McLEAN, Va. (TheBlaze/AP) — It seems like we’re not done with the “horses and bayonets” meme quite yet. Instead of a political dig though, the “old-fashioned” battle equipment is showing up in another unlikely place: a video game.
Although it’s not expected to be the most popular of video games depicting war, which today usually involve computer-graphics imagery of tanks and machine guns and Tet offensives, Assassin’s Creed III is due for release Tuesday, immersing players in Colonial America and the Revolutionary War. At the same time though, the creators said they were sure to avoid an overly pro-American theme.
There will be key cameos from George Washington, Ben Franklin and other Founding Fathers.
In some ways, the game is meticulous with historical accuracy. Great attention was paid to research to recreate the cities of New York and Boston on a one-third scale. History professors were brought in as consultants.
Watch the video game’s trailer (Warning: Violent content):
In other ways, the game takes liberties with history. It integrates the Revolutionary War into the overarching story of Assassin’s Creed, in which the secret society of the Knights Templar fills the role as the game’s overarching villain.
Game creators were reluctant to reveal too many details in advance of the game’s release. Review copies were not available in advance.
The game’s creative director, Alex Hutchinson, said the ability to explore a historical era that has been largely left untouched by the gaming world was one of the most exciting aspects of the project.
As for Washington himself, Hutchinson said he wanted the game to portray the fact that for the man who would become the nation’s first president, it was far from certain that America would win the war.
“He wasn’t sure he was going to win,” Hutchinson said. “When you read their letters, they were very uncertain for much of their time” how the war would turn out.
Francois Furstenberg, a history professor at the University of Montreal, who has written about the iconography that surrounds Washington, served as a consultant and said he was interested less in making sure names and dates were perfect, but more in the game’s overarching narrative. He said the game’s creators shared his desire to depict the war in a nuanced way that avoided portraying one side as the good guys and vice versa.
“Anything that complicates the narrative is a good thing,” he said. “If anything I think they were more interested in sort of a muckraking account” of the revolution, something that agreed with Furstenberg.
The game’s protagonist – Connor, half American Indian, Half British and not aligned with either side – served as a good vehicle for exploring the era in a way that avoids patriotic cliches, Hutchinson said.
“As the colonies draw closer to revolution, you will become the spark that ignites the revolution into a full blaze. Your crusade will lead you through blood-soaked battlefields,” the YouTube trailer description says of Connor. “You will not only witness history…you will make it.”
The game’s international fan base also demands an even-handed approach to the Revolution, said Hutchinson, who is frequently questioned by skeptical fans who worry the game will be too pro-American. You can see this in another trailer for the game (Warning: Violent content):
Not to worry, said Hutchinson, who jokes that he’s an Australian living in Canada making a game about the American Revolution for a French software company.
Even where it sought to be realistic, the game’s creators took a few liberties. Washington, for instance, is first introduced as a young officer serving under General Braddock in the French and Indian war. The game makers took great care to show the youthful Washington accurately, as a redhead. Looking at the finished product, though, they felt they ought to add a touch of gray to Washington’s hair, to more closely match the iconic image of Washington held by the public.
“We did not know how odd it is to see a red-headed George Washington,” Hutchinson said. “It was one of those instances where the fiction felt more right than the real version.”
Ubisoft takes far greater liberties in a downloadable add-on game that will be available to Assassin’s Creed players a few months after the games release. In “The Tyranny of King Washington,” players confront a scenario where Washington, rather than yielding power to civil authority, parlays his power and popularity and establishes himself as a new monarch.
At George Washington’s Mount Vernon estate, curators are happy that the game will introduce so many kids to Washington and the Founding Fathers and hopefully get them thinking about history.
“I would love for people to focus on exactly the incredible choice Washington made to relinquish power,” said Carol Cadou, senior curator at Mount Vernon, even if the vehicle for prompting that discussion is a game that contorts and creates an alternate reality.
Historical figures certainly make appearances in some video games, but rarely from historical eras and rarely in a setting devoted to realism. The popular game “Call of Duty: Black Ops,” for instance, features John F. Kennedy, Fidel Castro, Richard Nixon and former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara. But in the game, the four of them team up to defeat an onslaught of zombies at the Pentagon.
