When their batteries are about to die, watches run erratically, slow down, and eventually make instinctual journeys to their final resting places beneath Big Ben. Keep time from running out with today's Groupon: for $15, you get $40 worth of watches or watch-repair services at Precision Time. This Groupon is valid at the locations in Murray, Orem, Provo, and Sandy.
For more than two decades, Hugo Fraga and his family have restored and fine-tuned the intricacies of customers' timepieces in Precision Time's convenient mall kiosks. In addition to replacing batteries and manicuring the hands of more than seven million watches, the millisecond specialists carry a full spectrum of watches and wristbands by designers including Swiss Military and Sottomarino. A collection of Fender timepieces ($15+) unites wearers with craftsmanship that revolutionized the music industry in the 20th century, and a collection of London Underground watches ($36) pairs classic and modern styling typical in across-the-pond fashion. Precision Time connects each of its functional jewelry pieces with a five-year battery plan, and provides watch-cleaning services ($10) for timepieces that have been accidentally dropped into vats of horse sweat.
Though Precision Time sometimes features a discounted price online, this Groupon still offers the best deal available.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Forgotten Video Games
As more and more video games are rebooted, sequeled, and adapted into hit procedural dramas and breakfast pastries, some 8-bit classics have fallen by the wayside. What are some classic video games you forgot to remember?
• Battle Brothers (ActivoVision, 1989): In this high-octane punch 'em up, two rad brothers (Clint and Vortex) must survive a concrete gauntlet in order to rescue the president’s stolen bike.
Forgotten Fact: In Battle Brothers, both players could accidentally cause damage to each other, resulting in exciting real-life fistfights between real-life brothers.
• Swords & Squares (Dønderhuff ElectroPublishing, 1981): This brain-enhancing game of medieval strategy pits dueling royal courts against each other, and bestows players with a dot-matrix certificate at the end that assigns performance-based ranks, ranging from Knight of the Round to Horsepox Survivor.
Forgotten Fact: Game is essentially chess.
• Olympics® '87! (Pixellius, 1986): You play as Torcho®, the Olympic Torch®, as he is passed hand-to-hand between different athletes on his globetrotting journey. Don’t tip over and set their sweat-slicked hair ablaze!
Forgotten Fact: Not affiliated with the Olympics in any way, Olympics® '87 holds the record for video game most frequently mentioned in court transcripts.
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