Investors are often taught to look forward, not
backward. With video game publisher Take Two
Interactive, in particular, investors have been encouraged to look
to the future and away from a messy past.
However, sometimes the past can expose a consistencies that
requires attention.
Get this. In the last five fiscal years
reviewed from FY08 onward, Take Two Interactive has delayed
every single major non-sports AAA title at least one
time. And not only that, most of the delays were
from one fiscal year into the next.
The sources of these dates are from Take Two’s own
official press releases:
Grand Theft Auto 4 – delayed for 2
quarters, devastated the stock price and was pushed out of FY07 and
into FY08
Bioshock 2 – announced in early 2008 as
an official FY09 title, the game was pushed into FY10
Red Dead Redemption – announced as an
official FY09 title, the game was delayed into mid FY10
Mafia 2 – announced in 2007 and later
received an official FY09 release date, delayed almost a year into
late FY10
L.A. Noire – originally announced as an
official FY08 release, the release date was later withdrawn and a
year later was turned into an official FY10
release. It has now been released in Take
Two’s new FY12, giving this title the distinction of the
longest delay, over three years.
***
The shortest delay of an officially announced title is upcoming
release, Duke Nukem Forever, which was delayed for
one month. Of course, the irony about that is
Duke Nukem Forever is probably considered the most delayed title in
video game history at somewhere around ten
years. Take Two Interactive is the publisher and
not the developer of this title.
Another critical mention is Max Payne 3, which
was called a 2009 release in 2008 and later received an official
FY10 release date. That was withdrawn in late
2010 in the same way L.A. Noire’s date was withdrawn in 2009
and the title’s new release date plan is unknown.
In the most recent quarter earnings press release, Take Two
announced that investors should expect Spec Ops: The Line and X-Com
in FY12, along with Bioshock Infinite in “calendar
2012”. Will these be delayed, continuing
the trend? Lookout, Take Two’s record on
delays is unusually consistent.
The next question is, will Take Two announce dates for Agent or
the next Grand Theft Auto, and should investors count on those
dates? Michael Pachter of Wedbush Morgan has
been stating that Grand Theft Auto will in fact come this fiscal
year and has floated a
rumor that an Activision representative suggested to him that
Take Two may have a major announcement the day before
E3. The stock has seen considerable speculative
buying activity in recent days.
Take Two produces high quality titles, but investors have
oftentimes paid a high price to play. Take Two
does not guarantee that games will not be delayed, and analysts and
investors ought to pay attention.