Showing posts with label Assassin's Creed 3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assassin's Creed 3. Show all posts

Headline RePLAY – 4.6.12

Today on Headline RePLAY: The creative director of Assassin’s Creed 3 calls the internet’s ideas “predictable,” major publishers removed registered sex offenders from their online services in New York and a South Korean representative uses Angry Birds for his campaign.  


Alex Hutchinson, the creative director of Assassin’s Creed 3, really didn’t like the ideas proposed by fans on where the next Assassin’s Creed game should go.

“People on the internet suggest the most boring settings,” Hutchinson told OXM. “The three most wanted are WWII, feudal Japan and Egypt. They’re kind of the three worst settings for an AC game.”

Hutchinson and Assassin’s Creed 3 writer Corey May rather do India. “[May] really wants to do India,” said Hutchinson. “I would too. I’d really to do the Raj.”

At PAX East, Hutchinson clarified his stance on potential Assassin’s Creed settings and the creative process: “It’s part of a bigger discussion. Obviously any setting is potentially awesome,” Hutchinson told Joystiq. “The point we were making was that some settings are more familiar in videogames than other settings. And the two particular ones [WWII and Feudal Japan] that were mentioned are very familiar videogame settings.”

“The exciting thing is that the game can go anywhere,” the creative director continued. “We’ve had versions of the assassin… people have thrown ideas around for probably literally any setting that people would think of. But when you get right down to it—when we’re doing the actual nitty gritty of spending the time on it, spending a couple years making something—we wanna go to a setting that other games haven’t gone to.

“We’re trying to find places that will surprise people.”

“If people think they have the worst ideas, I apologize for that,” he said. “But really, they’re very predictable. The internet is not the place for insight, unfortunately.”  

*Source: OXM, Joystiq


In an aptly titled initiative dubbed “Operation: Game Over,” major videogame publishers have purged 3,580 accounts of New York registered sex offenders from their online services in collaboration with the state.

The initiative used information from a database that collected sex offenders’ e-mail addresses, screen names and other online identifiers. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman then approached publishers to remove the sex offenders from their online platforms. The first-of-its-kind effort involved Microsoft, Apple, Sony, Warner Bros., Electronic Arts, Blizzard Entertainment and Disney Interactive Media Group.

“We must ensure online videogame systems do not become a digital playground for dangerous predators,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “That means doing everything possible to block sex offenders from using gaming networks as a vehicle to prey on underage victims.”

The New York Civil Liberties Union disagrees: “While the intent here is admirable, schemes like this one do very little to keep children safe and trample on the right to free speech and expression,” communications director Jennifer Carnig told Gamasutra.

“And the problem this initiative is trying to solve is almost non-existent,” Carnig explained. “Children are almost always abused by people they know—a friend or family member—not by people they interact with while playing videogames online.”  

Nevertheless, the Attorney General’s office plans to continue what the initiative started. “The process is still ongoing, so we’ve been in touch with [Nintendo] and other companies as well. These major companies are just the first to voluntarily agree,” said an Attorney General spokesman.

*Source: Gamasutra


Capitalizing on the Angry Birds craze, a South Korean representative has released a campaign video titled “Hong-ry Birds” where he, well, dresses up like an Angry Bird to discuss social issues.

In a rebranding effort to distance themselves from South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, the incumbent Saenuri Party has decided the best approach was to dress Representative Jeong Hong with feathers, make bad puns and declare: “I’ve become a bird for the Sae[bird in Korean]nuri Party. I’m a completely different candidate, with completely different promises!”  

If it squawks like an Angry Bird, explodes like an Angry Bird… it’s still a South Korean politician in disguise.  

*Source: koreaBANG via Kotaku

Headline RePLAY – 3.1.12

Today on Headline RePLAY: Ubisoft confirms Assassin’s Creed 3 speculation, a patent troll is targeting big companies and a new development studio is founded by the creators of Fable.


Confirmation, ahoy! Ubisoft has just confirmed the image we saw yesterday of Assassin’s Creed 3 on their Facebook page by posting the cover art for the game depicting the same white-cloaked, tomahawk-wielding assassin in the backdrop of the Revolutionary and British armies duking it out.

If confirmation from the source wasn’t enough, Game Informer also revealed the art for their April cover story— the same image from yesterday crafted by comic artist Alex Ross.

It looks like the next locale in the war between the Templars and the Assassins is the 18th century: the American Revolution!

