Assassin's Creed: Memory Block 5- Sibrand Assassination
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Man I still didn't know how to fight templars before doing this mission I passed a very bad time retrying this memory... but something pretty weird is that, later, [SPOILER ALERT] when i had to fight like 5 templars before killing Robert De Sable, it was pretty easy i felt like a sir haha
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if i knew that al mulaim is the traitor , i would stap him in his neck while being in masyaf all the game long
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@salidas16 the guy is not even a templar he is german and templars were French
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@salidas16 you do know that the Hashish were bad and the Templar's good ...the Hashish were the real assassins creed
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@Puglous The heart to heart moments after the assassinations in this is what i like over ac 2, just about everything else i like better in the second one.... though they both have a sense of mystery(both different) that i love the most about this series.... idk which i could say is better...
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Such a scary thought. There is no life after death, the greatest fear of mankind. When Altair kills Abbas, he says that he hopes there's an after life so he can discover the truth about his father. He dies thinking he'll find out, but only Altair knows that there is no life after death, and that Abbas died without knowing the truth.
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@Raidergod25 amen to that.
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Agreed, dialogue (not just here but in the interludes at Abstergo) and story presentation made AC1 mind-blowing. In AC2 the story seemed to spin out of control and was poorly told. I mean, why the hell were the Assassin's and Templars called Assassin's and Templars if they existed before the Hashashin and Knights Templar? I was really really dissapointed with AC2.
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This was my best assassination in the whole series. I climbed his ship, killed him without anyone noticing, and slowly made my way back to the bureau without having to fight or run.
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@Spieluhr13 Well, to be honest, it was to show how far the templars have fallen. They practically forgot the reason of their objectives.
Beside, it started to become a little more black and white (or grey at times) when we last saw Al Mualim.
I have to admit that I felt kinda sad about this. Sibrand didn't really seem evil but instead just kinda broken really. The man seemed like he was just going along with the rest of the templars in some attempt to find some meaning after finding out everything he believed in was a lie.
salidas16 10 months ago 32
@Spieluhr13 Amen to that. As repetitive as some of the tasks were in AC1, what sets it apart was the dialogue. In AC2 and AC Brotherhood, you never second guess yourself. You believe that everything you do is good and on the straight and narrow. In AC1, after each assassination, the "victim" lingers in limbo for a while and makes such strong cases about believing in what they're doing, which makes you question your own motives.
Raidergod25 9 months ago 23