Spiffae
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- May 22, 2003
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This is just a question to spark debate, it has no "right" answer, nor will the answer ever be heard.
here are the facts/statements
who was lying? at some point, no matter how you slice it, somebody said something that was not true, and they knew it. How on earth could a game have been announced as nearly done in May of 2003 suddenly be a definite 2004 title? How could this really have nothing to do with the code theft? Some people suggest that Valve's whole 9/30 release was a scam in order to whip up publicity. That would seem likely, but Valve's business partners never would have signed on if the game was nowhere near done. ATI certainly wouldn't have spent the money they are rumored to have spent on a game sight unseen. They must have gotten some sort of demo. Maybe they just saw the E3 stuff.
If what the hacker got is all that Valve had, then certainly, there is no playtesting going on right now. If the game was nearly done, then it would have been out by christmas if the hack really hasn't changed the schedule. Either the game was not done, and the stuff about playtesting and AI segments shown to magazines were falsified, or the game was done and Valve is hushing up the damage the hacker did.
What do you guys think?
here are the facts/statements
- Valve announces HL2 for September 30th
- Newell: "we'll see" to spitcodfry a week before the 30th.
- Source code leak.
- Doug Lombardi (in an interview) "we're just watching people play through the game over and over and refining the experience"
- Doug Lombardi - "holidays 2003"
- Hacker "the beta is all that valve has"
- ATI planned to launch the 9800XT w/ HL2 on 9/30
- SDK, originally slated for August, is a no-show.
- Benchmark, for 9/30, is also a no-show
- now gabe: "even w/o theft, no HL2 in 2003"
who was lying? at some point, no matter how you slice it, somebody said something that was not true, and they knew it. How on earth could a game have been announced as nearly done in May of 2003 suddenly be a definite 2004 title? How could this really have nothing to do with the code theft? Some people suggest that Valve's whole 9/30 release was a scam in order to whip up publicity. That would seem likely, but Valve's business partners never would have signed on if the game was nowhere near done. ATI certainly wouldn't have spent the money they are rumored to have spent on a game sight unseen. They must have gotten some sort of demo. Maybe they just saw the E3 stuff.
If what the hacker got is all that Valve had, then certainly, there is no playtesting going on right now. If the game was nearly done, then it would have been out by christmas if the hack really hasn't changed the schedule. Either the game was not done, and the stuff about playtesting and AI segments shown to magazines were falsified, or the game was done and Valve is hushing up the damage the hacker did.
What do you guys think?