Cadou says that Washington has so often been portrayed so heroically that he becomes unrelatable.
“Washington is almost so good he becomes bland,” she said. “Even if he’s depicted in a negative way, it gives us an opportunity to explore” his life that otherwise wouldn’t exist.
The Mount Vernon estate has focused in recent years on piercing the stodgy image of Washington on the dollar bill and sought to emphasize his military daring and action-hero aspects of his life story.
Mount Vernon even looked at producing its own educational video game featuring Washington, but ultimately concluded that such a game would be “a little more violent than we had the appetite for.”





















































































































ChewbacaTW
Nov. 1, 2012 at 2:27pmI’m playing this right now… cause i’ve always liked alternate history. It got me interested in actual history.
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SkunkWorks
Oct. 31, 2012 at 2:40pmI wonder how Liberal Hollywood has hacked up the new redo of the movie Red Dawn.
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BuggiOlleo
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:00pmTry Empire Total War for a more realistic approach to War Gaming; still, it is a game which only created a need to search for answers which I didn’t already know concerning Revolution. Now, in AC3, Gen Gates became a person whom I was hungry to investigate which further lead to many more Revolutionary War Heroes concerning Mutiny on the Crown. I am eager to PC my way through the AC3 campaign; it looks interesting–accuracy in history is usually left to the player; it is wonderful to argue theory in AC 3 chat rooms then axe your tormenters in the head during live AC 3 multi play…be ready to endure the Creed of legions who will enjoy every moment of the genre. After all, it is only a game; interpretation is great for arguing over a cup of Jo in the local coffee shop.
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OniKaze
Oct. 31, 2012 at 11:51amI played this for 4 hours last night, and I found it hard to put down… (Had to since I had to go to work today…) but I am a big fan so far…
Is the game OVERLY American?? No… But the Main character is NOT an “American”… He’s an American Indian (which weren’t TOO found of the “white man” back in those times…) so that makes perfect sense…
Does the game follow exact history?? No… And it shouldn’t, after all, if it did we would all know how it ended.. (Titanic, anyone??)
Is the game fun and entertaining?? Heck Yes….. It is a really good time.. Very emersive…
I hated the First A.C. game (it was lame and repetitive) But all of the A.C. games that came after were a blast and have a great story… The story is Sci-Fi/Historical/Fictional which makes for a GREAT gaming world…
I like this game (so far) and before people harshly criticize it, you should give it a go…. If anything, you’ll have a fun 30+ hours…… But the game has one thing that many people find annoying… It comes out and tells you that HISTORY is written by the winner, and what we all “think” is fact, MAY be a little different from what REALLY happened… May, or May Not….. I leaves it up to you to decide…
Overall, good game, whether it factual or not (even though at the first loading screen they TELL YOU it is a FICTIONALIZED story…).
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Rock_Paper_Bullets
Oct. 31, 2012 at 8:59amFor those that are negative towards this video game, the ENTIRE series is an exercise in storytelling, as in “What if this happened in World History instead of what really transpired?” not to mention the healthy dose of SciFi and Conspiracies. Don’t you folks ever entertain “What If” scenarios, simply to appreciate what you have? If you don’t like it, don’t play it and don’t let your children play it…a simple solution really.
Besides of all the gripes I’ve seen, I have yet to see complaints about “The Violence Factor”…which UbiSoft listened to folks this time and provided an option to turn off the “Blood/Gore”…score another kudo to UbiSoft
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BradLitton
Oct. 31, 2012 at 11:59amI really don’t see how this is an issue. All 5 AC games have been made primarily in Canada and as Rock_Paper_Bullets pointed out is an exercise in storytelling. I’m not surprised that Canadians weren’t focused on being as Pro-American as possible when they’re wrapped up in telling a story that has spanned 5 games, 3 continents and hundreds of years.
Also, all 5 AC games have an option to turn off the blood for those concerned about the violence.
