''[[Shay Cormac]] arrives back at [[Port-Menier|camp]] to find they've been [[The Way the Wind Blows|attacked]] by the [[Royal Navy|British navy]], and gets into a fight with:''
''[[Shay Cormac]] arrives back at [[Port-Menier|camp]] to find they've been [[The Way the Wind Blows|attacked]] by the [[Royal Navy|British navy]], and gets into a fight with:''
AC Twelve Trials Odyssey Q1 Liam O'Brien Reversed.png|[[Liam O'Brien]]
AC Twelve Trials Rogue Q1 Liam O'Brien Reversed.png|[[Liam O'Brien]]
AC Twelve Trials Rogue Q1 Chevalier Cropped.png|[[Louis-Joseph Gaultier, Chevalier de la Vérendrye|Louis-Joseph Gaultier]]
AC Twelve Trials Rogue Q1 Chevalier Cropped.png|[[Louis-Joseph Gaultier, Chevalier de la Vérendrye|Louis-Joseph Gaultier]]
</gallery>
</gallery>
Revision as of 19:05, 27 July 2022
Patience, brothers. Soon we will reveal the secrets of this painting.
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The Twelve Trials is a puzzle and promotional website celebrating the 15th anniversary of the Assassin's Creed series. Over the course of 3 months, from 14 June–12 September 2022, players are invited to answer ten weekly trivia questions about the games to earn entries in a grand prize draw for an all-expenses-paid, one-week trip to Italy for two any time between April–June 2023.[1]
The 15th anniversary roadmap lasted the contest's duration
The contest is open to everyone worldwide who is 18 years of age or older, excluding residents in the Canadian province of Quebec. Upon visiting the game site, players are prompted to sign in to their Ubisoft Connect account to keep track of which questions they answered correctly and to see how they fare in the leaderboards. From there, they have one week to answer trivia on that week's profiled main game, working in reverse chronological order of the series' releases, starting with 2020's Assassin's Creed: Valhalla and ending with 2007's Assassin's Creed.[1]
Answering all the questions correctly earns one entry in a draw for that week's prize of an Assassin's Creed statue, with the exception of Weeks 6 and 7, which will reward an Assassin's Creed game[1] and a themed[2] gaming chair[3] and desk[4] by Secretlab, respectively. Ten correct answers will also give one entry for the grand prize draw. For players who do not have a Ubisoft account, they can also submit their answers by email to "AC15quiz@ubisoft.com", so long as it is within the week that the questions were live. However, this alternate entry method is limited to adults in the United States and Canada only, and comes with the condition that these players cannot then create a Ubisoft account and submit future answers from there, nor can players who already have an account also submit their answers by email in attempt to earn more entries.[1]
Trivia questions
Stylized logo for Assassin's Creed: Valhalla
14–26 June
Embody a Viking warrior once more to conquer ten memories from Assassin's Creed: Valhalla. Knowledge is power. How well do you know this title?
Journey with the Fryes in Syndicate and test yourself with ten adventures from their time in London. Knowledge is power. How well do you know this title?
Prize
30cm Jacob Frye figurine from the Big Ben Collector's Case edition of Syndicate.[8]
The Rooks, a London gang that fights against the Blighters. At one point, the color of their clothing changes from green to black, as they are led by...
In the tenth Assassin's Creed: Origins question, the title cards for Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag and Assassin's Creed: Rogue displayed the wrong characters, with the Colonial TemplarShay Cormac labelled as being in Black Flag and the pirate Edward Kenway seeming to appear in Rogue. However, Shay was born in 1731 once the Golden Age of Piracy had ended, while Edward was long dead by the time of the Seven Years' War depicted in Rogue and was only mentioned in passing. This error lasted the duration of the week players could answer the Origins trivia questions and was not fixed by the time the quiz closed in preparation for the Syndicate set.
In the third Assassin's Creed: Unity question, each of the suggested dates for the Women's March on Versailles are also the dates for events either seen elsewhere in Assassin's Creed or referenced in supplementary media. 5 September, 1781 was the date for the Battle of the Chesapeake as seen in Assassin's Creed III; 5 October, 1789 was the Women's March in Unity; and 5 November, 1605 was Guy Fawkes' failed attempt to blow up the Palace of Westminster in the Gunpowder Plot, which was mentioned in James Morse's emails on Abstergo.com after then-junior professor Shaun Hastings used Fawkes' name as an alias to leak classified information on Abstergo Industries.
In the tenth Assassin's Creed: Rogue question, it mentions the player collecting the scattered pages of Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanac. Although it would still have a few years left in its circulation each time Franklin met Shay in the mid-1750s, the question and accompanying picture are anachronistic to the series' internal history, as that activity is instead started by Haytham Kenway in the Seven Years' War and completed by his son Ratonhnhaké:ton in the American Revolution.