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Half-Life 2 officially delayed
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By John Delbart at 14:57 on September the 26th, 2003
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This press release on Reuters officially confirms that Half-Life 2 has been delayed and will not be released on Tuesday as originally planned, but is still targeted for an unspecified holiday release. As of Friday afternoon, online retailer Amazon.com showed the game being released Dec. 1, while EBGames.com showed it shipping Nov. 14, and GameStop.com showed it being released Feb. 2 of next year. Check the above link or read the full story for more details.




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Vivendi says 'Half-Life 2' video game delayed

LOS ANGELES, Sept 26 (Reuters) - Bad news for video gamers with itchy trigger fingers: alien-hunting season has been delayed.

Vivendi Universal Games said on Friday the developers of "Half-Life 2," the most heavily anticipated video game of 2003, will not release the game on Tuesday as originally planned.

A spokeswoman for VUG, a unit of Vivendi Universal (NYSE:V - News; Paris:EAUG.PA - News) said developer Valve Software announced earlier in the week that the game would not make Sept. 30 but was still targeted for an unspecified holiday release.

As of Friday afternoon, online retailer Amazon.com showed the game being released Dec. 1, while EBGames.com showed it shipping Nov. 14, and GameStop.com showed it being released Feb. 2 of next year.

Audiences were wowed at last May's games industry trade show, E3, by a preview of the game that critics said brought a new level of realism to characters and the virtual world in which they move.

The original "Half-Life," released in 1998, is still popular among PC gamers, and a modified version of the game, called "Counter-Strike," is widely used in gaming competitions.

"Half-Life 2" stars Gordon Freeman, a scientist battling aliens from the planet Xen in a mysterious European locale known only as City 17.

"HL2" and "Doom 3" were expected to compete for the hearts and wallets of PC gamers this holiday season, but when "Doom" publisher Activision Inc. (NasdaqNM:ATVI - News) said the game would not be out until at least early next year, the path was left clear for "HL2" to dominate sales charts.

The game's release is also expected to benefit makers of high-end computers customized for gaming -- machines that use the latest components and can often cost thousands of dollars.

Computer graphics chip designers Nvidia Corp. (NasdaqNM:NVDA - News) and ATI Technologies Inc. (Toronto:ATY.TO - News) in particular have waged a public dispute over whose chips are better suited to run the game. ATI sponsored the "HL2" demonstration at E3.

 
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