darksavant3571
      @darksavant3571 Před 4 lety +3

      The issue here is that a pardox is formed. If, it is the first time these events take place. Then how did he survive to same himself later? For example, when the dementors were about to eat Harry's soul, the *first* time it happens, it would have never happened before. And such he would have died there, unable to save himself because be would not have been able to get out of the situation without help. As such, we have to make the assumption that time is preordained. That it *always* happens the same way. Because if it is not then the movie as depicted never would have happened.

    • @shivshetty3045
      @shivshetty3045 Před 4 lety

      @@shruthilakshmi7090 but u can. Hermione says to make sure they aren't seen because that could change everything

    • @MatiasJaruf
      @MatiasJaruf Před 4 lety +4

      Acording to J.K about time travel, when some wizards discovered time travel, they sent a witch a few centuries to the past and they didn't know how to get her back. She spent like a week or so in the past and when she returned, she aged rapidly and died, at least 25 wizards, all decendants of people she met in the past, vanished, the next thursday was two and a half day long and the next tuesday only lasted four hours. That's when they discovered the dangers about playing with the fabric of time. Since then, time-turners can only be handeled by Unspeakables and you can only go back in time 24 hours top or something like that, I don't remember all the exact details but it's something like that, so you can change things, and you can also break time. That's why they have so many laws about it and that's why it's so strange that they give one to a third year student

  • @jacksonrocks4259
    @jacksonrocks4259 Před 5 lety +42

    Harry explained in the book that he had a voice in his head like an omniscient being

  • @ash-bob3398
    @ash-bob3398 Před 6 lety +353

    I think we underestimate how difficult most of the advanced magic that we see performed in the books is to most of the magical population. That could account for why people don't often make this potion, if ever. I think slughorn probably had liquid luck on hand in the event he needed to escape from the death eaters who were looking for him. But then he came to Hogwarts and realized he no longer needed it and so he gives it as a prize. As far as why Snape never used this potion, it's very possible that he did. The fact that he was able to surrender himself to Dumbledore and not get ANY punishment from the ministry of magic is astounding, particularly when we see that the ministry is quick to turn on people to gain positive press and appear like they're "doing something."
    Also, this is a world where children possess the power to perform magical spells, so I don't think a potion that gives you good luck is far fetched at all.

    • @Morgan-bz7du
      @Morgan-bz7du Před 6 lety +12

      Ashley Boban i'm not sure what to believe, but both of you make compelling arguments...

    • @JotaC
      @JotaC Před 6 lety +15

      Yes, you're right, he simply ignored the most important point in the video, that luck isn't really having everything perfect, the potion makes you know stuff and predict what will happen, nothing that something non-magical could do. That "it really does nothing" twist is just a stupid overused plot device that I really don't believe JK would use

    • @VANhasVOICE
      @VANhasVOICE Před 6 lety

      Yeah, especially with magic world being in a nasty mystery-decay.

    • @Hy-Brasil
      @Hy-Brasil Před 6 lety +9

      i caught that too. they're turning animals into dishes and producing snakes from the ends of their wands.... but liquid luck is a placebo? lol
      okay sure..... I'll bite.
      IF it's a placebo then all it does is force you to use deductive reasoning and cause and effect. Most average people can't really do this anyway but in those moments when they do they call it luck...
      And if it isn't a placebo and actually works then MAYBE that horse radish and thyme just cleared their senses and allowed them to think clearly (there are real medicinal qualities in herbs after all...)

    • @truekurayami
      @truekurayami Před 6 lety

      Here is one possible case, as far as a true "luck" potion it could very well be a placebo with what people normally consider to be luck in how it affects their lives, but it very well could be a psychic stimulant(mental not physical) the brings out the needed mental qualities for "good luck" when made right but if made wrong at the same potency could do the same for "bad luck" while making it wrong by not getting the potency right could have diminished effects that may make it seem like it doesn't do anything.

  • @Hanzatre
    @Hanzatre Před 7 lety +188

    "It makes you feel more positive, lowers your inhibitions and just gives you more confidence."
    - Felix Felicis is alcohol.

    • @ubbafire
      @ubbafire Před 7 lety +4

      yeah exactly, and considering alcohol is sometimes referred to as liquid luck, its pretty obvious

    • @grant1770
      @grant1770 Před 7 lety +2

      Ya, alcohol must be "liquid luck" says all the drunk drivers

    • @minnie7453
      @minnie7453 Před 7 lety +4

      Grant Hazen Too much and you may act recklessly and dangerously. Felix felicis = alcohol.

