• Breaking News

    Tuesday, September 15, 2020

    Assassin's Creed [Day 04/60] Assassin's Creed Unity - Sequence 05 - 'The Root of Evil'

    Assassin's Creed [Day 04/60] Assassin's Creed Unity - Sequence 05 - 'The Root of Evil'


    [Day 04/60] Assassin's Creed Unity - Sequence 05 - 'The Root of Evil'

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 06:00 AM PDT

    AC Marathon 2020 - Day 04

    Assassin's Creed Unity - Sequence 05 - 'The Root of Evil'

    Greetings, Assassins! This sequence, we are tasked to find the silversmith named Germain. After rescuing him from Templar hands, we are told that he made the pin for a man named Lafrenière. The plot thickens yet again as we immediately set out to find and assassinate our new target.

    Today's Target: Chrétien Lafrenière


    DAILY OVERVIEW

    1 - The Silversmith
    Track down and rescue Germain. Learn of his affiliation with the murder.
    2 - La Halle aux Blés
    Investigate Halle aux Blés and destroy Lafrenière's gunpowder supply.
    3 - The Prophet
    Assassinate your target at le Cimetière des Innocents, and discover his plans of attacking Hôtel de Beauvais.


    DISCUSSION

    Share your feelings about today's sequence in the comments below. What did you think? Talk about what you liked, what you disliked, and your general thoughts. Feel free to engage with others and ask questions of your own!

    Being active in discussions will make you eligible for an official Marathon giveaway. More info in the 'Giveaway' section below.


    WALLPAPERS

    Make sure to download the official Marathon wallpapers for Assassin's Creed Unity!

    Desktop 1920x1080 || Desktop 1920x1200 || Mobile


    FAN CREATIONS

    Here is today's Fan Art of the Day for Assassin's Creed Unity.
    dArtist: Ardika Priyata

    Featured Video: The Silversmith - Stealth Reaper.
    Creator: blackTIE


    LIVE STREAMS AND VIDEOS

    Here's the list of streamers that will be broadcasting today's sequence. All times in EDT.

    10:00 AM - /u/GamerGirl_9623 on Twitch

    10:30 AM - /u/SerHolmes on Twitch

    11:00 AM - /u/MegaBoschi on Twitch

    6:30 PM - /u/InfinityGB on Twitch

    Here are the playthroughs that Marathon streamers have pre-recorded and uploaded:

    AC Unity, Sequence 5, Memory 1 & 2 by /u/vDmze

    AC Unity, Sequence 5, Memory 3 by /u/vDmze


    2020 Schedule

    September 11th - Assassin's Creed Unity
    September 21st - Assassin's Creed Unity: Dead Kings
    September 22nd - Assassin's Creed Syndicate
    October 1st - Assassin's Creed Syndicate: Jack the Ripper
    October 3rd - Assassin's Creed Origins
    October 13th - Assassin's Creed Origins: The Hidden Ones
    October 15th - Assassin's Creed Origins: Curse of the Pharaohs
    October 17th - Assassin's Creed Odyssey
    October 29th - Assassin's Creed Odyssey: Legacy of the First Blade
    November 2nd - Assassin's Creed Odyssey: The Fate of Atlantis
    November 9th - Marathon End Discussion
    November 10th - Assassin's Creed Valhalla Launches!


    GIVEAWAY

    Three lucky winners will receive a copy of The Art of Assassin's Creed Valhalla!

    To be eligible for this year's giveaway, you must comment on at least 24 total threads across all games, including one thread from each game. (DLCs don't count as separate games.) Replies to other comments count as well. Engaging in discussion with other Marathoners is strongly encouraged!

    Your account must be older than the Day 01 post of this year's Marathon, and you will have to confirm your participation at the end of the Marathon by commenting on the final thread (Day 60) using a keyword given in the post.

    Please refer to our FAQ for additional details.


    TOMORROW

    Tomorrow, on Day 05 of the Assassin's Creed Marathon, we will be reuniting with Élise de la Serre, as part of Assassin's Creed Unity - Sequence 06!


    Follow us on Twitter || Follow us on Instagram || Marathon Megathread & FAQ

    submitted by /u/ACMarathon
    [link] [comments]

    It has been a beautiful odyssey

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 02:15 PM PDT

    If 100 years from now, Ubisoft make an AC game set in our time, Pit bull would be an awesome choice for a public figure who's an Assassin, a la Machiavelli.

