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Remakes And Remasters Should Never Replace The Original Games, And Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag Is No Exception

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Collage of images from Assassin's Creed 4: Black Flag.

Listen, I’m no landlubber but, truthfully, me timbers be shiverin’. That’s because recent updates to the Assassin’s Creed 4: Black Flag Steam page lists features that aren’t currently in the game. That wouldn’t seem like a bad thing in isolation — old games are updated with new features all the time — but given that a remake of Black Flag has been heavily rumored for a while, it looks like Ubisoft may be preparing to delist the original game, replacing it with the new version.

This is what happened with Assassin’s Creed 3 when Ubisoft launched a remaster back in 2019. The new and improved version replaced the older one on Steam, locking new players out from ever purchasing the original game, unless they can hunt down a physical copy. This doesn’t delete the original for Steam users who already own it, but it does limit the number of players who can experience it going forward.

Bayek, Yasuke and Naoe from Assassin's Creed

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A Remaster May Be Incredibly Similar, But It Isn’t The Original Game

This is a problem because, while these two games might have the same name (give or take a “Remastered” at the end of the title), they aren’t actually the same game. Assassin’s Creed 3 Remastered isn’t unanimously considered the best version of the game and a quick perusal of this Reddit thread confirms that, as recently as two years ago, players were still frustrated with its changes to the original’s lighting and its general bugginess. Not everyone in that thread hates the remaster, but enough have issues with it that it really seems like new buyers would benefit from an option to go with the original.

It also highlights one underdiscussed issue with replacing an established game with a remaster: you’re swapping out a game that has had years of patches and stabilization with a new release that simply can’t have had that same time and attention paid to it.

Replacing old games with remasters isn’t necessarily a common practice. But we’ve seen it enough that the problems have become clear. Sometimes a remaster is well-liked enough (like Dark Souls Remastered), but it seems like just as often an inferior version of the game is forced on players. Warcraft 3: Reforged is the only version of the iconic RTS that you can currently play on PC — unless you have a physical copy of the original or, just as rare, a computer with a disc drive — and fans hated the changes Blizzard made to the game. Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy – The Definitive Edition was roundly rejected by critics and players, but it’s still the only version of the PS2 classic that you can play on modern hardware.

Stop Killing Games (Then Bringing Them Back To Life As A Weird Clone)

I’m thinking about this more than usual because of Stop Killing Games, the initiative dedicated to preventing publishers from destroying games once they’ve outlived their usefulness. This strikes me as a similar kind of planned obsolescence. Publishers don’t want to see sales diverted from a more expensive new product to a less expensive old product, so they simply remove the choice from consumers. It’s gross, and any company that cares about its history would make both versions available.

Of course, we don’t know that Ubisoft is planning to replace Black Flag with a remastered version. It could just be improving the original. But, if I were a betting man, I’d make sure I had the original in my Steam library sooner rather than later.

TG Bloodborne Lady Maria with a 'No' symbol around her.

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