    • @robynullman4856
      @robynullman4856 Před 7 lety +2

      Felix Felicis I didn't think was supposed to lower inhibitions, it's supposed to heighten them to do what is best...?

    • @dav9104
      @dav9104 Před 7 lety +2

      alcohol also need more time brewing it

  • @kirksimmons8184
    @kirksimmons8184 Před 3 lety +3

    personally i think it magically enhances a persons natural intuition. if you look at the times that the potion is used in the books its like the people who are under its influence are just more aware of their surroundings and able to react a little better without really being consciously aware why. And when it came to Ron's placebo potion, he was clearly always capable of performing at that level as Harry had seen, but lacked the self confidence.

  • @themrme4031
    @themrme4031 Před 4 lety +52

    You debunked your own reasoning. Slughorn is exactly the kind of person who would always have some ready in case of emergency. Also Harrys confidence tends to be what makes him bad at diplomacy cool theory though.

  • @SuperCarlinBrothers
    @SuperCarlinBrothers  Před 7 lety +1021

    So what do you think.. does Felix Felicis do anything?

    • @firecrown1482
      @firecrown1482 Před 7 lety +28

      SuperCarlinBrothers Seeing the evidence, nope.

    • @friskdragongaming2310
      @friskdragongaming2310 Před 7 lety +7

      SuperCarlinBrothers I wish it did, but nope :/

    • @ssfilms9122
      @ssfilms9122 Před 7 lety +10

      SuperCarlinBrothers no idea cuz when Harry does it it seems to work buuut it does also werks for Ron but he doesn't have any! Sooooo I don't know

    • @iskhan0808
      @iskhan0808 Před 7 lety +7

      SuperCarlinBrothers No I don't think so.

    • @brodysports4984
      @brodysports4984 Před 7 lety +3

      SuperCarlinBrothers after that I don't think so

  • @jeanmuco6794
    @jeanmuco6794 Před 7 lety +141

    @SuperCarlinBrothers
    I think the explanation for the luck that Ron, Hermione, and Ginny have in their battle against the death eaters under the tower can be found by looking at the seemingly ineffective ingredients of the potion. The 'burlap tentacles' in particular are said to improve one's difference against spells. To me, this is exactly the effect of the potion seen in that battle.

    • @redgeoblaze3752
      @redgeoblaze3752 Před 6 lety +1

      Jean Muco they didn't all take a sip of the potion. One of them took the potion, and they got lucky when no one got hurt.

    • @nicoloveronese5544
      @nicoloveronese5544 Před 6 lety +4

      mmh well i remember they all took the potion, at least ginny, hermione and ron did, but bill almost got killed by the werewolf soo yeah they didn't all got lucky, mabe it's like the guy said and they 3 got a magical protection. in fact they were the objective of the deatheaters because they are close to harry, so the got focused more than the others, and thanks to that ingredient the didn't got hurt, maybe the other members of the order had just luck to avoid the spells the deatheaters casted against them, it could be it. sry for my english btw :P

    • @rhlrprsd
      @rhlrprsd Před 6 lety +1

      it's murtlap

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 6 lety +6

      Except that they're not protected against spells, it's just that the spells missed them ^^'

    • @shadowkisss1958
      @shadowkisss1958 Před 6 lety +1

      lol Seamus Gormans theory was about this

  • @zoenightshade3053
    @zoenightshade3053 Před 3 lety +4

    I think of Felix Felicis as a brain stimulant. When Ron thought he had it, there were a lot of lucky things for the Gryffindors, and unlucky for the Slytherins, but no where does it say that Felix causes bad luck for someone else, and anyway, Ron hadn’t taken it. When Harry took it, the only really “lucky” thing that happened to him was that Filch left the door unlocked, but we know that Filch is a pretty forgetful guy. Slughorn was picking those leaves for third years, and if Felix was a brain stimulant, Harry would have known about those leaves from his third year potions and herbology, so would have known that Slughorn probably needed them within a day or two, and would pick them at twilight. The rest of the scene falls into place after that.