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Marsh626
Oct. 31, 2012 at 3:24amThe real historical assassins were shi’ite muslims and the first islamic terrorists. And their real life primary enemy wasn’t the evaaaal White Christian Crusaders but mainstream sunni muslims who viewed them as infidels for not following sunni islam.
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ChevalierdeJohnstone
Oct. 31, 2012 at 2:33amSome of the Sid Meier’s: Civilization titles, including the most recent, include American Revolution scenarios in which a player can choose either the American or the British. The depiction of military technology, economics, and even political differences is quite accurate – at least insofar as a turn-based strategy game can be historically accurate.
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Chuck Stein
Oct. 31, 2012 at 3:21amThe “Civilization” line of games is consistently skewed towards a positive perspective of Communism. I love the games — so does my son, but the original version of the game made Communism a form of government that had several positive aspects (the “corruption” in an empire was not increased by communism, but was spread evenly around). Civ IV had Communism producing more food from windmils (as I recall) — total joke. The latest, Civilization V, makes the adoption of Communism incompatible with a police state! Still, a fun game.
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darkimagesoflight
Oct. 31, 2012 at 9:28amIt skews communism as good, because it assumes the end-game/ideal result of communism to be what is existing in the game. The problem is, because 100% of humanity will never operate entirely out of selflessness and with a “greater good” mentality, that end game will never be achieved.
So in a way, the game does accurately portray what communism espouses, it DOES NOT portray the reality that has proven true in every nation to embrace that government style.
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ssvineman
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:13amFirst off, just got the game and I love it. Second off, yes, some people have issues. Of course the game isn’t overly patriotic, any more then Altairs story was overly Jewish or Ezio’s overly pro italian, and as for the DLC, like the guys who made the game, I”m a story writer by trade and one thing about story writers, we aren’t afraid to ask what if, and Ubisoft isn’t the first to ask, what if Washington wasn’t the noble, god fearing man he was. The Tyranny of King Washington seems the perfect way to me to consider how lucky we were to get President Washington and not tyrant Washington, and if I get to make evil CINOs (Christians In Name only) look silly doing it, even better.
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OperationNorthwoods
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:03amI played the first one and didn’t like it but if they fixed the issues then I might pick this one up after I get Black Ops 2.
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OniKaze
Oct. 31, 2012 at 11:37amI hated the First A.C. game… It was lame, and repetitive…. However ALL of the other ones after the first have been VERY entertaining….. Give them a shot from A.C. II on… They are VERY good.
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pray75
Oct. 31, 2012 at 12:45amI recall Ubisoft searching for American Revolution Historians for the class, and typically, the games are pretty historically-accurate. They do take liberties for the sake of the main story of the game, but overall the history is done pretty well. I was actually talking about this with a few friends of mine, and the Assassin’s Creed games (specific 2 and Brotherhood) helped me do extremely well in a few exams in college. LOL
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Hatchimon
Oct. 31, 2012 at 4:17pmI’m with ya. After AC II, I did some research on the Borgias. Sure sparks curiosity.
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ssvineman
Oct. 31, 2012 at 9:15pmI learned how to say rest in peace in Italian playing the Ezio games, does that count?
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Metallicat
Oct. 30, 2012 at 11:18pmWith this entry in the series Ubisoft/Montreal proves(to me) that they are not only anti-Christian but anti-American as well. these games are only misleading our children to believe Christianity is evil and now America as well.
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Quagmir
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:04amAnd dont forget that playing Grand Theft Auto will make you shoot people and run people over when you drive…. And I never get turtles to do like Mario does in Super Mario Bro’s. Thousands of dead turtles and none of them ever slide on the grond bouncing off everything at a high rate of speed. Dont get me started on Donkey Kong……
/sarcasm off
Its a game that from your comments…you obviously have not played or take a game way to serious and not for the entertainment value that it is. It isnt real life and they dont pretend it is.
I have watched the Brits take Indians captive and kill them, I have helped them by setting them free and helped the revolution all while meeting founding fathers and killing thousands of smug Brits. I dont feel any less Christian for doing any of this.
