Video game media said that video game giant Ubisoft will release a virtual reality version of the Assassin’s Creed game.
The game will be available on the latest virtual reality helmets produced by Meta, known as Quest.
This game is considered one of the most popular group games in the world. The game will be available with virtual reality technology by the current year, and its events will take place in the city of Baghdad in the nineteenth century.
Director of Innovation David Votypka told AFP during a Ubisoft Forward presentation in Los Angeles that the game’s realistic “feel” of the game’s protagonist would be “a great attraction for players.”
“It’s a good option for virtual reality,” said Votypka, as the most popular games with this technology “are those that involve a large amount” of physical challenges.
Assassin’s Creed is full of climbing, jumping from one building to another, racing, battles and other situations that excite the player.
And a team from Ubisoft worked to provide options that relieve people who are prone to feeling nauseous or who are easily affected, by adding features that allow characters to “teleport” from one place to another, for example.
The designers also sought to reduce the intensity of the violence in the killing scenes, so that they are quick, by controlling the location of the victims’ injuries, and excluding any use of torture.
“Assassin’s Creed” was previously adapted into comic strips and a movie in 2016, in line with Ubisoft’s strategy to transform its productions into works through other media.
Ubisoft also announced, on Monday, “Assassin’s Creed Mirage”, which is a new part of the series of episodes of this game, dedicated to video game consoles and personal computers, and is expected to be released on October 12, knowing that its launch was originally scheduled for the end of 2022.
The new part is a tribute to the first episodes of the series, and the events of “Mirage” take place in Baghdad during the ninth century, and the main character in it was given the name “Bassem.”