RhapSidious
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- Aug 5, 2003
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My current theory is this:
Valve's been saying that ATI cards perform better in HL2 long before the benchmarking that was done a couple weeks ago. This means Nvidia must have known about their poor performance (dispite their claims) prior to the benchmark numbers going public (think July).
With that in mind, it made sense for Valve to partner with ATI for co-op adversing and bundling. Unlike most games, HL2 is seen as the first true next gen title for the pc. This game is going to push hardware sales like none other before it (even Forbes thinks so).
I think Valve finished the game, and were honestly going to be ready for a Sept 30th release.
Here is where it gets interesting. Lets imagine what would happen if HL2 were really going to ship next week. ATI sales would prosper in the coming months and Nvidia would loose a majority of it's market share.
I think that Nvidia made a deal with Vivendi to delay the release to allow for Nvidia to release something more competitive at the time of HL2 so it won't be a total loss for them.
Nvidia has probably been working on a true DX9 card for several months already, and it could possibly be ready with a few months.
If this is the case, then I believe Valve might have been figthing with VU since July over the delay issue (ie 'no comment' answers by Gabe regarding the delay).
Valve must of lost the battle (or been bribed themselves) and the rest is history.
Valve's been saying that ATI cards perform better in HL2 long before the benchmarking that was done a couple weeks ago. This means Nvidia must have known about their poor performance (dispite their claims) prior to the benchmark numbers going public (think July).
With that in mind, it made sense for Valve to partner with ATI for co-op adversing and bundling. Unlike most games, HL2 is seen as the first true next gen title for the pc. This game is going to push hardware sales like none other before it (even Forbes thinks so).
I think Valve finished the game, and were honestly going to be ready for a Sept 30th release.
Here is where it gets interesting. Lets imagine what would happen if HL2 were really going to ship next week. ATI sales would prosper in the coming months and Nvidia would loose a majority of it's market share.
I think that Nvidia made a deal with Vivendi to delay the release to allow for Nvidia to release something more competitive at the time of HL2 so it won't be a total loss for them.
Nvidia has probably been working on a true DX9 card for several months already, and it could possibly be ready with a few months.
If this is the case, then I believe Valve might have been figthing with VU since July over the delay issue (ie 'no comment' answers by Gabe regarding the delay).
Valve must of lost the battle (or been bribed themselves) and the rest is history.