'Tom Clancy's The Division' release date delayed again

Is Tom Clancy's The Division the new post-apocalyptic game to beat?Amazon

Word on the street is that "Tom Clancy's The Division" is on to another setback, once again encumbering its rollout. Ubisoft seems to be having a hard time eliminating certain issues in the game, which has led the developer to push its unveiling to an undetermined date in 2015. Although Ubisoft has yet to substantiate this, it is most likely the scenario waiting to happen. 

It is not the first time the third-person shooting game was postponed. Christian Post, citing an unnamed source close to Ubisoft, reported that the game is not yet done. The unidentified insider added that the engine is in top condition, and Christian Post believes that the game is only pestered with bugs and issues and Ubisoft is buying more time to wipe them all out. This only denotes that 2014 is not the year "Tom Clancy's The Division" will put in an appearance. 

Air Herald is getting used to it. It said that 2014 was a year game developers were plagued with hard-to-kill bugs and issues, adding that Ubisoft was a big proof of all of that. Its big releases namely "Watch Dogs," "Assassin's Creed Unity" and "The Crew" had two things in common — they were potentially epic games and they had major issues that need too many patches. "Far Cry 4," on the other hand, had some PC troubles concerning optimization, and there is the delay of "The Witcher 3." Kpop Starz, Christian Post amplifies, shared that the quality of the Ubisoft's game releases in terms of graphics are becoming disappointing, almost like they were hurried. 

Game developer Martin Helberg and Ubisoft art designer Rodrigo Cortes represented Ubisoft in the midst of the claims, saying that producing a high-end title entails more time, and delays are part of it. This may be the case for "Tom Clancy's The Division."

"Tom Clancy's The Division" will be a larger-than-life title should Ubisoft pull it off. It will bear a balance of both role-playing components and third-person shooting elements. Air Herald compares it to Bungie's masterpiece "Destiny." In the much-awaited game, players will assume the role of a member of a group of people called The Division on a mission to get the United States to safety after an epidemic sweeps its territories.