![]() ![]() Ubisoft has even achieved a minor miracle: making the modern day sequences with Desmond interesting, and Brotherhood feels more like two related stories running in tandem rather than one meaty tale and one tedious framing story. Has anything changed? Well, the missions are even more streamlined and well-designed than they were in Assassin's Creed 2, meaning that this is one open-world adventure that's incredibly low on down-time, and that there's enough variety in the missions to get and keep you hooked. That's all great, but we're still not too far from a straight expansion. ![]() If you played and loved Assassin's Creed 2, then Brotherhood is going to seem as comfortable and familiar as an old T-Shirt. The controls, which make the business of climbing, killing and leaping from turret to chimney to window ledge ridiculously simple, are pretty much unaltered. The basic mix of clambering, free-running, stealth and hand-to-hand combat really hasn't changed all that much. What follows won't be too unfamiliar to fans of the series, as Ezio explores Rome, clambering up famous landmarks, taking on missions and slaying Borgia targets, conspirators and hapless lackeys by their dozens. Meanwhile, in the present day his descendent, Desmond, is on the run from Aspergo, the corporate front for the modern Templers, using the Assassin's rogue Animus machine to plug into his Italian ancestor's memories and - maybe - save the world. By honing and intelligently adding to the style and gameplay of its Renaissance masterpiece, Ubisoft has created the best Assassin's Creed yet.įor fear of spoilers we won't go too far into the plot, but Brotherhood takes our hero, Ezio Auditore da Firenze, to the Eternal City, Rome, where he once again finds himself in conflict with the Templers, and their public manifestation in the ruthless Borgia family. With mostly the same cast, the same technology and the same period setting, it is not quite different enough to be the third episode in the series, yet it is much, much more than a glorified expansion pack. (Pocket-lint) - Picking up directly where the superb Assassin's Creed 2 left off, Brotherhood is a weird sort of semi-sequel. ![]()
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