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Messiah List Price: $54.99 Sale Price: $1.59 |
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This software is BRAND NEW. Packaging may differ slightly from the stock photo above. Please click on our logo above to see over 15,000 titles in stock. Messiah puts a spin on typical third-person action-adventure gameplay. The player's character, a diaper-clad cherub named Bob, has been sent down from the heavens to set the world straight. Scientists experimenting with dimensional portals have brought the Lord of Darkness, as well as other nefarious minions, into the world. God hopes you, as his miniature messiah, can clean up the streets and restore order. Bob lacks many important abilities; the baby angel can run, crawl, push buttons, and hover slightly with his tiny little wings, but he can't carry weapons or directly fight his many enemies. Bob must possess characters inside the game world in order to use weaponry (which include flamethrowers, machine guns, grenades, and shotguns), solve puzzles, and traverse difficult platform-style obstacles. The player will possess and depossess dozens of different character types during the adventure--everything from dancers, rats, and cops to nuclear technicians and large armored beasts. Messiah's diverse gameplay consists of knowing whom to possess and when, and then using the host to the utmost potential. Despite being in development for over three years, Messiah's 3-D engine and special effects compare well with the latest and greatest computer games. Still, there have been reports of glitches with the most recent advancements in 3-D video card technology. A troubleshooting page at www.messiah.com/troubleshooting.htm solves most graphics card issues. Messiah's visuals scale down to meet your computer's speed. If you're using a slower computer, the engine automatically removes detail and special effects so you maintain a satisfactory frame rate. The effect works, but the amount of detail lost means you should still strive for the fastest machine possible (at least the minimum requirements) when you assume the role of Messiah. --Doug Radcliffe Pros: The art of possession introduces a unique spin to gameplay Excellent graphics engine that scales down to meet your computer's speed Solid blend of a third-person shooter and third-person sneaker Cons: Several bugs in initial release Bob is a working-class angel, ordered by God himself, to clean up the putrid, disgusting, sleazy, and infested world of the future. He has been given the power of possession so that he can sneak up on any person, animal, or genetically engineered being and leap right into their soul! With your help, Bob can then use their bodies, their weapons, or even their bare hands to strangle, cripple, impale, and incinerate the cities of sinners sent to stop you from finding Satan himself. Hiding in their souls, Bob can use these sinners' bodies against their will as armor (to take pain for him), or he can use them for camouflage (to hide inside them) and pretend to be just another twisted citizen in the Messiah world. |
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12 Tips on Writing Good Subject Lines That Get Your Emails Opened and Read
12 TIPS ON WRITING GOOD SUBJECT LINES THAT WILL
GET YOUR EMAILS OPENED AND READ
The subject line of an email is always the last thing people think about. It should be the first.
When your email pops up in your recipient’s in box, that person has just a few seconds to decide whether or not to read your message. Their decision is based entirely on the effectiveness of your subject line. A few hastily chosen words in the subject line will result in sales unnecessarily lost, potential customers missed and brand recognition wasted.
Here are 12 simple tips to greatly enhance the chance your emails will be opened and read.
1.Short is best: Three to four words is ideal, never use more than 10 words or 50 characters.
2. Avoid Spam Alerts: Never put an exclamation point in your subject line. The exclamation point is very common in spam emails, and the search engines will interpret your email as spam if an exclamation point is in your subject line. Other words that are interpreted as spam are: “exclusive,” “free,” “hurry,” “limited time.” Use a spam filter to check out how your subject line rates to minimize inadvertently including spam type words in your subject line
.
3. WIIFM: Always keep in mind the needs of your readers…the “What’s In It for me?” mentality. Your subject line must briefly describe the message of your email in a way that answers the reader’s question: “Will this message help me meet my needs, solve a problem, or make my life easier?”
4. Urgency: Your subject line should contain a sense of urgency. This will motivate the reader to act now instead of later. Incorporating a time element into the subject line creates a sense of urgency. For example: “Orders received by this Friday receive a 25% discount.”