  • @CoffeeBrainzz
    @CoffeeBrainzz Před 3 lety +5

    Ron thought he was on it for one quidditch try out, Harry was under the influence for the whole day. The potion doesn’t give you a anti depressant feeling, it takes you to ‘ the right place at the right time’ situations in order to bring you a ‘perfect’ day. If anything it derives off inner instinct and possibly a little bit of clairvoyance/future sight type magic

  • @katehearley3995
    @katehearley3995 Před 7 lety +42

    This makes sense, Harry's reaction from taking the felix felicis or "liquid luck" is very simular to when he was confident in the prisoner of azkaban when he is flying bukbeek with Hermione after he realised it was him who made the pertronus! (Sorry for the bad spelling)

  • @josh.1162
    @josh.1162 Před 6 lety +170

    I believe instead of liquid luck I think it should be called liquid CONFIDENCE

    • @shruthilakshmi7090
      @shruthilakshmi7090 Před 4 lety +2

      I guess Jkr likes alliteration and was like nah nvm confidence it's just freaking luck....

    • @joaofarias9986
      @joaofarias9986 Před 4 lety +2

      @@shruthilakshmi7090 call it confidence cream, then

    • @shruthilakshmi7090
      @shruthilakshmi7090 Před 4 lety +1

      @@joaofarias9986 uhhhhhh nO bud.

    • @TheKingOfSoup
      @TheKingOfSoup Před 4 lety

      @@joaofarias9986 oh yes

    • @paulgesler3919
      @paulgesler3919 Před 4 lety

      More like liquid really is just a massive placebo effect luck

  • @rjanssafttheiii4697
    @rjanssafttheiii4697 Před 4 lety +58

    You sir, are thinking like a muggle.

    • @TwhackyAttacky
      @TwhackyAttacky Před 4 lety +5

      I agree with him, but this comment is super funny

    • @snivygreen2216
      @snivygreen2216 Před 4 lety +2

      No!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @alisonremusandlil
    @alisonremusandlil Před 4 lety

    Such a fun video! The algorithm just suggested I watch it today, and I'd actually thought about felix felicis being the placebo effect before. I really enjoyed listening to all of this logic :)

  • @MrFantocan
    @MrFantocan Před 5 lety +152

    I think this theory is very good, but it is just partially right, the placebo effect is part of it but not everything, the long time to prepare and the rare ingredients must not be just to make the person beleive it is important, besides also doing that.
    I beleive that it might actually mix hormones or chemicals in the body to make the person actually more confident and energetic, like taking cocaine, and as I would guess magic has biological parts to it so it would boost that, for exemple you get to talk to snakes if you got the right genes, so something like adrenaline rush could happen just magic wise.
    So a "Magical Adrenaline" that makes all your spells more potent and your magic senses more acurate would make sense, wich could be explained as intuition or just normal senses like smell or hearing, wich made Harry feel Hagrid needed him for Aragog's death.
    So why would Snape not use it? With his deep understanding and pride he would realise that all that you get from the potion can be achieved without it, and fear of addiction, same as people in the real world choose not to use drugs.

    • @lexrue873
      @lexrue873 Před 5 lety +6

      And he might have still used it in truly crucial moments, perhaps the night Voldemort returned...

    • @4orce4u
      @4orce4u Před 4 lety +2

      No as we all know shape want to die because of Lily death but didn't because he have Dumbledore and his bride
      But if ur loved one died then u feel ur luck died with him

    • @challengeaccepted4440
      @challengeaccepted4440 Před 4 lety +3

      this is a great theory

    • @SilverTune
      @SilverTune Před 4 lety +4

      Yes! Magic science! I love it when they can work together!

  • @GaryKetchum808
    @GaryKetchum808 Před 7 lety +495

    The answer to every Harry Potter theory question:
    Because magic.

    • @JulianVJacobs
      @JulianVJacobs Před 7 lety +3

      no, this is a potion with an easy scientific test and explanation. Felix would have the ability to manipulate probabilities to make the user's desired outcome certain. you test this by conducting a simple probability experiment.

    • @GaryKetchum808
      @GaryKetchum808 Před 7 lety +10

      .. because magic.

    • @JordanSmith-gy6gm
      @JordanSmith-gy6gm Před 7 lety +1

      Teighlour Swyftte yes!

    • @chaoticgreed
      @chaoticgreed Před 7 lety +1

      200th like

    • @rayodonnell1712
      @rayodonnell1712 Před 7 lety +1

      222nd like

  • @elanorallmann
    @elanorallmann Před 4 lety

    This theory is amazing, like all your theories always are and I totally believe that, as always!