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Metallicat
Oct. 31, 2012 at 5:56amBut in each game in the series,isnt the main villian always “evil Christians”? Seems like a narrative that has carried on throughout the series,and now you can explore and murder in America without “the usual patriotic cliches” attached. Wonder what those cliches would happen to be? Maybe that America wasnt founded by Christians? Or that is was founded by evil Christian slave masters who hijacked the Revolution for their own ends? Either way I wont pay a Canadian or any other foreign nations company to entertain me by pooping on the history of my country or the history of my religion.Assassins had no part in this war historically,as it was not honorable of gentleman to employ such dispicable tactics or to associate with murderers. It was not Christian to do so. America was founded by honorable Christian gentleman. except maybe that Franklin guy,he was a little weird.
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TAC616
Oct. 31, 2012 at 6:37amIt’s obvious you haven’t played this series much. The plot gets rather complicated and very sci-fi. It’s hardly “anti Christian.” FFS the villians of Brotherhood were the Borgias, who managed to get the papacy and were awful, awful people. The Borgias being monsters is not attacking Christians, that’s historical fact. They are of course used ficticiously here, as there was no also Ezio in real life, nor ancient alien artifacts. The games use history as a backdrop for a sci-fi story that’s ultimately just an old fashioned fight between a huge hidden conspiracy that seeks only control (the templars) and the ones fighting them in the shadows(the assassins). Neither side has a religious exclusivity, if you fight for the cause, they don’t really care who you worship.
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OniKaze
Oct. 31, 2012 at 11:56am@Metallicat
Just for the sake of correction, YES the “villians” in this game ARE EVIL CHRISTIANS.. NOT Christians as a whole…
The Templar’s are portrayed (factual or not) as as a corrupt and power hungry organization seeking world domination… So Yeah.. That makes them the bad guys…. It doesn’t matter that they are Christian… They just hide under the veil of being a “Christian” organization… But they never once (in all the games I have played, which is ALL of them) say that Christians are evil as a whole… Just this group…
Corruption is NOT religiously exclusive…. It happens EVERYWHERE… I am sure there ARE Corrupt Christians in places of power in reality… But its not because they are Christian… Its because they are corrupt which makes them POOR Christians…
THAT is what this game is about…
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Hatchimon
Oct. 31, 2012 at 4:30pmActually, in the games the Templars are an exclusively atheist organization. At the end of AC II, Rodrigo Borgia (aka Pope Alexander VI) says that there is no God and he only wanted to be Pope for the power (Same goes for Templar Al-Mualim from AC I). On the Assassin side, Altair was atheist and Ezio was agnostic (he would give his targets a “rest in peace / good luck in the next life” send off just to be safe). The only hardcore Christian was King Richard the Lionheart, and he was protrayed kindly in the one scene he was in.
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SacredHonor1776
Jan. 28, 2013 at 1:54pmOn a related note, the game isn’t particulary “anti-American”. The main character actually is more anti-british. He fights on the side of the good guys. But so do some of the bad guys.
There are some great bits, where you raise the American flag in a patriotic way.
The only bit that Connor leaves Washington, and loses trust him, after Washington attacks his tribe. This was based on an actual historical event. Although he does come back to help Washington one more time, to investigate Benedict Arnold.
Washington is portrayed as a fairly complicated guy. Did some good things, did some ruthless things. Neither good nor bad. But other than his wiping out a few Indian tribes thinking they were allied with the brits, he seems to be mainly ‘good guy’.
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insomnia2399
Oct. 30, 2012 at 10:45pmI didn’t read any of the comments, I just read the article so I don’t know if anyone posted on this, but has anyone seen what the Add-On for this game is? I believe it’s called King Washington the tyrant… It says it’s supposed to be an alternate reality, but even so, and especially after reading this article, I believe it’s just a sly way to get our kids believing the wrong things about our founding fathers. And I am buying this game but will not buy the add-on. I liken this add-on to the Abraham Lincoln vampire hunter movie…. disinformation for our kids….fake or not… when they are not taught in school who these men really were… this crap out now is all they have to go off of…
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 11:00pm“Ubisoft takes far greater liberties in a downloadable add-on game that will be available to Assassin’s Creed players a few months after the games release. In “The Tyranny of King Washington,” players confront a scenario where Washington, rather than yielding power to civil authority, parlays his power and popularity and establishes himself as a new monarch.”
Guess you didn’t read the article or the comments before posting……?