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 04:06 AM PDT

    • He's Mr. Worldwide, so he could conceivably pop up wherever the game was set. (Maybe his transition from Mr. 305 to Mr. Worldwide was fuelled by him harnessing a Piece of Eden)
    • His vast number of collabs mean you could have him interacting with literally any public figures of the day.
    • "Reporting Live, from the tallest building in Tokyo!" - prime set-up for a Leap of Faith
    • "I got her hooked, 'cause she seen me in a suit with the red tie tied up!" - Basically the modern day equivalent of the iconic Assassins Sash.
    submitted by /u/DowdKnifeOfMapleton
    [link] [comments]

    [SELF] Kassandra, Assassin's Creed Odyssey - Ethlaine

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 02:02 PM PDT

    Took these. Hope you like them!

    Posted: 15 Sep 2020 12:44 AM PDT

    Received so much positive feedbacks and encouragement for my last fan art, so here is Kassandra and Alexios from Odyssey :D feedbacks welcomed!))

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 08:37 PM PDT

    Assassin's Creed II is one of my favorite games, so I just had to make my own Ezio Auditore cosplay.

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 11:16 AM PDT

    Just left the animus to discover that Shay’s granddaughter is working with the assassins

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 06:25 PM PDT

    2h of cinematic cutscenes is a lot better than 15h of poorly animated dialogue scenes. And a 15h main quest, without level requirements, is better than a story of 40h, extended due to level gating

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 10:41 AM PDT

    Here's what I'm trying to explain. One criticism often claimed and thrown at cutscenes in AC is that they're non interactive so the player is basically not playing.

    But the cutscenes are well made with great graphics and help the player connect emotional with the characters because they feel real, with quasi human expressions..

    Now, the Odyssey model. There's one or two cutscenes, and about 15h of dialogue, I'd say. Maybe 10, but not less than that I believe. In this main quest I'm including the forced side quests that you have to do in order to do the main quests.

    In those dialogue sequences the animations aren't... Very good and your only interaction, movement wise, is down or up to choose a dialogue option, followed by more animations of disputable quality.

    In a 30hour game as was Origins, you had about 3h of cutscenes, which meant that 37h on average of thr total playtime was active. Full control of the absolute madman that was Bayek of Siwa.

    While choosing a dialogue option is certainly an active action, it's very limited. So, I ask you, is it that much preferable 10h of dialogue scenes in which you have to press an option VS a linear narrative in which you are only restricted for a few hours?

    Let's talk about the main quest. In Origins it's about 10/15 hours without side quests. In Odyssey it's similar.

    But we know the game forces us to do a lot of side quests, which makes the game longer, making the people falsely feel the main quest was longer than the older games, when it wasn't by much.

    So, of the 40h you have to play to finish Odyssey, about half are spent doing side quests which obviously are sub-par compared to the main narrative.

    Is a 40h experience like that more enjoyable than a 15h one in which you can do the main quest without interruptions?

    Im not against rpgs. I love rpgs. Mass Effect is my favorite game trilogy because it's premise is that:player agency. But AC was not a dialogue based rpg.

    It was a linear narrative in which we review the lives of the ancestors of the modern day protagonist. A defined narrative.

    Sure, there are different ways to achieve an objective but the key story moments always happened.

    In Odyssey everything is up for grabs. Nothing is defined. Your mother can die, Alexis can live or not at all. It's not like Ezio killing a target by punching him in the groin repeatedly until he can longer father a child and drops his guard or by slashing his throat. The key result always happens.

    In this, AC Origins succeeded, while failing in tbe level requirement part. A traditional story. But, nonetheless, Origins was a game that showed promise. I have my problrms with it, mainly basic parkour and less cinematic combat, but it still felt like an interesting evolution.

    I just find it ironic that choices were added because nowadays they're cool. But if one analyzes their inclusion impartially, one spend more time just doing simple up down choose dialogue things, than a game in which you are in control of your character, climbing, running, fighting, exploring, for 95% of the time (in a traditional AC narrative) compared to the rpg narrative in which 30% of the game is watching two characters wave their arms around.

    I'm not against a dialogue system. It'd be great for a linear narrative AC to allow talks with the characters, ask them things and such. But optional. Or just choices for the side quests.

