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FEBRUARY 25, 2008
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Electronic Arts offers $2B for Take-Two
SAN FRANCISCO AP - Electronic Arts Inc. said Sunday it
was pushing ahead with a bid to take over upstart
gaming rival Take-Two Interactive Software Inc.,
despite rebuffs from the smaller company.

EA said in a statement that it was making an all-cash
bid of $26 per share, or about $2 billion, for New
York-based Take-Two, known for its "Grand Theft Auto"
franchise.
EA, the world's largest independent video game publisher, said it was releasing details of
the proposal to get the attention of Take-Two shareholders after Take-Two's board turned
down its second bid in two weeks.

The offer represents a 64 percent premium over Take-Two's closing stock price of $15.83 on
Feb. 15, the last trading day before Redwood City-based EA made its proposal. Take-Two
shares closed at $17.36 Friday.

"There can be no certainty that in the future EA or any other buyer would pay the same high
premium we are offering today," EA Chief Executive John Riccitiello wrote in a letter to
Take-Two released Sunday.

Riccitiello added that Take-Two's quick acceptance of the offer would mean EA could put its
marketing muscle behind the eagerly awaited release of "Grand Theft Auto IV," set for April 29.

In its response, Take-Two called the EA offer a "highly opportunistic" attempt to take
advantage of the game's upcoming release.

"Electronic Arts' proposal provides insufficient value to our shareholders and comes at
absolutely the wrong time," Take-Two chairman Strauss Zelnick said in a statement Sunday.

Zelnick said EA rejected Take-Two's offer to resume discussions of the takeover bid the day
after "Grand Theft Auto IV" hit store shelves.

EA said it offered $26 per share Tuesday after Take-Two rejected a $25-per-share bid earlier
this month.

The offer comes as Take-Two works to regroup following a rocky year. Shareholders threw
out most of the company's top leadership last spring over poor results as well as accounting
troubles and controversy surrounding violent and sexual content in the company's games.

Several former Take-Two executives, including Chairman and CEO Ryan A. Brant, pleaded
guilty in 2007 to falsifying business records in connection with a probe into backdated stock
options
.[read more]
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