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Rowgue
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:22pmI don’t know why anyone would be surprised by this. Assasin’s creed plays heavily off of the conspiracy theory mumbo jumbo surrounding the illuminati and the free masons guild. It’s a video game and it’s an insanely outlandish video game. It isn’t meant to be taken seriously.
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Metallicat
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:53pmseems to me to be about a secret society that kills those evil Christians.like a shadow jihad.
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Zerodawn
Oct. 30, 2012 at 10:16pmThe thing about this is you kill just as many Muslims and Christians. In fact the first game the leader of the assassins turned out to be the main bad guy. The story is intrusting but the thing is that it is just a game and a factional history. ALSO in this one they Make George Washington to be the hero and the British that killed the Indians to be bad.
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The-Monk
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:00pmSince this game deals with (and the story talks about) George Washington and Mt Vernon Manor I thought some of you would appreciate what has “really happened” in this area of the United States.
In this area of Virginia, Mt Vernon is the most prized procession of the Islamic Jihadist regime. Mt Vernon has been taken over and controlled by these Islamic Jihadist for many years.
Want some proof? Here is a link to what the best High School in Northern Virginia looked like in the past and another link showing what it looks like today…..
Past = http://mvhs-1960.com/home.html
Present = http://www.saudiacademy.net/History.htm
Got it? The home of George Washington is now run by Islamic Jihadist right under the noses of everyone in Congress.
For all you Ron Paul supporters…. Dr Paul did nothing to stop this.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:15pmgood call, Monk!
see this site to learn exactly who is running this little jihad academy:
http://www.jihadwatch.org/2009/03/urgent-call-stop-the-islamic-saudi-academy-expansion-tonight.html
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justangry
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:18pmCome on Monk, we’ve been over how he introduced legislation to stop issuing Visas to folks from countries that don’t cooperate with us or support terrorism and how it wasn’t cosponsored by anyone in the GOP included your VP candidate.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:27pmNot endorsing Monk’s cheap shots at RP, BTW…. (love ya anyway Monk)
The rest of this info is rather startling, though….
Deerborne, Mich. comes to mind…
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justangry
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:30pmBTW, I’d support a Constitutional Amendment to make Sharia Illegal in this country.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:37pmJUST….
even though it such an amendment would be redundant regarding current law, i would too.
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Individualism
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:49pmmonk there is a muslim under your bed watch out. Muslim Jihadist are no more of an issue than Christian Crusaders are, nothing to worry about, as long as we got our guns we will be fine to take out any murderers that try to murder people. The most common attacks are police brutality if your so concerned.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 10:21pmINDI….
again.. sometimes you make total sense… and sometimes you say things like this…
“Muslim Jihadist are no more of an issue than Christian Crusaders”
Huh? What year is it where you live?
I’d like to come visit so i can witness the fall of the Ottoman Empire…..
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ORACLE12389
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:56pmI’m a creed head, and I can’t wait to play this game. It’s fiction the story goes back to the crusades, and templars use alien tech to control minds to make their people world leaders, win wars, basicallly the illuminati running the world. The assassins are freedom fighters against them so on. Point is it’s one of the best franchises out, and it involves real history with fiction for fun. It may not be too pro American, but we fight the reds, and get to some actual history in the process. I guarantee its more pro American than anything the dems are putting out there.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:22pmThe commercials look awesome! I’m usually all about Splinter-cell & GTA (along with FIFA & Madden) but i may have to get this game…
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Jaycen
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:29pmNo, you get bogus history. It says so in their own words. Good God, pay attention to something digital that doesn’t spray blood.
Assassins are the good guys? Freedom fighters? Assassins (people who murder for hire) are freedom fighters (people who fight, and sometimes kill, and often die for a higher ideal of providing others with freedom)?
You can’t even hear yourself speak, can you?
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pantokrator
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:34pmI dunno. After reading this article, I don’t see it as not pro-American, or at least not to the point that it should be shunned. These seem like petty things, and from what I see, Connor is most definitely sided with the Americans. The George Washington DLC is more or less a hypothetical thing, a “What if?”. We all know, including the designers, that Washington was definitely NOTHING of the sort, so I wasn’t offended when I heard about that DLC.
