logo
Ten Things I Wish I Knew When I Started ‘Assassin's Creed Shadows'

Ten Things I Wish I Knew When I Started ‘Assassin's Creed Shadows'

Forbes28-03-2025

Assassin's Creed Shadows
Ubisoft
While this may be coming a bit late, without bothering to get a review copy, I started Assassin's Creed Shadows at the same time as most other people. But given that this is my job, I've managed to put 40 hours in already, and I've learned a few things. Here are ten things I wish I knew when I started Assassin's Creed Shadows
1) Check The Castle 'Type' Before Invading – You can check which 'type' of castle, for Naoe or for Yasuke, the game recommends by looking at its reward, and seeing if its for him or her. A Naoe castle will have more sneaking zones and small entryways, a Yasuke one will have gates to crash and sometimes big boxes to move. However, given how much of a combat monster Yasuke is, I end up using him to blitz through either kind of castle most of the time. That is harder with Naoe.
2) Stay On Your Horse, Avoid The Woods – In terms of navigation, this game does not want you to take shortcuts most of the time. I would almost always use your horse and the path tracker when going nearly anywhere. The woods are dense and the hills are steep off the main paths, and it will be more trouble than it's worth. Follow the winding directions on horses and you will always get there faster.
3) Don't Forget The Hidden Skill Tree Passive – This is easy to miss because it doesn't look like a normal skill slot and you can't put points into it. But at the bottom of every skill tree there will be a circle that shows you that you will get increased damage or health or things like that the more points you put into a tree. Jam points in there to get things like the 50% damage boost I now have on bow and naginata because I make sure to also do points on the left side row of perks, which will account for a lot of them.
Assassin's Creed Shadows
Ubisoft
4) Don't Forget Double or Triple Unlock Skill Perks - This is easy to miss. A number of upgrades will have a little dot or two above them. This means they can be upgraded multiple times, and for skills especially, these can be big damage boosts, sometimes 100% more damage if you remember to hit those nodes.
5) Always Do Your Contracts – Contracts refresh each season, are incredibly easy and usually close by. They give you a lot of upgrade materials for your base, your gear or just money, and if you're short on any of that, never miss them.
6) Don't Bother Smuggling With Scouts – That leads me to my next point, don't bother using scouts to tag materials in enemy zones. They don't give you that much, contracts are much more useful, and you should be saving your scouts mainly to find quest locations or occasionally, reset your wanted level.
7) Get Unblockable Counter Gear/Perks – While there are many styles of play in the game, I cannot live without giving the ability to parry unblockable attacks to both characters. For Yasuke, that's a chestplate called Protector's Armor found in Nijo Palace in Kyoto you can get very early. For Naoe, it's not gear, but a Katana perk, though you need the final row of knowledge point upgrades to unlock that one, which takes a long time.
Assassin's Creed Shadows
Ubisoft
8) Ditch Old Gear Instead Of Always Upgrading – I made the mistake of trying to upgrade all my favorite gear endlessly, but you will quickly run out of materials for that. Do not be afraid to ditch old gear, even legendary gear, for rares or epics because higher levels will give you flat stat boosts that are hugely important. If you can't live without a legendary, fine, focus on upgrading that one. But not all of them.
9) Get Legendary Blacksmith Mods – This requires a max Blacksmith upgrade at base, but it lets you take legendary mods from gear and put them in other gear's slots. For instance, that unblockable parry perk from Yasuke's armor can then be put into any other armor along with the original base perk.
10) Don't Forget To Transmog – This is easy to miss, but making your guys look awesome is a great aspect of the game. You can delete gear and still have those styles unlocked. Most legendary gear will have its own unique look, but even lower tier gear can be some of the best in the game (the mask everyone always asks me about for one).
Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, Bluesky and Instagram.
Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Popular Downtown Restaurant Is Moving in Next to the House of Blues
A Popular Downtown Restaurant Is Moving in Next to the House of Blues

Eater

time2 hours ago

  • Eater

A Popular Downtown Restaurant Is Moving in Next to the House of Blues

Four years after opening in Chicago, Kitchen + Kocktails by Kevin Kelley is moving into a larger home. They'll remain in River North inside a space that neighbors the House of Blues and in the shadow of Marina City. A July opening is likely inside the former Katana. Kelley says the menu will remain the same. He's adamant in keeping the same experience at all his restaurants for dinner and weekend brunch. Kitchen + Kockails debuted in 2020 in Dallas. Kelley has since opened locations in Washington, D.C.; Charlotte, North Carolina; and Atlanta. More locations are on their way. There aren't many Black-owned restaurants in Downtown Chicago, which makes Kitchen + Kocktails a unique success story. The restaurant's formula takes an elevated approach to soul food, with dishes like Caribbean jerk lamb chops and Southern fried catfish, and puts diners in a dining room with Instagram-worthy photo opportunities. Kelley says their current space is almost certainly crowded on weekends: 'Every year our sales have increased,' he says. That's quite an accomplishment, knowing the downtowns across the country struggled during the pandemic with fewer office workers and tourists. Chicago wasn't immune to those challenges. So an opportunity to double down on their commitment to Chicago presented itself in the former Katana space that also housed Bin 36 wine bar at 339 N. Dearborn. Kelley is particularly excited about an upstairs space, which they'll call the Assets Lounge, where customers can watch the big games. There will be a new private dining room, and Kelley wants to start welcoming corporate events, too. Kelley is hopeful the restaurant will attract concertgoers from the House of Blues, which hosts a variety of musical genres. That gives Kelley a unique chance to showcase his brand to new audiences. Adding weekday lunch is a possibility as well. 'We hope to show all of Chicago what we are and what we do,' he says. Kitchen + Kocktails by Kevin Kelley, 339 N. Dearborn, planned for a mid-summer opening Sign up for our newsletter.