    But this? It seems to me that this is nothing more than a dream. A mirage. An illusion. You're not actually playing a longer game with more freedom. You're not actually in more control because there are no cutscenes.

    It just appears to be so. If you're gonna take away control of my hands to a great or full extent, either give me great mind-blowing choices, or just stick to traditional storytelling. An advice for every game tbh

    Because after killing a Templar, I want a well done cutscene about him speaking how Order is the inexhorable destiny of all civilizations. I want to rest my hands and connect with the character emotionally.

    Not have to choose 10 similar sentences for 5 minutes, just pressing a button.

    Full respect for those that like this new approach. I don't mean this is as a new Odyssey bad post because I think Odyssey is a fun game. Not a good AC. But a 7/10, that's not bad! Another discussion to be had about review scores..

    I just find it ironic that player agency is claimed to be one of its strengths when I felt more restricted than ever.

    With constant dialogue scenes I had to act and constant level requirements impeding my main quest progress. Just to make me buy MTX, which I didn't. Screw that.

    Not a lot of freedom there. Nothing more than an illusion, it seems. Anyway, just my opinion. I guess this is more a state of the industry analysis than jut AC.

    It's just a shame to see art turned into just a comercial product only. AC can be both. It used to be

    submitted by /u/GreenArrow194
    [link] [comments]

    My drawing of Bayek of Siwa, scene from the trailer - color pencils

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 11:20 PM PDT

    Made a sticker/comic style wallpaper with Edward

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 12:44 PM PDT

    Assassin's Creed Valhalla News (Memory Corridor Confessions, Merchants, Traditional AC Elements, Ancient Roman Locations)

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 09:03 AM PDT

    Hands down the best ac video I had ever watched and you guys should check out.

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 08:37 PM PDT

    Why would ubi abandon trilogies? Or, generally, showing an older protagonist in newer AC games?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 05:45 PM PDT

    Since people obviously cherish the idea of seeing a protagonist more than once, like the situation was with Ezio, I can't think of a reason why Ubisoft wouldn't do it.. Look at the hype when Aiden came back in Watch Dogs legion. I could only imagine the hype that would accompany seeing an AC protagonist in more than 1 AC game.

    submitted by /u/RuminatingGuardian
    [link] [comments]

    The Ununited Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and Algarves - Mildly Obscure Setting Discussions

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 08:00 AM PDT

    A common trait Assassin's Creed groups have is the constant theorizing about future settings, because historical tourism is one of the best parts of the series. Many fans want pretty cliche settings such as the American Civil War and Wild West, World War 2, Ancient Rome, and Feudal Japan. Most of these popular settings will be discussed in my series on commonly suggested settings. The common thread between all settings in this series of posts is that they have not appeared on a Ubisoft poll or survey that can be easily found (China, Japan, Rome), they are not overly requested settings by the fanbase (see wild west and world war 2), and they all are relatively known enough to be marketable to a broad base. In each of these posts, I'll be discussing map areas, cities, architecture, culture, wars, historical events, historical characters, broad conjecture on how AC could work with this, and any existing lore in this area.

    In 1808 Napoleon was ravaging Europe with his conquests, at the helm of a massive army using an apple of Eden likely retrieved from Egypt. The lore is murky on his alliance to Templars or Assassins, but regardless he invaded the Iberian Peninsula causing the Queen Mary I, her son John VI, and several other Portuguese nobles to flee Portugal to their colony of Brazil and set up their rule from Rio de Janeiro. Once established, John VI reformed the Order of the Tower and Sword, a Portuguese military and religious order and knighthood formed initially by Alfonso V during the Reconquista.
    By 1815, Napoleon had been defeated and the Portuguese were demanding the return of the Queen and her son to Lisbon, while the native Brazilians, most notably court officials whose power had increased, were pressuring them to stay in Brazil with the desire to elevate the status of Brazil from a simple colony to something much greater. We know there are two Isu sites in Brazil, one near the Amazon River Delta and one likely under Rio de Janeiro. AC could definitely use this by saying the court officials or the Queen and her son were searching for the PoE as Templars or Templar puppets. We do know that by this point Templars had a base and had large connections to the economic powerhouse Sao Paulo, so Templar's influence in the royal courts would also make sense. Regardless, Prince John VI passed the law in December to formally create the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves. The Kingdom also held colonies throughout Africa.
    Soon after, in 1816, Mary I died (a potential assassination mission?) leaving John VI to take the throne, though the official coronation would take another 2 years. During this Queen Carlota Joaqina, who was a daughter of the Spanish branch of the House of Bourbon, began to influence her husband (who was described as very lazy and poor with politics), to take direct control of some Spanish colonial politics leading to him to capture Montevideo in 1817. She failed to convince him to aid the Spanish Crown any further, though. At this same time, North-Eastern Brazil (located mostly around Recife) broke out into a revolt demanding independence in part enflamed by sugar export decreases and allegedly freemason influence. Both in lore and real life, the Freemasons have deep ties to the Templar Order. This however was violently put down by the Portuguese Military. One of the leaders of this movement, Frei Caneca, was imprisoned in Salvador for 4 years.

