This is according to the rumors:
https://youtu.be/0RZaHgXEhJ4?si=vMYcAmfL1vE0kuwX
I don't know if he is going to be one of the game's protagonists or one of its main characters.
What do you think?
24 Votes in Poll
This is according to the rumors:
https://youtu.be/0RZaHgXEhJ4?si=vMYcAmfL1vE0kuwX
I don't know if he is going to be one of the game's protagonists or one of its main characters.
What do you think?
@Lacrossedeamon Because he brings female slaves to a nunnery!
Warning this contains spoilers on the Assassin's Creed: Valhalla novel Sword of the White Horse:
His name is Cyrus, a former Roman (Byzantine) soldier-turned-slaver who kidnapped women both Christian and Pagan women for a nunnery that was run by the Order of Ancients (which Cyrus was part of) and worked as a prison camp.
What do you think about him?
@Lacrossedeamon of why Babylon wasn't featured in the game!
@Shadowknight950 my goodness! I had forgotten that!
@Wendos I think that many anti-Roman rebels such as Arminius from Germania or Boudicca from Britannia were probably allies of the Hidden Ones!
@Ahmairah no that's the reason!
@Lacrossedeamon of why we didn't see Babylon in Assassin's Creed: Mirage.
As we know, Assassin's Creed: Mirage is set in Baghdad during the Abbassid era but is located in modern-day Iraq. It's located in the Middle Eastern region of Mesopotamia, situated among the Tigris-Euphrates river system, and was the birthplace of many cultures such as the Sumerians and Akkadian (the ancestors of the future Assyrians and Babylonians).
One of Mesopotamia's greatest cities and Empires was Babylon which was ruled by various leaders such as Hammurabi or Nebuchadnezzar II from the year 1894 to 539 BC but it was conquered by the Achaemenids, Macedonians, Seleucids, Parthians, Sassanids, and Arabs.
Babylon was abandoned in 1000 AD.
Did you want to see Babylon?
@Blixtkatt10 In this case the Medjays during their Golden Age in the New Kingdom of Egypt!
https://www.livius.org/articles/person/tacfarinas/
I think that he was a Hidden One because he was a Roman army deserter and led a rebellion.
@Violiina Well, in a few words telling about the role of the Sea Peoples (Philistines or Sherden) in the lore.
Instead of playing as an Ancient Egyptian, Canaanite, Phoenician, or Hittite, we could play as a Sea People warrior (like the Peleset or Philistines, the Sherden, the Shekelesh, and the Denyen).
During the Bronze Age, the Sea People raided lands such as Egypt, Anatolia, Phoenicia, Canaan, and Cyprus but they were defeated by Pharaoh Ramesses III in the Battle of the Delta between the years 1179 and 1175 BC, and according to the Old Testament also known as the Tanakh, some Sea Peoples like the Philistines settle down in the Levant and became enemies of the Ancient Hebrews.
In the game, the Sea People warrior discovers that Pharaoh Ramesses III of Egypt's affiliation with the Order of Ancients due to how he has his people in misery and kills him alongside some the Egyptian Queen Tiye kill Ramesses in 1155 BC.
Plus for the lore, it can explain the origins of the Sea Peoples, which they could the descendants of the Isu civilization because we don't know about their languages for example the Philistines.
https://youtu.be/8OPJ3OhQNvc?si=EMsEn3wqHXkNnzOz
An Assassin's Creed: Mirage DLC that could be about Mesopotamian mythology and another set in Constantinople.
The release day of Assassin's Creed: Jade.
More information on Assassin's Creed: Red and Assassin's Creed: Hexe.
Also, What is the game set in the Mediterranean, India, and Mesoamerica is about.
More information on Assassin's Creed: Invictus.
I'm also hoping for a game about Leonius due to the Roman Empire trend
I have seen the reviews and opinions from the Historian community and the French public on Ridley Scott's new film about Napoleon Bonaparte and how the director responded but What if Ubisoft does a game set in the Napoleonic wars in Russia, Egypt, Spain, or The Battle of Waterloo?
Napoleon Bonaparte appeared as one of Arno Dorian's allies in Assassin's Creed: Unity (set during the French Revolution).
One of my suggestions could be a game set during Napoleon's wars in Egypt and Syria (1798 to 1801 AD) which could feature events such as the Battle of the Pyramids and the birth of Egyptology plus we want to know the Egyptian and Ottoman points of view on Napoleon's campaign also on allusions to games such as Assasin's Creed: Origins and Assassin's Creed: Mirage.
Another interesting suggestion could be Napoleon's Peninsular War from 1808 to 1814 AD in Spain and Portugal, where we can learn about the Spanish and Portuguese Brotherhoods in that period.
These are:
Alexander the Great's Indian campaign (327 to 325 BC)
The rule of Ashoka the Great (268 to 232 BC)
The Trung sisters' rebellion (40-43 AD)
Roman Empire (177 to 192 AD)
The Three Kingdoms period (220 – 280 AD)
Alaric's Sack of Rome (410 AD)
The rule of Skandagupta (455 to 467 AD
Justinian I's Renovatio imperii Romanorum (533-562 AD)
Seongdeok of Silla's rule (632 to 647 AD)
The Battle of Hastings (1066 AD)
Hasan-i Sabbah's life (1090 AD)
Marco Polo in Kublai Khan's court (1260 AD)
Joseon dynasty (1418 to 1450 AD)
The Conquest of Tenochtitlan (1519 to 1521 AD)
The Elizabethan era (1558 to 1603 AD)
The Mughal–Maratha Wars (1680 to 1707 AD)
Simón Bolívar's wars (1783-1830 AD)
The Wild West (1865-1880s)
Nah!
He ruled from 355 to 360 AD and is known for being the last Pagan Emperor of the Roman Empire.
I think of two theories:
He was a Hidden One: During the rule of Constantine the Great (306 to 337 AD), many members of the Order of Ancients converted to Christianity, and the reason why he returned to the Ancient Roman Emperor's religion is that the Hidden Ones taught him on topics such as Homeric texts or the philosophy of Socrates, Plato, and Marcus Aurelius.
He was a member of the Order of Ancients: Since the beginning of Christianity, the Order of Ancients (which all members followed the Ancient Egyptian, Hellenic, and Ancient Roman religions) saw the Christians, Jews, and Samaritans as a problem, and they a strong influence on Roman politics, that's why they influenced Roman Emperors such as Nero, Valerian, Diocletian, and Valerian.
@Lacrossedeamon for his stories!