Why Terminator 2D: No Fate Was Delayed - Including Tariff Impact
Author:ScxclyPublish Time:Sep 30 2025
When Terminator 2D: No Fate was first delayed, the reasons given had been physical logistics and quality polishing. But new information shows there's a third, more external factor at play: tariffs and global trade disruptions.
Original / Previously Known Causes
Physical Edition Manufacturing & Logistics Delays
The production of Day-One and Collector's Edition components (steelbooks, posters, cloth, coins, etc.) is taking longer than expected.
To ensure all versions launch together (physical + digital), the publisher decided to push back the entire release.
Need for Final Polish / Day-One Patch
The developer wanted more time to test, fix bugs, and integrate the day-one patch so that the game's launch is smoother.
Delaying helps reduce the chance of crippling bugs at launch that could hurt reviews and reputation.
New Reason: Tariffs / Trade Policy Impact
Tariff Changes and Trade Disruptions Delaying Component Shipments
The publisher specifically cites "ongoing global trade and tariff changes" that have delayed the shipment of physical edition components.
In particular, U.S. tariffs (referred to in media as "Trump's tariffs") have been blamed for increasing costs, creating customs delays, and making cross-border manufacturing/logistics more complex.
Because the physical items can't be manufactured or shipped reliably under these conditions, the release of the digital edition is being delayed as well to maintain fairness and a unified launch.
Revised Timeline & Impact
Old planned launch: October 31, 2025
New confirmed launch: November 26, 2025
The extra time helps accommodate slower freight, customs processing, and compliance with tariff-related paperwork.
As one article puts it: "Delayed shipment of components for Day One and Collector's Editions due to tariffs" is directly named in the delay announcement.
Why This Tariff Cause Makes Sense
Physical edition components often rely on global supply chains (metal, printed materials, plastics) sourced from overseas manufacturers. Tariffs can slow or block these imports.
Tariffs may increase costs or cause producers to stagger shipments, which can cascade delays.
Publishers often prefer unified launch dates to avoid splitting digital vs physical markets and to maintain marketing impact.











