Paris, 1789. The French Revolution turns a once-magnificent city into a place of terror and chaos. Its cobblestoned streets run red with the blood of commoners who dare to rise up against an oppressive aristocracy. Yet as the nation tears itself apart, a young man named Arno will embark upon an extraordinary journey to expose the true powers behind the Revolution. His pursuit will throw him into the middle of a ruthless struggle for the fate of a nation, and transform him into a true Master Assassin.
Platforms
Stadia PC PS4 XONEGenres
Adventure Role-playing (RPG)Themes
Action Fantasy Historical Open world StealthLanguages: English and 13 more
Interface | Audio | Subtitles | |
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English | |||
French | |||
Italian | |||
German | |||
Spanish (Spain) | |||
Arabic | |||
Czech | |||
Japanese | |||
Korean | |||
Polish | |||
Portuguese (Brazil) | |||
Russian | |||
Chinese (Traditional) | |||
Dutch |
Critic Reviews
By Manuel Eichhorn
Assassin's Creed Unity on Stadia is a good game - and I'd like to see more series entries like this one. A proper remaster with all the technical glitches fixed might be a good start.
- 02 Jan, 2021
By Greg Wheeler
Assassin’s Creed Unity is not a good game. It’s a buggy, poorly written adventure that received a lot of criticism from the fan-base when it released back in 2014. 6 years later, that criticism is still warranted as Unity remains a buggy, poorly written title that stands out as one of the worst games in the Creed franchise.
- 13 Jul, 2020
By Gabriel Zamora
Ubisoft makes some good changes to its Assassin's Creed formula with Unity, but the game is doomed to mediocrity due to its lack of polish and originality.
- 17 Dec, 2014
By Marcus Jones
Many have complained about the number of glitches within Assassin's Creed: Unity, and while I have experienced some myself, the game is still playable and fun at that. It's got a solid core and I've enjoyed the story, but I feel like Ubisoft completely dropped the ball with some aspects. The connectivity they've forced upon players is just a major drag on the game and I feel cheated that because of their broken systems, I am unable to participate in every piece of Unity. If you can get past that, however, you'll certainly enjoy the game.
- 15 Dec, 2014
By Richard Lee Breslin
Assassin's Creed: Unity symbolises what is both good and bad in the modern day videogame industry. It may have received patches, but that's the videogame industries modern day cop-out.
- 05 Dec, 2014