    In 1819 professor José Bonifácio de Andrada moved from Portugal to Brazil, an aid to Pedro I, the son of John VI, in part due to political tensions. Portugal was demanding the return of the king and in 1821 formed a "Cortes" which was meant to act as a form of a constitutional convention of sorts where they decided to let prisoners of war go and demanded the return of John VI. Adrada urged John to resist going back to Portugal, but by April he had returned to Lisbon, naming his son Pedro I regent, while Adrada acted as a prime minister. Leaving Pedro I in charge led to a large mutiny by Portuguese troops in February that Pedro and his supporters personally rode to negotiate with, forming a new cabinet and getting his father to take an oath of obedience.

    In June of 1821, the military in Rio de Janeiro once again mutinied under the command of Jorge Avilez, using this as a military coup d'etat to gain power from Pedro who capitulated. In 1822, the Cortes hearing of these issues formally dissolved the regency in Rio and ordered Pedro I back to Portugal. On January 8th, a petition of 8000 signatures asked Pedro to stay in Brazil which he accepted, causing Jorge Avilez to mutiny again. This time Pedro rallied Brazilian troops and militias and defeated him in battle, exiling Avilez to Portugal. While Avilez would live for another 20 years and would fight in the liberal wars and become a military-governor in Portugal, I can see this being used as an Assassination mission. Following this Pedro traveled across southern Brazil for several months to rally support before receiving a letter from the Cortes in Lisbon that Brazil had no right to self govern and any who opposed this would be executed. Pedro I immediately put down the letter and declared Brazil independent, beginning Brazil's war of independence.

    Most Portuguese military fell back to Montevideo and used force to shut down Brazilians in Montevideo, Salvador, and Sao Luis. Other major cities became hotspots for Brazilian militias. Many Brazilians began to free slaves to conscript them to service and amassed a total of 27,000 troops. The first year of fighting was rough for the Brazilians, taking many losses as they built their ranks, but engaged in guerilla warfare, stretching the outnumbered Portuguese thin and by 1823 had only control of the major ports of Montevideo, Salvador, Sao Luis, and Belem (which is interestingly right near where an Isu site is). Montevideo was under a 2 year-long siege by the Brazilians, as was Recife and Salvador. Pedro I, meanwhile, was declared Emperor of Brazil and was forced to expend troops and time to make the entirety of the Territory submit to him.

    In 1823, the King of Portugal was subject to coup d'etat and experienced several revolts and revolutions, essentially destroying their 1822 constitution and the Cortes. At one point the King was even forced to stay in a fleet outside the port of Lisbon and feign that he was traveling to Caxias, a city under siege in Brazil. During this time, King John VI also attempted to begin a Congress in Vienna to make other European Powers not recognize the sovereignty of Brazil, but in 1824 the United States formally recognized the Empire of Brazil and dissolution of the Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves. In June of 1825, after 3 years of guerilla fighting and thousands dead, King John VI signed a peace treaty recognizing the Empire of Brazil and his son Pedro I as emperor, however, it remained implicit that Pedro would become king of Portugal. John VI died a few months after the treaty became international law in 1826, leaving Pedro as king.

    At this point, an armed rebellion against Brazil began in Rio de Plata (present-day Argentina), and Pedro travels back to Portugal left the Brazilian Military weak. When he returned he gave in to the demands of the rebels. In 1831, Pedro abdicated to his son Pedro II due to leaving to wage war against his brother in Portugal, with Marquis de Lafayette and his son as allies. Pedro I was often a weak leader, but he cemented the roots of a constitutional monarchy and liberalism in Brazil. Brazil alone had taken 40% of all transatlantic slaves making up over 4 million men and women. Under Pedro II's rule, slavery was formally abolished, and a few years later he was overthrown to form the Republic of Brazil.