5. Unique: Make your subject line unique. This approach presents your message as containing something new and different. For example, “Discover why Scandinavian vitamins make you feel five years younger, “as opposed to “Scandinavian vitamins enhance your energy.”
6. Specific: Be very specific in a way that will make your readers think “now what does THAT mean?” You could have fun with this approach. Here is an example: “Best time of day to ask for a raise,” or “5 things not to put in your baby’s diaper bag.”
7. Precise: Provide precise information. If you’re inviting someone to a meeting, say: “Invitation: End-of-Year Conference, New York, Dec. 1” instead of a bland “End of Year Conference.”
8. Detail: Provide details that let the reader know what you’re talking about immediately. If your message requires a reader’s response, say so…within the first one to two words. For example, “Response needed for project approval.”
9. Tease: A cleverly worded subject line is sure to get a reader’s attention and pique their curiosity. If you’re selling eye glasses, for example, your subject line could say “You won’t believe your eyes!”
10. Test: Test your email on a small segment of your market to evaluate the effectiveness of your subject line prior to sending out a mass email campaign. This will give you the opportunity to adjust your subject line copy if necessary. Many companies test the effectiveness of their emails this way: Three days before they launch an email campaign, they’ll send up to five of their best subject lines to a small segment of their mailing list. Twenty four hours later, review the open rates and conversation rates to determine which subject lines were the most effective
11. Name recognition: People are more inclined to open an email from someone they know and are familiar with. For example, if a reader subscribed to your Ezine entitled “5 Ways to Train Your Dog,” your subject line might include the words “Dog Training Tips.” This will remind the reader that they did sign up for your Ezine and make them more inclined to open it instead of deleting it.
12. From Line: Incorporate name recognition into the “From” line. Let’s use the “5 Ways to Train Your Dog” example above. Your “From” line may read: “http:www.5waystotrainyourdog.com.” This frees up your subject line to highlight a specific tip in your email copy.
In addition to the 12 tips listed above, here are five additional ways to write effective subject lines. Bob Bly, one of the most successful copywriters out there today, suggests these five tips to boost the success of your subject line:
1. Put a number in your subject line. When readers see a number, it arouses their curiosity and they’re more apt to open your email. For example: “7 Ways to Do X”.
2. Be mysterious, arouse curiosity, hint at what you’re offering in your email but withhold the answer. The recipient has to open the email to find out exactly what you’re talking about. Mr. Bly gives this example, which generated 392 orders for an eBook he wrote: “The Easiest Product To Sell Online”
3. Make a big promise that gets the recipient’s attention. Putting a question mark after the promise can help address the reader’s inherent skepticism. For example: “Get paid $22,500 to write a letter?”
4. As a question that the reader wants to answer. For example: “Is There a Book inside You?”
5. Offer to reveal some secrets. Secrets are powerful word in a headline and lost secrets are even more intriguing. For example, “3 Lost Secrets of a Winning USP”. Also putting quotes around text in headline or subject line increases readership.
In conclusion, the best way to ensure that your emails will be opened is to provide precise, concise, thought provoking subject lines support by a message that offers a quality product, valuable information and good pricing.
--Emily Foshee
November 2008
Emily Foshee is a freelance copywriter with more than 20 years of marketing communications experience. She has worked for numerous Fortune 500 corporations including Centex, Pizza Hut and Sprint.
About the Author
I am a freelance copywriter with more than 20 years of corporate public relations management experience in Fortune 500 corporations. Writing specialities include: marketing communications, newsletters, ghost writing, web writing, ezines, brochures, direct mail, brand ientity and more. Learn more by going to www.efoshee.com
P-51 Mustang shown at air, space museum
A North American P-51 Mustang is now on display inside Hangar 4 at the Pima Air & Space Museum, 6000 E. Valencia Road. The airplane, considered the best American fighter of World War II, used a Rolls Royce Merlin engine. It was originally developed for the British Royal Air Force in 1940.
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