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Freerunning

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Revision as of 05:05, 26 January 2010 by imported>Reqυiem (Undo revision 26129 by Ezio auditore (talk) Redundant.)
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Free Running or freerunning is a form of urban acrobatics in which participants, known as free runners, use the city and rural landscape to perform movements through its structures. It is one of the core gameplay mechanics of the Assassin's Creed series. It derived from the french parkour, l'art du déplacement (English: the art of moving) but is now considered as a separate discipline: Parkour emphasizes efficiency, whilst free running embodies complete freedom of movement which allows the inclusion of many acrobatic maneuvers (often for aesthetics and challenges). In this way, the movements Altaïr and Ezio perform can rather be considered as Parkour while referred as Free running in the game and by the developers. Characters in the game also use many movements of the Parkour discipline such as Passe-muraille, Balancé, Saut de bras, Planche... etc.

Known practitioners

File:654.jpg
Freerun chasing between Ezio and an Agile in San Gimignano.

Movements

Assassin's Creed

Altaïr can climb up any wall if its surface is not too flat, having anything he can grab to (windows, cracks, ledges...). In addition, he can use many of the parkour movements:

Balancé

Balancé (Swing) is a movement where you swing on a bar and let go to grab another object or to drop to the ground.

Lâché

Lâché (Drop) is the act of dropping from a hanging position or a bar.

Passe-muraille

Passe-muraille (Wallpass) is the climbing of a tall wall by kicking its surface once to propel upward.

Planche

Planche (Muscle-up or Climb-up) is the movement of climbing an obstacle from a hanging position into a position where your upper body is above the obstacle, supported by the arms.

Roulade

Roulade (Roll) is a forward roll where the hands, arms and diagonal of the back contact the ground, often called breakfall. Used primarily to transfer the momentum/energy from jumps and to minimize impact, preventing a painful landing.

Saut de bras

Saut de bras (Arm jump) is to land on the side of an obstacle in a hanging position, the hands gripping the top edge, holding the body, ready to perform a muscle up.

Saut de fond

Saut de fond is a jump from a high height usually followed by a roll.

Saut de détente

Saut de détente (Gap jump, running jump) is similar to a long jump.

Saut de précision

Saut de précision (Precision jump) is a static or moving jump from one object to a precise spot on another object of a small surface such as low walls. It is usually done with the feet close together but nobody in the games does it in this way.

Assassin's Creed II

thumb|300px|right|Uplay Help - Assassin's Creed II: Parkour Tutorial In addition to all the movements of Assassin's Creed, the second episode has some new ones.

Fast Climb

By holding the High Profile trigger, Ezio can climb up the building much faster than his ancestor Altaïr. However, the scheme of the ledges he will grab must be regular.

Climb Leap

This movement is first shown by Rosa. Being wounded, she makes a fellow thief teach Ezio how to do the movement:

"Begin in a hanging position, then jump to the ledge above you. As you reach it grab it with your hand and pull yourself up!"
―Rosa

Trivia

  • There is a bug in Assassin's Creed and Assassin's Creed II when sometimes even citizens or regular guards perform some freerunning movements that only Assassins can do. This bug mostly occurs when the NPC appears on a building or higher platform.