Mantis Burn Racing Free During First eSports Tourney

VooFoo Studios today announced that their award-nominated top-down racing game, Mantis Burn Racing, will be FREE to play on Steam from February 22nd through February 25th. With the game’s first PC-based eSports championship taking place alongside the Free Weekend, there’s never been a better time to experience the buzz of drifting past opponents in this thrillingly addictive top-down racing game.

Steam players will be able to play Mantis Burn Racing for FREE: including all of the DLC packs, from 10AM Pacific Time, on Thursday 22nd February until 1PM Pacific Time, on Sunday 25th February. If you enjoy Mantis Burn Racing’s fun and highly competitive top-down style racing and want to keep playing after the Free Weekend, you can get 50% off the game and all DLC packs until 10AM on Tuesday 27th February – what’s more, if you purchase the game during the Free Weekend all your in-game progress will carry over.

The E4i Mantis Burn Racing Championship is a weekend-long event streamed, casted, and entertained live on The Overpowered Noobs’ Twitch channel, and hosted through its eSports division, ESPORTS 4INDIE (E4i).

The weekend of February 24-25th will see all registered players through a day of competition and festivities, playing for loot and to qualify for the Sunday Twitch event (Feb 25), where the best of the best will claim the handsome prize pool and the prestigious title of “Mantis Burn Racing Badass.”

Join the E4I Championship: Live on Twitch: Saturday & Sunday, February 24-25th

All players are invited to register now at: opnoobs.com/e4i/mantis-burn-racing

For full event details, rules, and regulations, visit opnoobs.com/e4i/mantis-burn-racing

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Picture of John Breeden II
John Breeden II
As a journalist John has covered everything from rural town meetings to the U.S. Congress and even done time as a crime reporter and photographer.|His first venture into writing about the game industry came in the form of a computer column called "On the Chip Side," which grew to have over 1 million circulation and was published in newspapers in several states. From there he did several "ask the computer guy" columns in magazines such as Up Front! in New Mexico and Who Cares? in Washington D.C. When the Internet started to become popular, he began writing guided Web tours for the newly launched Washington Post online section as well as reviews for the weekend section of the paper, something he still does from time to time. His experience in trade publications came as a writer and reviewer for Government Computer News. As the editor of GiN, he demands strict editorial standards from all the writers and reviewers. Breeden feels the industry needs a weekly, reliable trade publication covering the games industry and works tirelessly to accomplish that goal.