  • @JackOfSpades12345678
    @JackOfSpades12345678 Před 5 lety +14

    So would the occamy shells be coloured silver or actual silver.
    If it is actual silver I think we'd be able to tell if someone is drinking it because here is the funny thing about silver; drink enough of the stuff and it will turn you blue.
    I'm not kidding you can look it up.

    • @torazely
      @torazely Před 4 lety

      They are actually silver. In the first Fantastic Beasts movie [spoiler if you haven't seen it] at the end Newt leaves Jacob some shells to give to the bank as collateral for a loan for his bakery.

  • @adamcarlson2192
    @adamcarlson2192 Před 6 lety +82

    "How is he doing this if he's constantly moving around and on the run?" You think the former potions master for the most prestigious school of witchcraft and wizardry in the world doesn't have a portable potions laboratory? Newt's trunk has shown us that something of the like would easily be within possibility. Not sure why he didn't just use it as his hideout, but as he himself says often, he does love his comforts.

    • @Hy-Brasil
      @Hy-Brasil Před 6 lety +2

      you still need a safe place to store that piece of luggage, otherwise it might end up in the landfill :O

    • @platostien189
      @platostien189 Před 5 lety

      Shape was brewing it. The other 2 potions take all long time also. It was for a demonstration for class. Slughorn just finished it when he took over the position. Snape most likely started it before summer vacation

  • @zackbob6
    @zackbob6 Před 7 lety +233

    Felix Felicis "makes you feel positive, lowers your inhibitions, and just gives you more confidence. But most importantly, it lets you believe that you are lucky. And then you just act accordingly." Soooo.... he's right, they're just brewing alcohol of some sort (he suggested tequila I think).

    • @patguitars1675
      @patguitars1675 Před 6 lety +2

      lol i read this while Jon was saying that part.

    • @kierabutler1739
      @kierabutler1739 Před 6 lety +1

      I saw this comment just as he said it

    • @medotaku9360
      @medotaku9360 Před 6 lety

      Sounds like cocaine to me. And we all know how that typically works out...

    • @luccaburgess
      @luccaburgess Před 6 lety

      Also, according to the book, to much of it can "make you reckless and overconfident, and can be toxic". Sound familiar?

    • @draco5991rep
      @draco5991rep Před 6 lety

      Definetly liquid cocaine or MDMA

  • @Stormkrow280
    @Stormkrow280 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The way the books describe the effects Felix Felices seems to work more as a guide, giving you instructions on where to be, what to do, and what to say in the right time and place to achieve your goal.

  • @CHSwildcats19
    @CHSwildcats19 Před 4 lety +10

    Watched this again and I just now caught that side comment, "Are we sure they're not just making tequila?" OMG, I'm dying laughing!!!! :D Good one, J

  • @leavittboyz
    @leavittboyz Před 7 lety +295

    A magical object in HP that could literally fix all of the conflicts in the series. Why does that sound familiar? *cough* Time Turner *cough*

    • @tisajokt7676
      @tisajokt7676 Před 7 lety +12

      But paaaradoxes...

    • @BaronSengir1008
      @BaronSengir1008 Před 7 lety +19

      What paradoxes? Even when using a Time Turner, it's a stable time loop, meaning that if you go back in time and do something, you had already done it before you went back in time to do it... The best example is when Harry saves himself from the dementors and then went back in time to save himself from the dementors... Also, there's the fact that when Hermione was told that she didn't show up for one of her classes, instead of just going back to take that class she started freaking out over the fact that she missed the class... This is why they couldn't just go back far enough and kill Tom Riddle as a kid and prevent the whole thing from happening, because they hadn't done so...

    • @coolreeb7361
      @coolreeb7361 Před 7 lety +4

      +BaronSengir1008 this is what I'm stuck explaining to people when they say that time Turners were too OP; but no one seems to get it

    • @zacharygilmore1075
      @zacharygilmore1075 Před 7 lety +3

      BaronSengir1008 There is a plot hole to this, though. Hermione has said that people who used the Time Turner accidentally killed their past or future selves by mistake. You couldn't kill your past self and have that be a stable time loop. That would cause a paradox. That opens up another plot hole, though. How does Hermione know that they killed their past self? It doesn't seem that time would allow that to happen. Long story short, huge paradox.

