Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag - Gold Edition

Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag - Gold Edition

released on Nov 19, 2013

Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag - Gold Edition

released on Nov 19, 2013

The immersive world of Assassins Creed Black Flag drops you into the heart of an explosive reimagining of maritime history. Play as young privateer Edward Kenway, fighting side by side with the most notorious Caribbean pirates of the 18th century. As captain of the Jackdaw, Master Assassin and ruthless pirate, seek adventure on both sea and land in the biggest world that Assassins Creed has yet conceived. Through raging waters, lush jungles and sunbaked cities, seek and destroy scheming Templars and oppressive colonial powers, while enriching yourself and your outlaw compatriots with ships and gold. Download Black Flag Gold Edition, and enrich the gameplay experience with exclusive island treasure hunts. Unlock multiplayer options, weapons, ships and valuable relics in these bonus packs, making yourself a richer, stronger and more formidable foe. Follow paths set by great pirates who came before, and discover the wealth they left behind. Captain Morgan's ship and silver pistols are yours for the taking in the Black Island pack, while the shallows of Sacrifice Island yield treasures left by Captain Drake in the Sacrificed Secrets Pack. Find the ship and other items left behind by Blackbeard's friend Stede Bonnet on St. Lucia in the Hidden Mystery Pack. Other exclusive packs include Captain Kenway's Legacy Pack, the Pirate's Bounty Pack and the Trove of Mystery Pack.


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Gold Edition


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Reviews View More

Sights & Sounds
- Even after all this time, the game still has moments where it looks pretty good (particularly when you're firing off grapeshot in a hurricane). Outside of that, you can definitely see the age with the clunkiness of some character animations and dated textures. Still not too shabby for a decade old game
- The setting is refreshing. AC games are pretty good in choosing interesting points in (usually Western) history to explore, and this one is no different
- The music is pretty great. Everyone loves a good sea shanty
- Being a AAA game, the voice acting is what you'd expect. Good performances all around

Story & Vibes
- I'll be frank, I stopped paying attention to the overarching AC story sometime midway through ACII: Revelations. It's mercifully shoved way in the background and mostly (outside of a few scenes) optional in this game
- Unfortunately, the in-Animus story is sort of a let down as well. You just kind of sail around the Caribbean as Edward, being sent from waypoint to waypoint to sneak into a fort and kill a revolving door of bad guys. Someone being conflicted about his relationship with his wife for a decade before deciding to raise his kid and become an assassin doesn't make for much of a story
- There are a few worthwhile characters. Blackbeard is an interesting character study, and Captain Kidd has the most motivating story arc in the game
- Despite the story being negligible in nearly every regard, sailing around can be relaxing if you're into that sort of thing

Playability & Replayability
- Refusing to change, enhance, iterate on, or improve either the stealth or combat gameplay in any noticeable regard was a bold choice. Not a good choice, but bold
- At least the sailing and naval combat are nice. Sailing felt clunky in AC3, but it's much more polished this time around given that it's a core component of Black Flag
- Despite all the ship upgrades, I found myself just relying on the regular cannons and the heavy shot. The other stuff like mortars and mines were situationally useful when I remembered that I installed them, but I never felt like they were actually necessary. Just buy armor, crew, and heavy ammo
- This is a replay (played it around release in 2013 on the 360), and I think this is my last go-around in this game. Hey, at least they managed to finally get me to care about collectibles (gotta hear all the shanties)

Overall Impressions & Performance
- A lot of people seem to remember this one fondly due to the sailing and naval combat, but neither of those really save it from feeling like just another AC game at heart
- Being a 10 year old game, it ran very well
- You will, of course, have to use Ubisoft's terrible, frivolous, and clunky launcher to play this game. Lécher le cul, Yves

Final Verdict
- 7/10. Compared to the preceding AC games it's roughly on par with AC2: Brotherhood (story/characters are worse, but gameplay is better). Black Flag is a pretty good game, but I'll always feel like this series never reached its full potential

I think it´s the best AC mostly because of the pirate setting. I really like it that you spend 50% on the Ship and 50% on Land because the Naval combat is great. The World is actually one of the largest AC Map but it´s mostly just water and you always have your loyal Jackdaw to bring you everywhere. The story is really epic but nothing too crazy and not the best in the series (That honor goes to AC 2 and Revelations for me). The combat system is really fluid even though you are basically a demi god because even 100 soldiers couldn´t stop you (at least it feels like it). It´s still very fun and never got boring just like naval combat where you can be killed very quickly in contrast to the battle with swords and guns.

A fresh take on the AC formula and my favorite up to this point in the franchise.

Played entirely on the Steam Deck and was fantastic. The gameplay loop was fun and the story didn't get dull. Completing all the side activities can get repetitive though. I finished the campaign, but I only got to about 67% game completion. May finish later.

Overall, it was a major difference from ACIII. That game felt like a slog.

Still my personal favorite AC game, while it does not have the strongest identity as an AC game, it still proves to be a quality open world pirate simulator with one of my favorite video game stories of all time