Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Board Thread:Series general discussion/@comment-18014300-20170611010837/@comment-142718-20170614022947: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Vetinari
Created page with "<div class="quote"> Sol Pacificus wrote: For example, I hope they don't make it a simple "liberation of Egypt against Greco-Roman influence" story. That'd be too simple and o..."
 
imported>Vetinari
No edit summary
 
Line 5: Line 5:
</div>
</div>


I doubt it will be that straightforward (especially if those trilogy rumours are true). Events in Uprising look to be setting up Juno making her move in the modern day and with the Ancient Egyptian pantheon influence out the wazoo I'm guessing the past will explore the Isu's legacy more than before. Plus Bayek looks to be a cop under a power shift so he has to figure out what he's upholding and his place in the world.
I doubt it will be that straightforward (especially if those trilogy rumours are true). Events in Uprising look to be setting up Juno making her move in the modern day and with the Ancient Egyptian pantheon influence out the wazoo I'm guessing the past will explore the Isus' legacy more than before. Plus Bayek looks to be a cop under a power shift so he has to figure out what he's upholding and his place in the world.


Unless he does it in less than a year like the Fryes. ;)
Unless he does it in less than a year like the Fryes. ;)

Latest revision as of 04:37, 14 June 2017

Sol Pacificus wrote:

For example, I hope they don't make it a simple "liberation of Egypt against Greco-Roman influence" story. That'd be too simple and only pushes the theme of freedom, rather than other core ideas of the Creed, like questioning dogmatic beliefs and personal fallibility. However, some of the more profound aspects of Assassin philosophy were revolutionized by Altaïr, so another question is, did Altaïr just rediscover the lost meaning behind the Creed, lost under Al Mualim? In laying down the foundations of the Creed, does Bayek ironically establish dogma in itself, or was it dogmatic in some respects from its conception and newly liberalized by Altaïr rather than having been as liberal from the beginning?

I doubt it will be that straightforward (especially if those trilogy rumours are true). Events in Uprising look to be setting up Juno making her move in the modern day and with the Ancient Egyptian pantheon influence out the wazoo I'm guessing the past will explore the Isus' legacy more than before. Plus Bayek looks to be a cop under a power shift so he has to figure out what he's upholding and his place in the world.

Unless he does it in less than a year like the Fryes. ;)