    • @coolreeb7361
      @coolreeb7361 Před 7 lety +4

      +Zachary Gilmore JK Rowling inadvertently wrote contradictory rules for Time Turners but managed to create a stable time loop in Prisoner of Azkaban

  • @dylanf8591
    @dylanf8591 Před 6 lety +187

    This theory really reminds me of the Fountain of Fair Fortune, In which there are three misfortuned witch sisters and a very unlucky knight who venture to bathe in the fountain. One sister is poor, one is weak and sick, and the other is heartbroken. After passing through trials, they make it. The sick sister collapses and the poor sister gathers herbs to make an antidote and cures her sister. She realized she can get rich off of this miricle cure and decides not to bathe in the fountain. The heartbroken sister decides not to bathe in the fountain because she realizes that she is in love with the knight. The knight bathes in the fountain and gains newfound bravery. They all live long and happy lives, the end. And at the end of the story, it is revealed to us by the narrator that the fountain's waters do nothing, and were incredibly ordinary. The original creator of the potion was probably inspired to replicate the fountain's water, but they alone knew it was a placebo and told no one else the secret.

    • @nopeg5730
      @nopeg5730 Před 5 lety +11

      The three aren't sisters. They just decided to band together, and the knight got stuck.

    • @nadyapoisac1716
      @nadyapoisac1716 Před 5 lety +5

      omg i've heard of that story! They performed it in Universal studios is orlando in harry potter world for a performance

    • @stoneflags2467
      @stoneflags2467 Před 5 lety

      Nice story, but... you spelled "miracle" wrong

    • @OptimusPhillip
      @OptimusPhillip Před 4 lety +2

      Sadly, there has been a push to ban the story from school libraries, due to its depiction of Muggle-witch marriage.

    • @tillyfoxes8778
      @tillyfoxes8778 Před 4 lety

      OptimusPhillip 😂

  • @bellarose5978
    @bellarose5978 Před 4 lety +8

    Didn't Slughorn also use it in the final battle? Maybe just to give himself more confidence but that guy seemed to always have some on him.

    • @Joe-hj1ou
      @Joe-hj1ou Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah he did you can see him drinking it in the film as well in the background of one of the scenes (deathly hallows part 2)

  • @megadude16
    @megadude16 Před rokem +1

    In the books, when Harry takes the potion, it seems less like luck or the placebo effect, and more like time and space is whispering in your ear, giving you hints on what to do

  • @Storribook
    @Storribook Před 7 lety +86

    If you think about it, you make a potion in a cauldron like they do in Potions class, but that doesn't mean it only makes one small glass bottle? I'm sure you could fill up 10, 20, maybe even more so Slughorn having the potion on the first day of class, doesn't mean it's fake. It just means that he probably had an abundance of small glass bottles filled with the potion which would last you awhile. I swear it's not magic, it's just common sense lol

    • @two-face1041
      @two-face1041 Před 7 lety +5

      Storri Gadau exactly what I said he just always has it on him

    • @patrickhodson8715
      @patrickhodson8715 Před 7 lety +16

      Also J completely forgot the possibility that _he bought some_ and brought it to class.

    • @HanaOccasionally
      @HanaOccasionally Před 7 lety +7

      Storri Gadau I always wonder what the expiration date of potions were Lol

    • @Eva-kl3fy
      @Eva-kl3fy Před 7 lety +10

      Storri Gadau I was thinking the same thing. It would also make o lot of sense to have some licuid luck stored away for an emergency. Since Slughorn was on the run from Deatheaters, he would probably have a whole bunch of the potion close at hand. In Hogwarts he probably felt safe enough to give some of it away. And this has no effect on the theory, as he might not have figured out the fact that Felix Felicis is fake.

    • @moonlightmusic3253
      @moonlightmusic3253 Před 7 lety +1

      Storri Gadau good point

  • @aschloss.entrepreneur
    @aschloss.entrepreneur Před 7 lety +213

    So... What would happen if somebody drank Felix Filicius (or however you spell it) out of a cup, and you thought it was pumpkin juice? What would happen??

    • @captainclasher6459
      @captainclasher6459 Před 7 lety +9

      Aaron Schlossberg same thing that happened to Ron

    • @daggern15
      @daggern15 Před 7 lety +33

      If you mean the person drinking it thought it was pumpkin juice then according to this theory it wouldn't do anything

    • @richerds1234
      @richerds1234 Před 7 lety +37

      wonder why their drink tasted odd.

    • @aschloss.entrepreneur
      @aschloss.entrepreneur Před 7 lety +2

      lol ;P I was thinking that too.

