Insider revealed Ubisoft's surviving games – including three Assassin’s Creed, Splinter Cell remake, and a new Ghost Recon part
A few days ago Ubisoft announced a radical "reorganization", within which six games were canceled, including Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, delayed seven releases, closed two studios, and announced the establishment of five Creative Houses to oversee certain franchises.
But gamers are more interested in which games survived the "cleaning" and this question was answered by the authoritative French insider j0nathan.
What is known
The blogger has long proven his awareness of Ubisoft's plans, so his words can be trusted. According to j0nathan, the company continues to develop the following games:
- Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag Resynced — a remake of the iconic 2013 pirate action game;
- Assassin’s Creed Hexe — the next big part of the franchise dedicated to medieval Europe during the Witch Hunt;
- Assassin’s Creed Invictus — a multiplayer project in the Assassin's Creed universe;
- Beyond Good & Evil 2 — the longest-developed game in industry history, which has already spent 18 years and over $500 million;
- Ghost Recon (Project Over) — a completely new part of the series, events taking place in a fictional Southeast Asian country;
- Splinter Cell Remake — a remake of the first part of the famous spy stealth action series – announced in 2021, and no information about the game has been received since then;
- The Division 3 — expected release in 2027-2028.
- Project Maverick — an extraction shooter in the Far Cry universe, which will be released at the same time as Far Cry 7.
Of course, these are not all the games Ubisoft is developing. j0nathan reported that the company is working on several completely new IPs, and one of them will be Scout – a new attempt to enter the competitive shooter genre, and this time the developer is focusing on Apex Legends.
A remake of the adventure Rayman Legends is also in development, which, according to the insider, will disappoint fans.
Source: @xj0nathan