The mail sent to a video game publisher

(gamefile.news)

64 points | by colinprince 3 days ago

1 comments

  • footydude 1 hour ago

    Interesting stuff - and lovely to see positive/nice examples of interaction with the game developers. Very cute.

    It reminded me of a job nigh on 25 years ago I had - I worked at a large insurance firm as part of a team delivering a specialist service to high value customers...but it was often under-subscribed so if things were quieter we'd get roped into doing all manner of different tasks to keep us busy/help out.

    One thing we occasionally got roped into was opening returned mail from mail-shots advertising 'over 50s whole of life' insurance (basically a policy over 50s would take out with guaranteed payment on death that would primarily be used to cover funeral costs).

    The mail shots were sent with a pre-paid envelope and a form to fill in to buy the product. It's going back a while now but some days it'd be 100s of letters coming back - my rough estimate would be:

    * ~2-3% of the return envelopes were people buying the product

    * ~95% were people return the application form in ripped up form

    * ~1-2% were people sending something weird back

    The weird stuff we got back varied massively, but a few that have lived long in my memory:

    * A sheet of paper with a hand written note saying they'd farted on it

    * Toe-nail clippings

    * A stash of cuttings taken from pretty graphic porn magazines

    * Hand written notes, often so apoplectic in their rage that they were hilarious to read

    * 'Filled in' forms but where all the information was clearly fake/puns/nonsense ('Mr Hugh Janus' that sort of thing)

    * Randomly (to me at least) peeled off labels from jars/etc. were quite common to get back

    For what was a pretty dull task (open envelopes, if genuine, scan for the processing team and return a 'parker pen' to the applicant, if not dispose of) the occasional weird responses we'd get made the task much more amusing.

    {all mail had already been through some sort of security scan process for metals/etc. so we didn't tend to get anything truly dodgy back}