    • @gialloyd906
      @gialloyd906 Před 6 lety +8

      daggern15 according to this theory the murlap and the egg used in love potions would still effect the drinker. And the giddy feeling of infatuation and protection against jinxes may still cause the placebo effect. You just wouldnt understand why you felt like things were going your way.

  • @theotherguy187
    @theotherguy187 Před 7 měsíci

    That is crazy the breakdown of the ingredients is what really got me

  • @dylannance4772
    @dylannance4772 Před 3 lety

    This was revealed in the movie though...still fantastic and lovely videos as ALWAYS!

  • @eloraleishman797
    @eloraleishman797 Před 6 lety +48

    Slughorn could have had the liquid luck previously brewed for an emergency

    • @nilsmanuelgut131
      @nilsmanuelgut131 Před 5 lety +10

      And as he felt safe being close to Dumbledore he didn't need to keep it any longer because he didn't expect an emergency

    • @nicoleharvan4970
      @nicoleharvan4970 Před 5 lety

      Nils Manuel Gut so what? He just got rid of the bottle? NO! He probably packed it with his stuff when he went to Hogwarts. I definitely agree with the idea

  • @henleyg9928
    @henleyg9928 Před 7 lety +59

    Just a question, did you ever take into consideration that Slughorn just had a bottle at the ready because he was on the run from Death Eaters, and would need it in an emergency, just like you said Snape should've done?

  • @mayun9871
    @mayun9871 Před 2 lety

    hi i love ur harry potter theories please do more

  • @briancilyok2584
    @briancilyok2584 Před 3 lety +2

    Slughorn as far as I can tell, is great with potions, but maybe not the best practitioner of magic. Yet, slughorn manages to avoid death eaters for months. If you go along movie details, when harry and dumbledore first talk to him, his feet are exposed while he hides as a chair. Also, the entire house seems to have been destroyed and the one untouched thing is him. That sounds pretty darn lucky to me. I think he has it on hand. I think he also brews it constantly. I mean, newt has a briefcase with pretty much an entire zoo in it. I say he's got a constantly running brew lab in a similar case.

  • @MerabuHalcyon
    @MerabuHalcyon Před 7 lety +36

    I like to think that Felix Felicis is two-fold, first there is the confidence booster part where it let's your subconscious fill you with "I can do anything!" which in part could explain why Harry went to Hagrid's. He knew he had to get the memory from Slughorn BUT he also needed to help out his oldest friend in his time of need. The second part of Felix is where it subtly affects things around the user, for instance making it where every curse or hex aimed at you misses, I think that part is intentional to move things around the user to best benefit them under the circumstances BUT the user then has to act upon those opportunities for it to work.

  • @ubbafire
    @ubbafire Před 7 lety +261

    i think felix felicis may be a metaphor for alcohol, a little bit gives you confidence, too much makes you reckless, also in the movie harry was acting drunk, what do you guys think?

    • @miimiimullen7373
      @miimiimullen7373 Před 7 lety +7

      Bashir Muttawa I just commented the same thing! :D

    • @HanaOccasionally
      @HanaOccasionally Před 7 lety +6

      Bashir Muttawa Him actually drinking on set was just method acting too Lol

    • @matthewkent3624
      @matthewkent3624 Před 7 lety +2

      I agree completely

    • @ubbafire
      @ubbafire Před 7 lety +2

      great minds think alike ;)

    • @ubbafire
      @ubbafire Před 7 lety +3

      was he actually drunk during during those scenes? wow lol

  • @gryffindorgirl1009
    @gryffindorgirl1009 Před 2 lety

    Thanks! I found a situation where the placebo effect was involved and recognized it because of this video!

  • @wolfyboy
    @wolfyboy Před 4 lety +1

    That makes 100% sense! I always thought that was a very weird potion, as luck is a concept and impossible to prove .

  • @sarahgracehellman5633
    @sarahgracehellman5633 Před 7 lety +172

    It is just like when Harry "gives it" to Ron, It may just be all in his head, kinda like psychological sickness or belief in things that aren't true.

    • @spacetrashpile7199
      @spacetrashpile7199 Před 7 lety +20

      Sarah Grace Hellman yeah, they brought that up.

    • @sfuikm
      @sfuikm Před 7 lety +1

      Sarah Grace Hellman That's the main proof to this theory.

