After October 2, fans who had sent in letters to Mark Meltzer's P.O. Box began to receive telegrams, delivered in person by Speedy Brothers employees riding old-style bicycles. This was the third such promotional mailing, after the mailing of childlike drawings from the Lunchbox Puzzle and the vinyl records of "Rise, Rapture, Rise."
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rdfs:label
| - Speedy Brothers Telegrams
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rdfs:comment
| - After October 2, fans who had sent in letters to Mark Meltzer's P.O. Box began to receive telegrams, delivered in person by Speedy Brothers employees riding old-style bicycles. This was the third such promotional mailing, after the mailing of childlike drawings from the Lunchbox Puzzle and the vinyl records of "Rise, Rapture, Rise."
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dcterms:subject
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dbkwik:bioshock/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
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abstract
| - After October 2, fans who had sent in letters to Mark Meltzer's P.O. Box began to receive telegrams, delivered in person by Speedy Brothers employees riding old-style bicycles. This was the third such promotional mailing, after the mailing of childlike drawings from the Lunchbox Puzzle and the vinyl records of "Rise, Rapture, Rise." Fans who received a telegram began to receive packages one day later. These packages contained a copy of Mark Meltzer's letter to his contacts, as seen on the Something in the Sea website, and samples of Splicer masks that will appear in BioShock 2. Fans who were not home to receive their packages of masks the first time were sent another mask at a later date. These late masks came with a letter from Elizabeth Tobey, 2K Games' community manager.
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