According to boasts by Ubisoft, Assassin’s Creed was one of
their most successful franchises. They sold millions of copies last year, and
the PC version did very good in sales, despite it being leaked.
Ending in a cliffhanger, Assassin’s Creed begged a sequel,
and now it’s going to get it. Ubisoft officially confirmed the continuation,
Assassin’s Creed 2.
Ubisoft announced its financial results for the six-month
period which ended on September 30, 2008. The report revealed that sales were
up 31.8%, driven mostly by casual games and the company’s distribution
business. Yves Guillemot, Ubisoft’s CEO, announced at a follow-up conference
that they are hard-working on Assassin’s Creed 2.
No release information has been provided, but what rumors
we’ve gathered point to the fact that the game is set roughly 500 years after
the original in the 1700s, probably during the French Revolution.
The sci-fi twist at the first game’s conclusion hinted at
such candidates for the sequel’s location as ancient china or Feudal Japan,
making the French Revolution somewhat of a dark horse candidate.
The rumor comes from analyst Michael Pachter, who was a
guest on Gametrailers’ show Bonus round, who during the course of the show said
that the next Assassin’s Creed would be set “several hundred years” after the
original, “sometimes in the 1700s.” Going into specifics, Pachter then went on
to “speculate that the French Revolution could be a potential setting.”
The French revolution, one of the defining moments in the
world’s history due to its ramifications to this day, began 1789 with the
storming of the Bastille, and was one of the bloodiest changes of government
ever recorded. The Great Terror which ensued saw leader Maximillien Robespierre
put thousands of nobles and other political opponents to the guillotine. Irony
bit Robespierre like a sharp blade to the throat as he faced the guillotine
himself in 1794. Implications of the involvement of Knights Templar’s
descendents into the revolution set it up as a good candidate for the
conspiracy-inspired meta-background of the franchise.
The bloodletting and urban chaos of the period would also
lend itself well to the concept of a game set there, as well as the fact that
it’s close to Ubisoft’s collective heart: Ubisoft’s headquarters are based in
Paris.
Nevertheless, this is just a rumor. Pachter politely
declined comment when asked to elaborate, and Ubisoft have not responded to
requests for comment.
Another concern is that the breeches-and-powdered wigs
(albethey bloody considering the goings-on) of that era may not be as
attractive to gamers as the original medieval setting of the game.
Nevertheless, while leaping from rooftops in Jerusalem, gliding like a ghost
through souks in Damascus and slitting throats in Acre may be fun, there’s no
reason to keep the same setting considering the possibilities afforded by the
story. We don’t know whether it will be France or Kyoto, but we all can’t wait
for the next chapter of Assassin’s creed.