    • @kiddo6393
      @kiddo6393 Před 7 lety +3

      and that, my friend, is called the "Placebo effect"

    • @SimeonFarkas
      @SimeonFarkas Před 7 lety +2

      Sarah Grace Hellman psychological illnesses aren't just in the head, there are many actual things happening in the brain that causes a mental illness...

    • @sfuikm
      @sfuikm Před 7 lety

      NoBoy Lunatic He went over that too....

  • @someonemstr1
    @someonemstr1 Před 7 lety +35

    It's also worth mentioning that Felix felicis actually creates a voice in Harry's head in the book, which can't really be explained by the placebo effect since Harry doesn't know about the voice aspect of the potion before he takes it. Joe probably overlooks that point since it isn't really conveyed in the movie version

    • @abejoker
      @abejoker Před 7 lety +2

      Someone Mystery That makes his theory useless mostly.

    • @caityreads8070
      @caityreads8070 Před 7 lety +4

      Not necessarily. Those thoughts could easily be kicking around in his head anyway and he simply believed that they were Felix. For me, the biggest failing of this theory is to account for a) the front door being unlocked and b) Slughorn happening to be where Harry was going

    • @d.lan3y
      @d.lan3y Před 7 lety +1

      his name isn't Joe

  • @tzw001
    @tzw001 Před 3 lety +3

    @3:19 - Case in point of Snape having an emergency stock of Liquid Luck at hand: what was the potion he gave Dumbledore to drink when he "trapped" the ring's curse inside Dumbledore's right hand?

  • @corvidofchaos
    @corvidofchaos Před 4 lety +6

    I always watch these videos and think about how much sense they make
    And then I realise that J.K.Rowling would never have put any thought into this sort of thing and would only be "confirmed" in one of her notorious tweets🙃

  • @emilyr7888
    @emilyr7888 Před 6 lety +108

    It’s just magic people drugs

  • @ekaterinao1709
    @ekaterinao1709 Před 4 lety +1

    There’s this thing with the placebo effect where some doctors pretended to give kids a special procedure that was really just some sound effects, and the kids actually got healed from ADHD for one, headaches/migraines for another, and skin rashes for the last. The kids came back in a month later and they were well on the road to recovery.

    • @askinredroads5132
      @askinredroads5132 Před 2 lety

      ADHD is a life-long disorder though? You cannot be “cured” or “healed” of it.

  • @Groundlord
    @Groundlord Před 4 lety +1

    It's possible that Slughorn had some Felix Felicis already brewed and ready to go before the Death Eaters came looking for him. Assuming that the stuff does actually work (or that Slughorn somehow hasn't realized it's a placebo), it seems like something a skilled potion-maker would want to have on hand at all times in case of an emergency.

  • @antitheist3206
    @antitheist3206 Před 7 lety +19

    Futurama did this in "40% Iron Chef", with Bender getting the essence of pure flavor only to find out it was just water...
    Well, laced with very small amounts of LSD, but then again Felix Felicis is basically just tequila.

  • @izzy1221
    @izzy1221 Před 7 lety +242

    So when Harry faked giving the luck potion to Ron, he is actually uh...fake giving the fake potion to the..uh....I am confused.

  • @socialdeviant13
    @socialdeviant13 Před 4 lety

    My 3yo says you are a Super Guy. Thank you for making wholesome content!

  • @mr.seagull1091
    @mr.seagull1091 Před 3 lety +2

    Chances are, the placebo effect is actually a magical thing, at least when it comes to wizards. I mean, the magic in them has to be sort of useful, besides just using a wand.

  • @aureliamyers6501
    @aureliamyers6501 Před 7 lety +101

    Can Snape please just teach my science class

  • @patrickrussell6574
    @patrickrussell6574 Před 7 lety +162

    7:21 he-he *thyme* consuming

  • @rachelleredd8803
    @rachelleredd8803 Před 5 lety +45

    Wait, how do you know Snape doesn't have Felix Felices?
    Good theory tho

  • @raygaming548
    @raygaming548 Před 4 lety +22

    What about when Ron, Ginny, and Hermione said every spell seemed to miss them

    • @leogreaves3251
      @leogreaves3251 Před 3 lety

      Ray Gaming they probably only noticed that because of the potion

    • @swayambhupanigrahi296
      @swayambhupanigrahi296 Před 3 lety +2

      Or the Death Eaters have Stormtrooper aim

    • @gmuffin4543
      @gmuffin4543 Před 3 lety

      @@swayambhupanigrahi296 I mean remember the bridge scene in the 8th movie? Must be true to wome extent

