At surface level the widespread problem with The Division seems simple enough: players deck their backpacks out to kingdom come, only to log on later to find their uber-customized backpacks empty, and then shortly after their characters locked out from logging back in altogether.
Controllers must be flying across rooms like uncontrolled helicopters, shattering TV screens right and left right now. The amount of frustration endured by any gamer out there that has to deal with an accidental restart, an unsaved 'boss kill' before dying, is enough to crush the most reasonable temperaments. Plain and simple, it just sucks to devote time and energy towards something that up 'n vanishes out of nowhere.
Mauricio Plaza put up a video that depicts the 'bug' in all of its evil glory, firsthand:
Let's just hope Ubisoft Massive patches up this madness soon.
Since we all need a mental health break from the world, please enjoy this fantastic video game design glitch.
From the original video: "One of the games my students were working on had a glitch today. I made the whole class come and watch. We were all crying we were laughing so hard."
Work it, Bigby!
Watch the entire bug in action here (Warning: Some minor spoilers):
Mewtwo has no official special moves in Super Smash Bros for Wii U/3DS, but you can hackily achieve them through the use of Miis. In order to do it, you have to download a Mii not created on your system, then select it for play, deselect it, and select Mewtwo. Mewtwo inherits that Mii's custom moves, but since this isn't supposed to happen things get pretty glitchy.
Here the map of the glitch in Lumiose City that happen after release of pokemon X and Y
And it doesn't require a Mega Stone!
Yet this unique, glitch-filled experience is a positive trait for the Gen I games. Don't ask why, but that's the truth.