I love how salty the article is, lol. It doesn't look professional at all.
But who in the world would believe in tweets sent out by the CoD twitter?
Why would they apologize? There's literally pictures of the video game attached to half of the tweets.
[QUOTE=ZeroTimesCookie;48793444]I love how salty the article is, lol. It doesn't look professional at all.
But who in the world would believe in tweets sent out by the CoD twitter?[/QUOTE]
They changed the name to something that looked like a news site
[QUOTE=Dr. Ethan Asia;48793577]They changed the name to something that looked like a news site[/QUOTE]
It still says @CallofDuty on every tweet. Also Singapore does not have soldiers in robot suits.
More stellar reporting from PCGamesn.
[quote]Perhaps the most unsettling aspect of this stunt is found in the replies to those twenty tweets. "Modern Warfare 2 on next gen," reads one. There's a picture of a Spongebob meme below another. These aren't the responses of people scandalised to their very core - they're replies from people so used to tacky PR stunts that they don't even break stride in trying to get their favourite game remade.[/quote]
I guess if you can't sensationalize people getting fooled by the stunt, you can always complain about how "unsettling" it is for people to not be fooled. Gotta find some way to spin the story.
I bet PCGamesN would've written really salty letters when the original War of the Worlds radio-play aired and there was a minor scare because people actually believed it was happening.
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