    There's a lot they could do here with a handful of famous court officials and generals during the war for independence, and if that wasn't enough in just South America, Ubisoft could have a great reason to take this to Africa too. Mozambique was a large Portuguese territory, but the city of Mombasa in Kenya was home to a Portuguese fortress, Fort Jesus, which was in constant flux and war with local Omanis. It would be very possible that during one of the multiple naval skirmishes of the war, a leading Templar may flee to Mombasa or Maputo. Mombasa, however, appears to be home to another Isu Site. This may be a good opportunity to show part of Eastern Africa naturally without needing a full game around it.

    submitted by /u/nstav13
    [link] [comments]

    If I rewrote odyssey to better match other AC titles in mainly just plot points and quest ideas with blurbs would you read it?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 09:23 PM PDT

    So as I said above after I finish reading the odyssey novel and going through the story again would any of you be interested in reading about how I would've done odyssey's story? As well as some commentary on some other things in the story I would've changed and in the game mechanics?

    I'd also add more historical references, make the family story more emotional and memorable, make use of those pesky cultists, and make the map size fit the story. (All those things bothered me..)

    This is mainly because I have a love hate relationship with odyssey where I absolutely love the game but I still think it pails in comparison to what it could've been.

    submitted by /u/0MidnightSolv
    [link] [comments]

    Which story was better? AC Rogue or AC Unity?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 03:45 PM PDT

    They both are amazing. Both great stories but whose story was better? Shay's or Arno's?

    submitted by /u/logan4587
    [link] [comments]

    There a way to boost trying to get level 99

    Posted: 15 Sep 2020 12:06 AM PDT

    Trying to level up to 99 there a way to boost me am in level 82

    submitted by /u/Chiquiesthekilla13
    [link] [comments]

    My feedback on Assassin's Creed Odyssey

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 11:13 AM PDT

    Hi everyone, I wanted to share my feedback on Assassin's Creed Odyssey. First of all I wanted to clarify that when I play an Assassin's Creed I do it by taking my time and doing everything 100% and in the hardest difficulty when I have the choice of difficulty. I started Assassin's Creed Odyssey in November 2018 a few weeks after its release. I just finished it.

    So it took me 350 hours in nightmare difficulty to do everything 100% which involves Assassin's Creed Odyssey and its two DLC:

    - Main progress (main story) = 100%

    - All Side quest = 100% (which obviously does not include repetitive quests

    - Region discovered = 100%

    - Player level = 99 which is max level

    - All Mythical Creatures defeated = 100%

    - Collected all orichalcum spread on the main map (600 Ori) = 100%

    - All synchronization point = 100%

    - Fully upgrade my ship = 100%

    - Kill all member of the Order of the Ancients

    - Kill all member of the Cult of Kosmos

    - Reach Tiers S4 Mercenary Ranking

    - Spear of Leonidas at level max = 6

    - Unlocked all upgraded abilities from DLC which are 9 special abilities

    - Solve all Ostraka: 60 on the main game + 5 in Elysium + 5 in underworld + 5 in Atlantis

    - Cleaning all the map with finding all underwater wealth + cleaning all Military Camp + Killing all Legendary animal

    - upgrading all engravings at their max level

    - defeating all champion in the arena.

    I really enjoyed the world of Greece during the Peloponnesian War. What interests me in A.C is not lore but really living an experience in a historically reconstituted universe. Exploration is something that I really enjoy. I'm a history fan and not really lore even though I've played almost all of Assassin's Creed. What I'm looking for above all in franchising is the work that ubisoft does to reconstruct historical periods. And clearly Assassin's Creed Odyssey is one of the best for me.

    I am in tune with the work of ubisoft which has taken over the franchise and is now orienting it towards this RPG and exploration component to fully enjoy the universe.

    Surprisingly, I appreciated the Legacy of the first blade DLC more on the scenario part than the main game. The story with Darius, the Persians and what Alexios will build with Darius' daughter caught me more interested than the family story of Alexios in the main game. And finally the 2nd DLC is in my opinion a success in terms of artistic direction !! I have really traveled and with Elysium, Underworld and Atlantis !! These universes are in my opinion clearly successful. Just as I was not disappointed with the 2nd DLC of Assassin's Creed Origins with Curse of the Pharaohs, here with the DLC of Atlantis I really enjoyed these universes !!