New Japan theme park aims to tap tourism boom, become springboard to Asian markets
New Japan theme park aims to tap tourism boom, become springboard to Asian markets

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Yahoo

New Japan theme park aims to tap tourism boom, become springboard to Asian markets

By Rocky Swift and Kentaro Okasaka TOKYO (Reuters) -The company behind a new nature adventure park on Japan's southern island of Okinawa is hoping the country's huge tourism boom will get it off to a raring start, and that with time propel the startup further into Asia and other markets. Junglia, a 60-hectare site built on an old golf course and featuring more than 20 attractions from a hot air balloon ride and buggy riding to treetop walking and a "Dinosaur Safari", is set to open on July 25. Costing some 70 billion yen ($634 million), the park is the brainchild of Tsuyoshi Morioka, chief executive of entertainment firm Katana. Morioka, a theme park veteran, is credited with turning around flagging attendance at Universal Studios Japan (USJ) in Osaka, western Japan, by bringing in Harry Potter-themed attractions. Japan is experiencing an unprecedented boom in tourism, fuelled by a weaker yen, with overseas visitors climbing 47% to a record 36.9 million last year. Their spending shot up 53% to 8.1 trillion yen ($55.6 billion), making tourism - which counts as an export in GDP data - the country's second biggest export sector after cars. The Japanese also love a good theme park with Tokyo's Disney resorts having enduring success and USJ, despite some early financial woes, proving popular. That said, many parks have also failed. Yu Shioji, the chairman of the Amusement Park Society of Japan, believes Junglia will have "almost no chance" of long-term success given that there are other nature adventure parks in Japan and its relatively high cost - 6,930 yen ($48) per day pass for locals and 8,800 yen ($60) for international visitors. While acknowledging long odds for long-term profitability for any amusement park, Morioka - who considers himself a maths nerd - said that by his calculations, Junglia has more than a 70% chance of success. He expects several thousand visitors a day to Junglia and says it can be profitable even if it only garners half the number of visitors of the nearby Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium, which has around 3 million per year. Morioka added that demand for theme parks and higher value-added tourism services in Japan is here to stay, given that many Asian countries are growing wealthier. "The weak yen is a tailwind, but the number of people who want to visit Japan will increase structurally regardless of the currency effect," he said. The Japanese government has said it wants to boost the number of overseas visitors to 60 million per year by 2030. If Junglia is successful, Morioka says developing smaller attractions that cost less than 100 billion yen, unlike mega theme parks like Disney's and USJ, could be easily replicated in other Asian markets like Taiwan and Indonesia. Listing Katana would be an option to fund future growth, he said, adding that he saw a lot of potential for theme parks built around Japanese anime if he can convince content creators to license their intellectual property. "I think it would be good if there was a third option in cities around the globe after Disney and Universal," said Morioka. "I want to develop niches where they can't go and create a third force in attractions in the world that originates from Japan." ($1 = 144.84 yen)

Ubisoft shares plummet 20% on sharp net bookings drop, disappointing outlook
Ubisoft shares plummet 20% on sharp net bookings drop, disappointing outlook

Yahoo

time15-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Ubisoft shares plummet 20% on sharp net bookings drop, disappointing outlook

-- Ubisoft Entertainment (EPA:UBIP) reported lower-than-expected earnings for fiscal year 2024-25 as net bookings declined 20.5% year-over-year, reflecting weaker partnerships and intense industry competition, and issued a disappointing outlook for the fiscal 2025-2026. The video game publisher posted an adjusted loss per share of €0.56, wider than analysts' estimates of a €0.47 loss. The company's shares plummeted more than 20% in Paris trading Thursday. Net bookings for the full year came in at €1.85 billion, slightly below the company's target and down from €2.32 billion in the previous year. Sales fell 17.5% to €1.90 billion, though marginally beating expectations of €1.89 billion. Ubisoft reported an operating loss of €82.6 million compared to a profit of €313.6 million a year earlier. Despite the challenging year, CEO Yves Guillemot highlighted some positives, stating: "Assassin's Creed Shadows reaffirmed the power of the Assassin's Creed brand, with a highly favorable community response from long-time fans and new players alike." The company generated positive free cash flow of €128 million, ahead of its target. However, Ubisoft expects approximately breakeven non-IFRS operating income and negative free cash flow in fiscal 2025-26 as it continues its transformation efforts. Ubisoft issued a weak outlook for 2025-2026, citing additional game delays. The company expects flat net bookings year-on-year, break-even adjusted EBIT, and over €100 million in negative free cash flow—all significantly below consensus estimates. Q1 guidance was also soft, with projected net bookings of €310 million, 13% below expectations, despite strong interest in Assassin's Creed Shadows. "It's clear that Tencent's €1.16bn cash injection into the group (to acquire a 25% stake in the new subsidiary) has eased pressure on the balance sheet, perhaps making the decision to delay games easier," Deutsche Bank analyst George Brown commented. "However, it is clear that further efforts need to be made to reduce poor profitability, notably with regards to headcount," he added. Brown highlights that Ubisoft employs around 18,000 people—two to three times more than U.S. peers—despite generating significantly lower revenue. "In the meantime, investors have little to be excited for with regards to the pipeline in FY-26 with no major games announced," he said. Luke Juricic contributed to this report. Related articles Ubisoft shares plummet 20% on sharp net bookings drop, disappointing outlook Foot Locker shares surge as Dick's mulls $24-a-share buyout SoFi targets 30% member growth, CEO talks guidance Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store