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Post by markgraham on Feb 10, 2018 2:44:13 GMT -5
Hello, What would you say if you paid for an entry into a skills-based competition, and then later discovered that the judges of that competition had been bought off – and that you never had any hope of winning the grand prize? I’m not even allowed to print here what I’d want to say, but at a civil minimum you’d complain to the organizers, demand compensation, and then keep after them until the situation was properly corrected. So... what if you then learned that the organizers were not only fully aware of the situation, but didn’t care, and had no intention of fixing anything? And what’s more, had every intention of continuing to accept paid entries from ignorant hopefuls That’s essentially what’s happening right now with Gameloft’s “2015 Game of the Year,” Asphalt 8: Airborne. As a “freemium” game, Asphalt 8 can be played in its entirety without cost. But, unlike many other popular freemium titles, the effort needed to progress can be unusually extreme, often requiring months or even years of daily gaming before you begin to approach the upper levels of competition. Even then, the target shifts higher every few months, thanks to frequent content updates with newer, shinier, more expensive goals to work towards. Thanks For More Details:- Medical Device Marketing Examples
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