    Conclusion for me Assassin's Creed Odyssey has taken the best of Assassin's Creed Origin and made it an even better opus. I still enjoyed Assassin's Creed Origins because I really appreciate ancient Egypt. But here with Odyssey we have gone up a level in my opinion. I hope Assassin's Creed Valhalla goes in this direction and capitalizes on the best of Assassin's Creed Origins and Odyssey!

    Kind regards.

    submitted by /u/Alkashi76
    [link] [comments]

    Should I take my time with origins or rush through it?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 05:06 PM PDT

    I went on a marathon last year and beat all of the AC games up to unity, but unity quickly lost my interest (I was playing too much of one franchise) and last week got back into the franchise. I finished unity and syndicate and now I'm on origins. I want to beat origins and Odyssey so I can play Valhalla as soon as it releases. I don't know if I should go slowly and explore everything (And do all the side quests) or should I just quickly rush through those two games to make it time for the new release. I know it's such a minor thing to think about but it's been bugging me a lot. I'm enjoying the game a lot of anyone's wondering.

    submitted by /u/MrDragonball
    [link] [comments]

    Age is just a number! Awesome comedic quest ending

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 07:59 AM PDT

    So you run into this Older Lady who needs some herbs to get her husband... prepared for a fun night. In the end, when you get back with the herbs, the husband is like, "I'm too old for this shit!" (paraphrasing). So you being the badass assassin offers your physical services and this scene goes by where the husband is sitting outside their house playing guitar, chillin with people. It's finally morning when you walk out and the husband is like, "Did.. did she have fun?". And you're all like, "I think that'll tide her over for a few days."

    AND THE HE THANKS YOU AND PAYS YOU LMFAO! God damn, I laughed so hard. Wish I lived in Spartan times

    submitted by /u/imcleanasfuck
    [link] [comments]

    Assasin's creed games set in India

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 10:14 PM PDT

    I just wanted to know what historical events in India can be shown in an Assasin's Creed game set in India? I know that Assasin's creed chronicles is set in India, but aside from that what major events could have had the Indian brotherhood involved?

    submitted by /u/gunslinger141
    [link] [comments]

    My AC Series Reviews: Assassin's Creed Origins DLCs

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 11:30 AM PDT

    It's been quite a while since I posted my last AC review, which was for the core Origins game. I actually finished playing the DLCs about 3 weeks ago, and finished writing my review shortly thereafter. Then, life got in the way before I could get round to posting it here, my apologies for the delay.

    I'm sure my legions of fans (in my imagination) are desperate for the next article, so here it is. The Assassin's Creed Series: Assassin's Creed Origins DLCs: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_29.html

    It's going to be a while before my next review article is out, because now I'm waiting for Odyssey in the Steam Store to go on sale again, so I can buy the Gold version (that includes the Season Pass) at a reasonable price. Then I have to play through it of course.

    In the meantime, I'm working through playing Prey (2017) for a second 100% achievement record on PC (having done it already on PS4, I love this game) and also the newly released Kingdoms of Amalur: Re-Reckoning on PS4.

    Here's the link to all my AC reviews up to Origins. ----------

    Assassin's Creed 1: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/06/assassins-creed-series-assassins-creed-1.html

    Assassin's Creed 2: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins.html

    AC Brotherhood and AC Revelations: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-assassins-creed-series-ac.html

    Assassin's Creed 3 + DLC: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_19.html

    Assassin's Creed 3: Liberation: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_22.html

    Assassin's Creed 4: Black Flag + DLC: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_27.html

    Assassin's Creed Rogue: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_28.html

    Assassin's Creed Unity + DLC: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins.html

    Assassin's Creed Syndicate + DLC: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_8.html

    Assassin's Creed Origins: https://grimplings.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-assassins-creed-series-assassins_16.html

    submitted by /u/gse1
    [link] [comments]

    Is it still possible to get the ezio set in ac odyssey?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2020 03:31 AM PDT

    Hey I just got back into ac odyssey and realised that I missed the free weekend event. Is there anyway to get it now?

    submitted by /u/Mysfar
    [link] [comments]

    No comments:

    Post a Comment