    • @Kylie-kq6dm
      @Kylie-kq6dm Před 3 lety

      The deatheaters are just terrible at casting spells

  • @koukitea
    @koukitea Před 7 lety +67

    Liquid Luck aka Felix Felicis honestly sounds like an Amber Lager. The fermentation time is usually around 6 months for full fermentation. Also they have similar side effects as both cause reckless choices and over confidence with over usage(similar to a drunk state) similarly the placebo effect also works as many people who drank carbonated water with slight food coloring that was put into a wine bottle thought they were drinking wine and would say they felt the "effects"
    We might also see snape not drink this because he knows it's alcohol. This also fits the snape not using it because we don't see Snape drink any form of alcohol for pleasure or willingly with joy.
    The ingredients also match up with horse radish being used in many ales and lagers.
    Many Amber Lagers also look like some of the liquid luck we see in the movies.
    So there you have it, my theory is that liquid luck is actually an Amber Lager.
    I hope you guys take time to think if this is a good theory and if you guys liked it please let me know!

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav Před 7 lety

      Good

    • @isaacs8783
      @isaacs8783 Před 7 lety

      KoukiBlaze that comment startled me cause my name's Amber and I thought for a second you were addressing me

    • @ZimVader-0017
      @ZimVader-0017 Před 7 lety +1

      KoukiBlaze So Slughorn was just drunk out of his mind all the time. Nice :D

  • @atsukana1704
    @atsukana1704 Před 7 lety +50

    At the very beginning when you mentioned it might not do anything at all I knew you would bring up the placebo effect. Though it can't be that due to how it works. Harry had no idea what was going on and little "felix" was telling him where to go. Even with overconfidence he had no reason to go to Hagrid's

    • @wolfco47
      @wolfco47 Před 7 lety +11

      Ah but his theory has an interesting side note that can be applied. In the 'muggle' world placebo effect is scientifically measurable and well documented... but, what if you take the positive effect of belief and put it within a person with actual magic i.e. a power directly responsive to positive emotions (patronus or even accidental magic in children). Do this and bam! Suddenly, the theory liquid luck is a semi-bogus potion is incredibly sound. Or, you could have the best of both worlds... felix felicis is a legitimately difficult complicated potion that grants you incredible luck... by combining your natural positivity with your full magically capacity to affect the world around you as you desire it... wish magic.

    • @JakeLikesJoking
      @JakeLikesJoking Před 7 lety

      wolfco47 That actually makes sense. I'm gonna go with this line of reasoning for how it works... unless I find a better one further down the comments lol.

  • @VentusSilens
    @VentusSilens Před 4 lety

    Not sure if these still get seen, but sort of caught up on the effects of the ingredients. For example, Squill would get rid of any nervousness, Occamy shell to give the potion a certain shine, The murtlap would improve users defenses, which could account for dodging and reaction speeds, and as for the Ashwinder Eggs, their use in curing ailments could strengthen the Squill. All in all, it sounds like it'd make a rather powerful healing tonic.

  • @LiliyaS
    @LiliyaS Před 4 lety

    I kinda feel it is like the saying “ if you knew that you couldn’t fail what would you do?” . You become confident that you cannot fail that you take every step imaginable to get what you want. So you go extra without the fear of failure which is usually what stops people.

  • @bellatrixlestrange4461
    @bellatrixlestrange4461 Před 7 lety +146

    Hogwarts might have a stock of Felix Felicis, so Slughorn might have gotten it from there. Also, Harry can refill the drink Hagrid and Slughorn are having non verbally, and the book says he couldn't have done so otherwise.

    • @madscientistshusta
      @madscientistshusta Před 7 lety +1

      Bellatrix Lestrange ??

    • @backonlazer791
      @backonlazer791 Před 7 lety +45

      It might still be because of the placebo effect. He could do it because he had faith in himself when usually he is full of doubt.

    • @aaronbock6406
      @aaronbock6406 Před 6 lety +50

      The same way he was able to produce a patronous in prisoner of askaban. He believed his dad did it but then realized it was him.

    • @dereklouden7415
      @dereklouden7415 Před 6 lety +13

      Bellatrix Lestrange YOU KILLED SIRIUS

    • @davajita
      @davajita Před 6 lety +26

      Or, it's conceivable that Slughorn just kept a small supply of the potion on hand anyway. Seems like it's something you might want if you were on the run from Death Eaters.