'Tom Clancy's The Division' PS4 Xbox One Release Date Set For October 2015 By Ubisoft? Devs Clarify Graphics Downgrade Issue

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"Tom Clancy's The Division" PS4 Xbox One release date has been reportedly set to October 2015.

Cyberland has reported that "Tom Clancy's The Division" PS4 Xbox One release date has been allegedly set by Ubisoft to be on October 2015 and that new footage of the game would be revealed at GDC 2015.

"My sources can confirm that The Division would be available by October. Expect to see new videos of the game on GDC," wrote Cyberland.

Meanwhile, Design and Trend reported that the PS4 and Xbox One would have varying graphics as the PS4 would run on 1080p while the Xbox One would run at 900p.

"In terms of what that difference equates to, PS4 gameplay will allegedly support 1080p, while Xbox One's graphics display at 900p," wrote Design and Trend.

However, Developer Martin Hulberg has confirmed in a recent statement that "Tom Clancy's The Division" PS4 Xbox One graphics would look great even when compared to the PC.

"Obviously, we want to make a game that looks the best it can on its respective format, so Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC. So I think the term downgrade is a bit confusing and weird because we're trying to get the most out of every machine we use. So Xbox gets its attention, PlayStation gets its attention, and PC of course will be able to cram it up a bit more depending on the hardware you have," said Martin Hulberg.

Martin Hulberg then added, "We address every console, every platform as its own version," he said. "So we try to stay away from the thing where you go for the least common denominator and everybody suffers for it. We want to make a good experience on all respective formats."

And finally, Martin Hulberg admitted the possibility of a public beta for "Tom Clancy's The Division".

"We have a long experience in doing online games dating back to Ground Control and World In Conflict. And I think the chance to involve people to do tests is very important. I suspect we will release more details on the possibilities for public tests later on," said Martin Hulberg.

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