News - Assassin's Creed Shadows: Higher difficulties promised

Assassin's Creed Shadows is extremely good and has put the second best launch of the series so far after Valhalla. But the fans have reacted and ubisoft.

Assassin's Creed Shadows is becoming more and more light -fashioned for the battered publisher Ubisoft. The sales figures look good and except for a continued raging minority, players are also extremely satisfied. But they have wishes. So the players. And that is exactly what creative director Jonathan Dumont has to do with the colleagues ofGamesradarexpressed.

Apparently there are higher difficulties on the wish list and Dumont is not averse. He confirms that the developers "actively think about it" to increase the difficulty for some of the players. How challenging should it be? But we deal with these things and watch what people say about the game. "

So it cannot be ruled out that Ubisoft will actually submit other difficulty options via an update, but other features and additions are also quite possible. "Of course we cannot implement everything, but there are things that we will tackle, and for the next updates alone, some error fixes and small functional improvements are planned," said Dumont. "I can't just create a list. There is a lot of it. So the team is constantly working to improve the game, and hopefully people will notice the difference if they play shadows in the coming months."

Overall, it would not be surprising if you consider what Assassin's Creed: Valhalla received on additional features after the release. Apart from that, Ubisoft also has more time to take care of new features and improvements, since the game came on the market much better than its predecessor, which should also result from the shift at the time.

Some assumed that AC: Shadows had received conversions due to the flop of Star Wars Outlaws, but Dumont contradicts this - the shift was that "our game was ready, so that we only had to make sure that there were no mistakes and that the gaming experience is flawless for people."