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  •    THQ in Red Faction smash grab marketing stunt |    Technology |    guardian.co.uk

    From the page: "I love videogame marketing departments. None of them seem to have functioning super egos. In other areas of the media, publicity campaigns are bound by outdated concepts such as civic responsibility, taste and the fear of moral backlash. For game marketers, these are just... more

    Reviewed by ekso Jun 18, 07:42am ( 11 reviews ) guardian.co.uk

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  • Rated by fallingwithstyle on Jun 19, 8:23am

    From the page: "I love videogame marketing departments. None of them seem to have functioning super egos."
  • Rated by al3xand3r on Jun 18, 4:12pm

    Fake, Do some simple search on your favorite search engine, or any video site, Fake Fake Fake. There are videos of people smashing the car to get the game, but each time the car is fixed. etc. etc. Yah, Only one picture of a hundred sites, only a few sites with all the pictures of them setting it up .. and videos. geeze.
  • Rated by thelibertywell on Jun 18, 3:40pm

    The only reason I liked this article From the page: "I also love the fact they chained the sledge hammer up. I mean, amid all this lunacy, someone had the foresight to think, 'hang on, if we just leave the hammer there some idiot will nick it'."
  • Rated by garrettair on Jun 18, 3:13pm

    I would have done it and taken copies for friends.
  • Reviewed by Adaman on Jun 18, 3:05pm

    Only got one picture? Seems like they would of videotaped it.
  • Rated by MrPopo on Jun 18, 10:23am

    From the page: "I also love the fact they chained the sledge hammer up. I mean, amid all this lunacy, someone had the foresight to think, 'hang on, if we just leave the hammer there some idiot will nick it'." Sums it up 100%
  • Rated by ekso on Jun 18, 7:42am

    From the page: "I love videogame marketing departments. None of them seem to have functioning super egos. In other areas of the media, publicity campaigns are bound by outdated concepts such as civic responsibility, taste and the fear of moral backlash. For game marketers, these are just things that happen to other people."