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tennistoad2k3
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yes it is, they won't allow Valve to unlock the game.The_Monkey said:This is not Vivendi's fault you idiot!
BladeTurbo said:yes it is, they won't allow Valve to unlock the game.
halo 2 is actually quite the enjoyable experience.tennistoad2k3 said:what else am I gonna do play halo2??
abconners said:Its Only Two More Days People! You Can Wait Two More Fricken Days For Crying Out Loud!
That's vivendi's problem.wilka91 said:Vivendi did nothing wrong.
Go burn the stores that are selling it early for no reason. They didn't have the right to.
Sierra is owned by VU games, thats why everyone refers to them. Also I think what it says in the contract is something along the lines of "Valve can't release the game until VU's release date."FISKER_Q said:That's vivendi's problem.
If what Valve writes is correct then it indicates there is indeed a clause in the contract making it possible for Valve to release it if the game is released.(Which it is)
So why would Vivendi threaten with legal actions, and claim the game isn't release, if there were no clauses? Then the game wouldn't be activated until it's 16th november releasedate regardless.
And just as important, why is any publisher relation mentioned as Sierra? Does it even say Vivendi Universal unless you call their support?
The obvious would be people blaming Valve and Steam, since that's the easiest way to blame someone.
I wouldn't call 50% off the actual game purchase "punishing their customers". Like every game the publisher doesn't want people to play early. The only difference this time is that now VU can actually prevent people from playing it early, any other publishing company that had the option of doing that probably wouldn't hesitate to prevent people from playing early.OCybrManO said:It's understandable that they don't want some people to buy through Steam because it's not available in stores near them for a couple of days but did they really expect a game as big as HL2 wouldn't slip out a couple of days early if they sent it to stores almost a week before the release? Now, Vivendi is punishing their customers (many of whom probably didn't even know it was being released early), not the stores, by not letting people play games they already bought and brought home. If they want to get the stores fined for breaking the release date that's OK by me... but not letting paying customers use a product they own is just mean.
I know that Sierra is owned by Vivendi, that wouldn't stop them for putting their own name on it though.The Mullinator said:Sierra is owned by VU games, thats why everyone refers to them. Also I think what it says in the contract is something along the lines of "Valve can't release the game until VU's release date."
Even if Valve could worm their way through that it really wouldn't be a good idea and you know why? Because an extra two more days shouldn't hurt anybody, Valve and VU are currently in a legal battle so its not a good idea to make things worse, and it sounds like if VU can prove Valve broke their initial contract then VU may get the rights to everything related to Half-Life.
Now does anyone have the nerve to tell me if those potential problems are worth waiting a mesely two extra days! Some people just need to sit back and relax.