How Assassin’s Creed Origins tech is finally catching up to the vision
"Now we have the tech to do whatever we want and the ideas are not missing”
Assassin’s Creed has always been a franchise with a grand vision both in terms of the scale of its worlds and its narratives. Telling a story that has a foot in our present while making history an accurately and respectfully recreated playground is no small task but the team behind Assassin’s Creed has been doing so for over 10 years.
Over that decade it has, however, sometimes felt like the development team’s vision was slightly ahead of its time – like they wanted to deliver more than they were able to in the time they had with the tools they were using.
Each game has had mind-boggling amounts of research behind it that’s been used to recreate stunning historical locations to an astounding degree of accuracy and make them feel convincing and immersive.
However, despite impressive scope and visuals, the games have been repeatedly pulled down by bugs and glitches and the sense of history being our playground has been undermined by arbitrarily locked maps and restrictive, repetitive gameplay.
Grand designs
With Assassin’s Creed Origins, Ubisoft is promising to reinvent the series with its biggest, most open game ever. When we sat down with the game’s creative director, Jean Guesdon, he told us that a lot of what the team has managed to achieve this time around is largely down to now having “the tech to do whatever [they] want.” And maybe a little more time.
“I’ve been working on [the series] for 11 years now, since Assassin’s Creed 1. We’re dealing with human history, something that’s so rich that the possibilities are endless and we’ve already explored many time periods,” Guesdon told us.
“We still have many choices left but Egypt was one of the most desired settings by players and ourselves. We felt that we were ready to build it and recreate it as accurately as possible. Now we have the tech to do whatever we want and the ideas are not missing.”
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When we asked Guesdon what kind of tech the team now had that they didn’t before and how it had helped he told us it was twofold. First of all, there’s the consoles: “When you talk about recreating an entire country it requires a powerful console and consoles are now mature enough to allow us to bring that with a level of quality you’d expect.”
Of course, we’ve already seen previous Assassin’s Creed titles on current generation consoles, but it’s the new 4K and HDR capabilities of the PS4 Pro and Xbox One X that appear to have the Assassin’s Creed’s art team excited.
During a press presentation, the game’s art director Raphael Lacoste was keen to point out the importance of lighting in recreating an Egypt that felt real. The region’s relatively flat landscape, he said, meant that a stark contrast between light and shadow were important for creating depth and really highlighting the brightness and heat of the sun.
The HDR support being offered by new consoles must, then, be exciting we posited to Guesdon.
“Absolutely,” he replied, “the artistic team finally has the tools they needed to bring the beauty of Egypt to its completion and now players will be able to enjoy it and its massive scale. As soon as you play the game you get the sense of immersion and it’s a real blessing.”
There have, of course, also been internal technology advancements that have helped, namely in the Anvil game engine. Anvil is Ubisoft Montreal’s proprietary engine that’s been used in its various forms to develop all of the Assassin’s Creed games.
Revving the engine
According to Guesdon “Anvil is now at its full maturity [...] we’ve continued to push and we added some new tools to create the terrain.” As a result of these advancements it’s been possible for the development team to “increase the productivity and bring this entire world fully developed from underwater to the top of each mountain.”
Breaking out of the yearly release cycle was naturally a help, too, and Guesdon acknowledged this: “We used this extra year, it was really important for us because it was giving us the opportunity to come back for the 10th anniversary with a very big strong and polished game. Especially dealing with this setting, ancient Egypt, Cleopatra’s era – it’s something that’s massive and we’re really happy with result after four years of development.”
Whether or not the team is now planning to go back to this yearly release cycle or move to releasing a game every couple of years Guesdon told us he couldn’t say. The focus now, he said, was on “delivering the best possible experience for Assassin’s Creed Origins.”
Given that the team is excited by advancements in development technology, we wondered whether the Assassin’s Creed team would be interested in using it to develop for new platforms. The new Discovery Tour game mode, we suggested, has the potential to lend itself particularly well to virtual reality. Sadly, a virtual reality mode isn’t in the immediate future for the Assassin’s Creed franchise.
However, Guesdon did praise VR’s ability to “push immersion like never before” before adding “maybe one day the two will meet. For the moment that’s not the plan.” At the moment, the team is aiming “to deliver a very good first iteration [of Discovery Tour] in early 2018 and then we’ll see from there what makes sense in terms of future potential development.”
Emma Boyle is TechRadar’s ex-Gaming Editor, and is now a content developer and freelance journalist. She has written for magazines and websites including T3, Stuff and The Independent. Emma currently works as a Content Developer in Edinburgh.