I too am an AC freak, and I can’t wait to get my hands on this game. When I heard it was taking place in the American Revolution, I almost jumped out of my chair in excitement. Among all the ideas that went on out there about where ACIII was going to take place, I really didn’t think the American Revolution was going to be it.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:40pmJAY…
We don’t play games to learn history…
I know my history, thank you…..
I’m 39 freiken years old!
Games are for fun… they don’t have to be real..
Also… some times i play Star Wars games… and i play as the BAD guys (gasp!)
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DLV
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:17amOracle- I agree with your statement, I love the Assassins Creed series but I love your avatar more. The fallout series is one of my favorite series to date. That picture is just so badass.
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Metallicat
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:50pmI started to play the first game in this series but felt it had a pro muslim slaughtering Christians feel to it,so I stayed away from the series.
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Metallicat
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:09pmI also refuse to buy any game made by Ubisoft/montreal for their repeated use of Christians as fodder in their games.
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Kael Hyun
Oct. 31, 2012 at 4:38amObviously you didn’t play longer as Altair kills Muslums (quick tip the Templars aren’t just Christians in this series there all faiths the Templars just use faith as a means to an end) as well and (Spoilers) at the end of the game got on pretty well with King Richard
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Valezka.Vidra
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:39pmI want to play this game so freaking badly. argh!!!
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PeteOH
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:35pmWhat a J@ck@ss comment… “they were sure to avoid an overly pro-American theme.”?????? … about the AMERICAN Revolutionary War!? WTF! It’s become so bad that you can’t even have a video game about the American War for Freedom without being “pro” American?! Fools! These Frogs should be grateful we had this war, won our freedom and later saved their hides, otherwise they’d be “Shaggin’ Gerry and speaking speaking German”! I’m a Modern Warfare and Halo kind of guy!
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PittsburghAfterDark
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:34pmHere’s the wonderful thing about this game that no one is discussing.
Assassin’s Creed is a huge gaming franchise which is rather surprising since it started out as a great concept with a mediocre execution first time out.
Fans of the series will positively dig into the “real” history introduced in levels, campaigns and downloaded content in this production and discuss it endlessly on gaming message boards. They will love picking apart what isn’t “real” and what’s been embellished for the sake of telling a story and selling a game. Believe it or not for many teenagers this will be their first time spending any time at all researching the history of this country and this period of time all because of a game.
We’ve watched real American history brushed under the rug and this site, of all places, should welcome a huge number of our citizens now intellectually curious enough to learn about what made this country great. The author may disagree about the tepid nature of pro-American cheerleading going on but we all know 1/3rd were revolutionaries, 1/3rd loyalists and 1/3rd just wanted it over. That’s the real history and any chance to introduce the American story to a world wide audience is okay by me.
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Wool-Free Vision
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:18amI’m with you on this, PittsburghAfterDark. Though I’m not particularly excited to learn that they are intentionally avoiding “being too pro-American,” I can certainly understand WHY they would want to avoid the appearance of a bias in this matter – it’s pretty obvious when you consider that this game will be sold internationally.
But you make an EXCELLENT point with your post, and I agree wholeheartedly. There will be PLENTY of American players who actually DO know the real history, and they will be ranting about any fallacies and discrepancies on every message board and even through in-game chat (if that is a feature of this franchise).
Let’s try to be optimistic about this and be grateful that, AT LEAST, Ubisoft is exposing young minds to SOME actual American history. This is a good thing. It is far better to foster an interest in real history and real American heroes than to encourage criminal activity with titles like Grand Theft Auto, Mafia, Postal, etc. etc. etc.
I will reserve final judgment until after the game is released and played through by American historians who can find the faults in it, but for now I am cautiously optimistic.
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Stelex
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:14pmMy son is playing this at this moment……ITS A GAME, he knows its not history and any fool or parent whom allows there child to look at video games as such should have there child taken away. I grew up on creature double feature…….I know Japan never battled Godzilla or Gammera or Mothra. I loved the Matrix………I’m reasonably sure I’m not a battery. My neighbors are not “POD PEOPLE” and the “THING” I hope is still in Antarctica. To any parent that loves the Republic, just teach your child the Constitution, Bill of Rights and help the interpret the Federalist Papers. Why they are not taught in every high school in America is a crime in and of itself. F the Progs……lets get our country back.
