| This article was nominated fordeletion on 5 January 2012 (UTC). The result ofthe discussion waskeep. |
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Infobox says there is one but I don't see it anywhere and no sources to confirm.Richiez (talk)10:12, 28 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Hi – I've prepared auserspace draft that is fully referenced and should therefore tackle the issues that have been flagged for this article. If someone could review it and feedback to me that would be much appreciated. In the interests of transparency I am declaring a conflict of interest in that I work for Bell Pottinger, a UK PR agency, and that Palringo is my client. I will post on COIN. Thanks.HOgilvy (talk)21:04, 17 July 2014 (UTC)[reply]
The article seems rather self-promoting in tone, smells like it was written by the company and lots of unnecessary detail. Can we shorten it and stick to cited relevant information?Sharky05 (talk)23:27, 30 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
In 2020, the company held "WOLF AID"[1], an in-app charity event that worked to benefit Action Against Hunger and Save the Children, raising $184,000[2]. For WOLF AID, users were tasked with finding special items from in-app collection bots, united by a festival theme. 50% of the proceeds from any in-app purchases related to these games were donated to charity. These items ranged from a cooler full of drinks to festival equipment such as a DJ deck. Users could also purchase unique Action Against Hunger and Save the Children Charms, used to decorate a user's avatar, with 100% of the proceeds collected going to charities.— Precedingunsigned comment added byPete Ingham at WOLF (talk •contribs)11:11, 22 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]