'Tom Clancy's The Division': What to expect after release date announcement

Tom Clancy's The Division Ubisoft

"Tom Clancy's The Division" by Ubisoft is officially arriving on the PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC on March 8, 2016. The announcement was made by the game company during its presentation at the Electronic Entertainment Expo 2015, as reported by IGN. This will mark a four-year development and a two-year delay as the game was initially meant to be released back in 2014. 

"It is never an easy decision to move a launch date," Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot explained about the game's constant delay. He also stated that each delay the game experience has "always benefited the company." 

According to the report from IGN, the beta test for the game will be launched for all three platforms early next year, allowing a few select players to give the game a try and help the developers identify rough spots, bugs, and areas that need to be improved, changed, or deleted. 

During the presentation, Ubisoft let fans have a first-hand look at the cooperative and competitive nature of the gameplay. In the video, a group of three form a temporary alliance with two random strangers they come across. As a bigger group, they kill off some opponents, take whatever loot they can, and head to the extraction point. 

However, after calling in for a chopper, the original three turn rogue and start firing at the two they formed an alliance with. Before the shoot-out is over, one of the original three then turns against his own allies and kills them as well, taking all of the loot for himself. 

"Tom Clancy's The Division" is an open world third-person shooter RPG set in the United States after a virus causes the nation's collapse in just five days. Players will have to work together to help piece the nation back and rebuild civilization, fighting AI and human-controlled enemies that are either focused on their own survival or are spreading the disease even further. 

News
Archbishop of Canterbury will be attending abortion vote in Lords on Wednesday
Archbishop of Canterbury will be attending abortion vote in Lords on Wednesday

The office of the Archbishop of Canterbury has confirmed she will be joining a key vote on abortion in the House of Lords this Wednesday after there was backlash over the suggestion she might be absent due to a planned pilgrimage.

'A lot' would change if Green Party disestablishes Church of England, says vicar
'A lot' would change if Green Party disestablishes Church of England, says vicar

The best response to suggestions that the Church of England would be disestablished if the Greens come to power is to do a better job of sharing the Gospel, an Anglican priest has said. 

AI still too inaccurate when it comes to Scripture, says YouVersion founder
AI still too inaccurate when it comes to Scripture, says YouVersion founder

YouVersion founder and CEO Bobby Gruenewald says artificial intelligence holds enormous promise. But when it comes to answering questions about God and Scripture, he believes the technology is not yet ready.

Church of Ireland marks St Patrick’s Day with worship, music and pilgrimage
Church of Ireland marks St Patrick’s Day with worship, music and pilgrimage

Church of Ireland dioceses and cathedrals have prepared a wide programme of worship, music and community events to mark St Patrick’s Day on Tuesday.