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DEFCON4
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:23pmNicely put, boy, do I remember the “creature double feature”……
I believe, Dr. Spock was the “MC”. lol
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DarkJello
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:28pmAgreed.
I have played some of these, and they are fun. Nothing more or less. The problem is not that this era has been mostly passed over in video games, but that it has NOT been explored fully by each and every American since the birth of this great country!!
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Anonymous T. Irrelevant
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:35pmI grew up with Thriller, where Boris Karloff was the host. Then I moved to where it wasn’t on and they had the Cool Ghoul here in Cincinnati.
I saw this on a commercial the other night. i thought it was a bit strange that the hero was an Indian.
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Gazoiks
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:37pmThe biggest problem I find with this game is that the “hero” is a Muslem, and he is tasked with killing the evil Christians wherever he finds them. It is just another form of indoctrination of our youth that Christians are evil conspirators and the only hope is Islam to stop them. It really is that bad of a premise, and it is just another tool to indoctrinate with. If you don’t believe me, watch the trailer again and just before he plants his axe in the general’s chest he opens the shirt and what do you see?
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Stelex
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:38pmGotta ask you school why, why are we not made to understand the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and I believe most important is the Federalist Papers which ties everything together. Why if this is America’s core belief system are they not taught in every school. I was never seriously taught about them, it was up to me to figure it out. Now they sing OBAMA SONGS and slam the constitution. WTF…….Wake up and get mad….call your school. They knew the children where the way to go and now we’ve got at least 2 to 3 gens of Prog BS.
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Locked
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:38pm@Gazoiks
“The biggest problem I find with this game is that the “hero” is a Muslem, and he is tasked with killing the evil Christians wherever he finds them.”
You’re insane.
“Through series’ protagonist Desmond Miles, the player controls a young half-English, half-Mohawk man named Ratonhnhaké:ton, also known as Connor, who is drawn into the fight against tyranny when his home is attacked by European colonists.”
The protagonist is not Muslim in this game. Troll elsewhere.
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khandahar&jalalabad
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:39pm@gaz It’s a cross because he’s a Templar. Templars are the bad guys in the game, it’s not that he’s simply a Christian.
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tommylink
Oct. 31, 2012 at 1:17amUm I have played the series and all though it does have some anti chirstian messages in it’s bias it’s not pro muslim, if anything it’s pro scintology. I want to play this game and just see how good Ubisoft got in nailing are founders. If they give them off has complicated men with revioloutnary ideas and ideals that they diden’t always have the ability to live up too. Or if it will be the simple George Washington he was a wealthy slave owner out to screw other colonist through a war that I see a lot of far lefty spew.
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intercepter
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:09pmI still like mario bros.
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Stelex
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:19pmI’m an “Asteroids” guy myself
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PittsburghAfterDark
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:26pmDo you have Asteroids?
No but my dad does. Can’t even sit on the toilet some days.
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Stelex
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:31pmPreparation A…….will take care of it.
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:45pmDIg Dug
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BenInNY
Oct. 30, 2012 at 10:17pmWhen Dig Dug did Dig find Asteroids?
Man I still have my old Atari 800 and 50 or 60 games for it. Last year I bought a Coleco and a bunch of games at a garage sale for $3
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Eastinfection
Oct. 30, 2012 at 10:26pmBEN….
Coleco- Vision? Damn Benny i’m jealous..!
What i’d really like to get my hands on is an old Intelivision….
Best game ever, though, is the original NES Kung-Fu Master…. hi-ya!
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Locked
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:07pm” It seems like we’re not done with the “horses and bayonets” meme quite yet. Instead of a political dig though, the “old-fashioned” battle equipment is showing up in another unlikely place: a video game.”
No offense to the author, but this is a statement rivaling the idiotic bias you’d frequently find on MSNBC. A quick search online finds that this game has been in production since at least 2010; it has nothing to do with a “horses and bayonets meme” at all. Sometimes, a cultural reference really is just a cultural reference. Leave the political grandstanding at the door, please; you insult conservatives when you act like the left.