*Source: Ubisoft


A patent troll may be on the loose under the guise of “GameTek LLC.” The company is suing companies like Facebook, Zynga and EA over US Patent #7076445: “System and methods for obtaining advantages and transacting the same in a computer gaming environment.” Basically, GameTek claims it patented the use of virtual currency to buy items in a game, which includes almost every modern title in existence.

Industry Gamers tracked the patent back to when it was filed in 2000, which was then granted to Shawn Cartwright in 2006, then assigned to Theados Corporation in 2011, and ultimately passed to GameTek. GameTek previously went bankrupt in 1997 and closed a year after, but is currently not engaged in any business other than pursuing the lawsuit.

GameTek is seeking a judgment on the aforementioned companies for infringing on the patent and to prevent them from doing so again in the future in addition to “reasonable” attorney’s fees and whatever else GameTek may be entitled to.

*Source: Industry Gamers


Fable’s art director, technical director and executive producer all left Lionhead Studios to join the franchise’s creators in forming a new UK-based development studio called “Another Place Productions.”

Simon Carter, one of the two brothers that created Fable, left Lionhead last June in hopes to join his brother, Dene Carter, working on games for digital platforms like XBLA, PSN, Steam and mobile devices. Other members of the Fable team that joined the Carter brothers include art director John McCormack, technical director Guillaume Portes and executive producer Jeremie Texier.  

Another Place Productions’ mission is to create “high-quality, meaningful experiences that will inspire audiences worldwide.”

It is unknown how their departure will affect the development of the Kinect-centric Fable: The Journey, or any other projects.

*Source: Gamasutra

Headline RePLAY – 2.29.12

Today on Headline RePLAY: The Binding of Isaac gets rejected from the 3DS’s eShop, Blizzard layoffs and the star of Assassin’s Creed 3 may be revealed.


The Binding of Isaac is an indie game that was released on Steam in late 2011. It’s named after the biblical tale of the same name—except in this version, Isaac tries to escape his mother, who was tasked to sacrifice him, by navigating through randomized, Legend of Zelda-esque dungeons. According to Isaac’s creator, Edmund McMillen, the game’s “questionable religious content” was enough for Nintendo to reject it from being sold on the 3DS’s eShop.

“Nintendo is saying that Isaac can’t ever exist in the 3DS shop ever,” said McMillen. “All I know is they passed on it due to problems the religious aspects of the game might cause. I don’t have details on what aspect of “religion” they are most bothered by, but I did hear that they didn’t care about any blasphemy in games, but cared more about religion period and how something based on the bible might effect things.”

“Honestly it was a pretty muddy response,” continued McMillen, “but I did hear that religious games are far more bothersome than blasphemous ones, and the game being based on a story in the bible and being “by the book” in a lot of ways could have actually been an issue.”

“It’s nice to have the freedom to publish something that speaks its mind about religion on a platform like Steam.”
                                                                                                                                                                  


Blizzard is reducing its global workforce by 600 workers following a review of the company’s organizational needs. 90 percent of the layoffs are from departments not related to videogame development; specifically World of Warcraft’s development team will not be impacted.

“After evaluating our current organizational needs, we determined that while some areas of our business had been operating at the right levels and could benefit from further growth, other areas had become overstaffed,” said Blizzard CEO Mike Morhaime. “As a result, we need to scale down some of our departments and part with some of our colleagues and friends here at Blizzard.”

Morhaime acknowledged how difficult the situation was for those affected, so Blizzard is offering each laid off employee a severance package in addition to other benefits.

“I also want to emphasize that we remain committed to shipping multiple games this year, and that our development teams in particular remain largely unaffected by today’s announcement. We’re continuing to develop, iterate, and polish Blizzard DOTA, Diablo III, StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm, World of Warcraft: Mists of Pandaria, as well as other, unannounced projects.”



Ubisoft’s announcement on Assassin’s Creed 3 left a lot of unanswered questions: When and where is it set? Who is the main character? A Best Buy employee may have the answer to these questions.

The unnamed employee sent Kotaku a picture of the game’s promotional art, which possibly features Assassin’s Creed 3’s star.

As of now, the art is completely unconfirmed, but if accurate, the rumors about Assassin’s Creed 3 being set in the American Revolution are true. The background contains the Continental flag and the assassin is wearing an 18th century military jacket, a tomahawk, a pistol and appears to be Native American.

*Source: Kotaku