Most 90's kids can sing and hum the Boy Meets World soundtrack on command but in case you need a refresher, a capella medley group The Warp Zone created a mash-up medley of the hit shows many theme song openings.

The medley follows the various season openings, including the earlier days when Corey Matthews was a 13-year-old "brillo head," the in-between years of enduring high-school with best friend Shawn and sweetheart Topanga, all the way through complicated college years and married life. The show displayed a heavy moral compass and multiple life lessons, all of which were resolved in a matter of 22 minutes.

The video incorporates a Brady Bunch-like set-up with each of the five singers belting and making beats in their respective boxes, even performing the instrumental theme song. The clip includes pieces of each opening tune for the 1990s hit sitcom starring Ben Savage--getting drenched by buckets of water as well as running down the stairs and out the door to jump into a red hot rod.

With the recent explosion of the a capella craze concerning Pitch Perfect 2 and Pentatonix, it only makes sense that the trend is continuing. Sketch comedy group The Warp Zone has covered other popular theme songs from the 90's including The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Pokemon and Powerpuff Girls, notes MTV News.

Since the show's completion in 2000, a spin-off series mimicking the original name, Girl Meets World, saw its release. The latest series stars lovers Corey and Topanga once more, this time as parents to a Corey of their own, Riley, who finds her own personal Shawn in her best friend Mya. The second season began on May 11 as the show has remained a massive hit since its 2014 debut.

"What really means a lot to me is when people come up to me - and it happens a lot - and say, "I grew up on Boy Meets World, and it means so much to me, and I like that I'm now able to watch Girl Meets World with my kid because it's like passing the torch between generations." That's what we set out to do. We were aiming to teach the lessons of Boy Meets World in an updated context to a younger audience," Savage told Vulture.

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