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mcmeador
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:26pmUh, I don’t think the author was saying there was any direct connection between Obama’s debate comment and this game…
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Locked
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:45pmRelating the two was ridiculous. It’s like saying that if a movie came out about the civil war right now, it’s only riding the wave of an Obama meme. Sometimes two events are just unrelated. As they say in psychology, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, and saying it’s something more says quite a bit about the person who’s arguing such.
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kaydeebeau
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:49pmUh – it is an AP story ….propoaanda in media at its “finest”
Here is a clue – if the story comes from AP you have to be warned – adjective use is always slanted and inflammatory rather than neutral – sad state of journalism – they should all be charged with malpractice
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Locked
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:21pm@Kaydeebeau
“Uh – it is an AP story ….propoaanda in media at its “finest””
No it’s not. Whenever it says AP/The Blaze, it means a Blaze author used AP information (usually the images) as the background for it, but wrote the article itself. The author is Liz Klimas, a writer here for The Blaze.
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mcmeador
Oct. 30, 2012 at 11:12pmLike I said, the author didn’t say there was any connection between the two. Was it a poor attempt at humor by referencing a current event in an unrelated story about a video game? Yes, I’d say so. She was simply saying that we’re not done discussing old weaponry in current events. That’s it. You’re reading too deeply into it.
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Buchanan16
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:02pmPre-ordered! Can’t wait!
My only problem is that I think it was bad for them to have DLC that portrays Washington as bad… They honestly couldn’t have thought of anything different?
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mcmeador
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:19pmWell it’s not like they’re saying that he really was bad. It’s just a “what if” scenario, and as much as I respect the founding fathers and love this time period, it is an interesting “what if.” If anything, I think exploring that scenario would help us respect the real George Washington even more.
Anyway, I was originally worried about the developer’s take on the Revolution, but most of what i have read since the game was announced has reassured me mostly. I can’t say I blame a foreigner for exploring the Revolution without an overwhelming patriotism. It’s not like I would feel patriotic for another country when exploring their history. I have the game now, and I will be playing it tonight. I can’t wait!
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bpodlesnik
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:19pmSame, I really liked the way they took this one.
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Stelex
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:26pmIt worries me that your getting your inspiration about GW from a video game.Please take some time to learn real history. Get your hands on anything written prior to 1900, any thing after that is probably tainted or just re written. Including video games…………..
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mcmeador
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:31pmWho says I expect to learn history from video games? Get your panties out of a wad. I have plenty of books about history and the founding fathers. I thought I made it pretty clear that I already had a great interest in American history. Excuse me for getting excited about being able to explore the time period to some degree in a video game.
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DeltaCharlieCain
Oct. 30, 2012 at 10:59pmThe description of the DLC points out that that is an alternate history. It would be like playing the Resistance series, where the Bolshevik revolution in Russia fails and World War II never happens, but instead, the world is invaded by an alien virus that turns people into monstrous freaks. It’s obviously an alternate history with Resistance, but it’s a similar idea here. We all know that Washington never became a tyrannical king, it’s just for fun.
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MrButcher
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:01pmThere is no reality anymore.
Reality is perception.
History is what you feel (that’s nothing new, BTW).
It’s going to get ugly.
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CatB
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:50pmThank GOD … ,my many x’s great Grandfather .. Joseph WIlloughby was pro-American in the Revolutionary War …
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CatB
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:55pmbtw .. here is the grave of my Revolutionary War 5 times Great Grandfather .. at one point he was captured (along with 5 others and one killed) when released he had to petition to get another gun, shot and powder .. and went back and fought again. Wonder if they have anything near how brave these men were >>> in the game.
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=WI&GSfn=j&GSpartial=1&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=49&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GSsr=321&GRid=17832052&df=all&
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TelepromoterNChief
Oct. 30, 2012 at 7:57pmWorst graphics ever.
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steelpanther
Oct. 30, 2012 at 8:41pmIf it’s anything like the first game I played, it’s not the worst of it. Reality was thrown out, history was thrown out, reason was thrown out, and it was a really boring game to start with, it was one of those few games that I couldn’t finish because I got so mad at how frustrating it was.
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TG360
Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:03pm@Steel
You must not play a lot if AC1 was the last one you played. First was very boring, but everything was fixed in 2 and there on which has made it one of the best series out there.
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