GAME Offers New Releases for £5

LONDON, January 26, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –

‘Fun for a Fiver’ Trade-in Offer Gives Gamers the Chance to Own Some of the Most Anticipated Titles of 2012 for Just a Fiver

GAME, the UK’s leading game retailer is helping gamers make their money go further by giving customers the chance to purchase the latest titles for just £5, thanks to a guaranteed trade-in offer on some of the most anticipated releases of the year.

From today until February 29th 2012, gaming fans that purchase selected titles, including the much awaited fantasy epic, Final Fantasy XIII and the family favourite Mario and Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games 3DS, from GAME will be entitled to trade the game in for credit within two weeks of purchase, meaning the game will cost just £5.

This exciting offer, which is also available on new releases, Soul Calibur V, Darkness 2 and Tekken 3DS, will also include selected pre-owned titles and gaming accessories.

Anna-Marie Mason, Marketing Director at GAME said: “With 2012 set to be another great year in gaming, were committed to offering customers the best value possible on the fantastic titles out there through competitive pricing, our trade in scheme and offers on games. Our Fun for a Fiver trade-in deal is a really unique way for customers to experience their favourite games for less and we encourage gamers to get in early to take advantage of this great offer today.”

For more information on this offer and all trade in initiatives visit the GAME website.

PLEASE NOTE: GAME is always capital letters and GAMEfest is written in a specific way as well.

About GAME:

GAME is part of GAME Group plc, Europe’s leading retailer of pc and video games, video game consoles and related accessories. We operate from over 1,000 GAME stores, concessions and franchises in the UK, Eire, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Spain, Portugal, France and Australia. Together with our on-line and multi channel shopping services, our aim is to be the destination of choice for every consumer.



Please contact the new GAME team at The Red Consultancy on GAME@redconsultancy.com / +44(0)20-7025-6688 for further information.



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Golf-Torrey Pines showcases Mickelson's deadly short game

By Mark Lamport-Stokes

SAN DIEGO, Jan 25 (Reuters) – If short game magician
Phil Mickelson felt it would not look too arrogant, he would
remove the flagstick from the hole every time he had a wedge
shot into the green.

The left-hander has long been regarded as one of the game’s
best players from inside 120 yards and he came agonisingly close
to forcing a playoff for last year’s Farmers Insurance Open with
a hole-out from 72 yards at the par-five last.

As it happened, Mickelson’s wedge shot ended up four feet
from the pin to set up a closing birdie and he had to settle for
second place, one stroke behind fellow American Bubba Watson.

“The fact that it landed close to the hole, it was supposed
to,” Mickelson told reporters on Wednesday as he reflected on
his near miss for eagle on the South Course at Torrey Pines.

“That’s what I practise. It’s not an accident that my wedge
game is what it is, because I sit there and work on it. I just
don’t do it out here (on the PGA Tour) for everybody to see.

“I practise flying my wedges to a specific yardage three
days a week. I hit over 1,500 golf balls and try to fly it
within a yard or hit a target. For the most part, I’m able to
fly it within a yard 90 percent of the time.”

Despite being repeatedly advised by his short game coach
Dave Pelz to remove the flagstick for every wedge shot he hits,
Mickelson has, for the most part, resisted.

“About a dozen times a year, I hit the pin with a wedge and
I end up getting a worse result because of it,” Mickelson said.
“Pelz wants me to have the pin removed on every wedge shot,
which I won’t do because it just looks bad.

“But the fact is that I hit the pin a dozen times a year,
and probably 11 out of those 12, the ball ends up in a worse
spot because of it.”

HAPPY HUNTING GROUND

Though Mickelson narrowly failed in his victory bid at
Torrey Pines last year, he is delighted to be back at a venue
where he has triumphed three times before.

“I loved playing here in San Diego because of what it’s
meant to me over the years,” the 41-year-old American said while
preparing for Thursday’s opening round at the Farmers Insurance
Open.

“It reminds me of when I was a kid watching here with my dad
and just the memories that it brings back. Even though I didn’t
win last year, it was still fun having that chance.”

