

I don’t understand why this isn’t done more often. Publishers announce games early, then have to go great lengths to keep the hype up all the time, then the announced date comes close, but game isn’t anywhere near finished, so it has to be delayed, fans are disappointed, developers are stressed. Next date comes close, game still isn’t finished, delay it again, fans are disappointed, developers burnt out. Next date arrives, game still isn’t finished, but cannot delay again, as fans would really be disappointed now, so buggy mess of a game is released, fans still are disappointed, developers have to work hard to restore the reputation of the game and themselves by repairing the biggest issues, and fans are still disappointed as now things work this way that worked that way before. And anyway it’s still not what was promised in the first place.
Instead: Work secretly until the game is in a good state. Release, get good reviews. People get exactly what they expected, as their expectations came from the finished game and not some blown-up early-development marketing visions. Fans are happy, more good reviews.
That truck is used at Computex to sell merchandise from.