It's no secret that The Division has been plagued by a wide array of glitches and errors since its release. So many, in fact, that it has been hard to keep track of all of them unless you went out of your way to hunt down any and all reports about them.
Well, it appears Ubisoft has finally stepped up to the plate and has done just that by compiling a list of both confirmed and unconfirmed issues that are currently plaguing The Division.
According to Ubisoft, as of May 27, there are five gameplay-related issues, one interface-related issue, one technical issue and one UI-related issue that are new with Update 1.2. Here is the complete list (the official list has yet to be updated with two fixes that were added Friday):
- [Gameplay] Electronics store teleport
- [Gameplay] Daily High Value Targets reset
- [Gameplay] No Critical Search & Destroy
- [Interface] Double UI Overlay
- [Technical] Graphics distortion
- [UI] Mark as Junk not working
- [Gameplay] One is None
- [Gameplay] DZ06 teleport
One of these issues was actually discussed in a previous report about the weak launch of Update 1.2. As you might have actually experienced yourself, the UI on occasion will overlap over itself, creating a double effect. While that is already an issue, the real problem is that the overlap causes the game to slow down to a snail's pace. Fortunately, it appears Ubisoft Massive is aware of the root of the problem and announced that a fix is currently in development.
Out of all these problems, the only two that have been fixed thus far are the High Value Targets Farming and Items DZ ran requirement change bugs. The former made it so that players would receive rewards for completing a High Value Target mission even though they failed it, while the latter made it so that the rank requirements to purchase certain blue prints at the Dark Zone vendor changed from 50 to 80.
Interestingly, the list doesn't include the problem affecting PC players that causes their characters be deleted. Considering that Xbox One players encountered the same problem at the start of Update 1.1, this could be a potential indicator that Ubisoft already has a fix ready and doesn't feel the need to add it to its list.
It's nice that Ubisoft has a full list of issues that players can access, but it doesn't change the fact that it promised this latest update would be "rock-solid" and it has failed to follow through on that.