Mickelson, who lives in nearby Rancho Santa Fe, will be
making his second start on the 2012 PGA Tour, having tied for
49th at last week’s Humana Challenge where he improved after
opening with a two-over-par 74.

“After having one week under my belt and kind of hopefully
ironing out some of the kinks, I think I’m ready to get myself
back in it on the weekend,” the four-times major champion said.

“That is certainly the goal. After a good off-season, my
game’s getting back to where I want it to be, and I’m excited to
get back into those opportunities (of contending) on Sunday.”

Mickelson will tee off with compatriots Nick Watney and
Hunter Mahan in Thursday’s opening round on the South Course,
one of two layouts co-hosting this week’s event.

(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in San Diego; Editing by
Frank Pingue; To query or comment on this story email
sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

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Pro Bowlers Want Game to Stay in Hawaii

byline ap Pro Bowlers Want Game to Stay in Hawaii

Many NFL stars are hoping that when it comes to the Pro Bowl in Hawaii, aloha doesn’t mean goodbye.

The NFL all-star game doesn’t have a home beyond Sunday’s game. League and Hawaii officials are negotiating a deal to keep the game in the islands, which is hosting it for the second straight year after it was played in Miami in 2010, breaking a 30-year run in Hawaii.

“It takes away from the game when it’s somewhere else,” said Miami Dolphins receiver Brandon Marshall, who also selected to the Miami game two years ago. “It’s always a privilege. It’s always an honor to be selected to a Pro Bowl. But this is what the Pro Bowl is about — paradise. So it would (stink) definitely if we no longer come out here.”

Some players went as far as saying they wouldn’t participate if the Pro Bowl was moved.

“That’s a lot of the players’ attitude, I think. If it’s in an NFL city, you’re in those cities quite often,” Minnesota Vikings defensive end Jared Allen said.

Allen and other players said the game belongs in Hawaii, where it’s more family oriented, relaxed and considered a reward for the hard work they put it during the season.

Jacksonville running back Maurice Jones-Drew’s first Pro Bowl was in Miami, which he said was a great experience.

“But it’s nothing like coming over to Hawaii. This is my first time here for the Pro Bowl, and it’s great,” he said.

In Hawaii, the players are treated to a beachside hotel to themselves. They sip on colorful, tropical drinks and lounge around the pool, golf or wade in one of the white-sand lagoons at Ko Olina Resort.

“In Miami, we didn’t have the whole hotel. You’re signing autographs 99 percent of the time at the hotel. It was just chaotic,” Allen said. “Guys weren’t showing up. You had a lot of alternates in and out. Over here, it’s kind of what everybody looks forward to. … I like it here. I’m a big fan of tradition. It started here. We should keep it here.”

But the Pro Bowl wasn’t born here. It was hosted for years in Los Angeles before jumping around the country in the 1970s, going everywhere from the Kingdome in Seattle to the Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City.

The game was first played at Aloha Stadium in 1980 with New Orleans Saints running back Chuck Muncie leading the NFC to a 37-27 victory. The winners earned $5,000. On Sunday, the winners earn nearly 10 times that amount.

The state is paying the NFL $4 million per game for the rights to hold this year’s game. About seven months ago, Gov. Neil Abercrombie opposed the cash-strapped state paying millions to host the Pro Bowl when the money could be used for education.

“You can’t do things like give 4 million bucks to a $9 billion football industry and not give any money to children,” Abercrombie said then. “You’ve got this spectacle of these multimillionaires and billionaires out there arguing about how they’re going to divide it up, and then they come and ask us to bribe them with $4 million to have a scrimmage out here in paradise.

“We’ve got to get our values straight and our priorities straight.”

On Tuesday, however, Abercrombie changed his tune when he crashed the NFL’s press conference and spoke in favor of keeping the game here. The governor said the state would like to continue hosting the game, “and we’re going to do everything we can to make sure that comes about in a fashion that will make everybody very, very happy.”

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