Welcome to the humble videogame channel where I'll upload gaming footage from my favorite games from time to time in order to boast to my friends about my ability to run a humble videogame channel successfully
The sequence with Lee is great. So much said without a word being spoke. Ac3 and Unity are probably my favorites out if them all, besides AC2. Arno, Conner, snd Ezio all are very similar in regards to principle and morality, Connor being the most out of them all
I cried at this part when i was gaming it, i cried again lol 9:15 Bro, i got sad because the Asgore got happy he started saying that we was going to have a good life... I dont i will mercy flowey again. Asriel? HAHA WHO CARES
It just occurred to me that Syndicate's memory corridors are so much like the ones from the first game, even down to the Assassin wiping their target's throat
Listening to Haytham in AC3 made me start actually thinking about the actual story. Coming back to AC1’s conversations, now I’m sure Haytham may have been right.
Still my favorite game in the series No game like it before or since has the same atmosphere or writing style There's such a creepy ambiance the animus has in the first game that is brought out especially in these thick "digital foggy" memory corridors. It's like Altair is talking with them in purgatory before passing on, the interactive camera angles are such a nice touch too and the VA work is top notch.
@@martin_acj98 yeah, either that, and i'm on him right now on neutral i'm in for some serious ass kicking from the big man (or rather, big goat) himself
I think in the real world, Batman is just sneaking through from area to area searching for Scarecrow as Scarecrow is hiding from him while taunting him with his voice. The giant Scarecrow's spotlight from Batman's nightmares is the fear gas completely taking over him if he were be spotted by Scarecrow.
To this day, these encounters are the number one thing I remember from Arkham Asylum. I could seriously play a full action/survival horror game involving Batman and this version of the Scarecrow.
The templars have somewhat of a point...but only if you abandon any morals. Just look at what each one of these ones do: -They abduct their citizens and run experiments on them to discipline their minds. -they force conscription on their citizens to teach them order. -they confiscate all the food in their cities to "ration it" -they supply both sides in a war to use propaganda to control their people. Who else does this? North Korea. Yes, when we look at it from the lens of the game we can see there is some logic, however when you think about real examples of it you can see just how much of a hell it really creates.
The Assassins are no better. They wait in the shadows and wait until an opportunity comes by, no matter how many people die until then. They keep killing Templars yet they offer no solution at all. If a Templar leader dies, another one will replace them and the cycle continues. Almost in every game, Assassins are shown to be nothing more than hypocrites who aren’t too slow to violate their own creed. The Assassins have perverted their focus to “freedom” rather than what they were originally in support of, which is peace. Freedom does not lead to peace, not completely anyways.
Only Altair, Haytham and Ezio seemed to truly understand the whole thing. The rest are broken, sociopaths or naive. And in the Present day story, it remains much the same. It's a shame.
Edward understood the whole thing by the end of his story, and Haythem was far from understanding at all. Haythem was so blinded by his own ideology he began becoming hypocritical. He opposed freedom because he believed that "freedom leads to chaos," however if we take an extremist approach to one end then we must look at the extreme side on the opposite end of the spectrum. If freedom leads to chaos then order leads to tyranny. Neither extreme is good, and Haythem couldn't see this.
@@TeamJellatechnically, Haytham refused to kill Connor in spite of every opportunity to do it, and Connor confesses he regrets killing Haytham, seeing it as a mistake. Not only that, in his novel, we discover Haytham wanted to try and unite both orders, but eventually found himself unable to. But you are right that I am underestimating Edward.
I’m playing this masterpiece for the first time and I’m on this section, when I first arrived there I got quite uneasy especially in the morgue, it was truly unsettling
What I love about these scenes is that they bring the historical figures to life: they're no longer one-dimensional characters in a history book. Even if this is made up somewhat, it reminds us that these people had much more in common with us than we might otherwise believe.
Connor: Why you do this? Templars: You're but a foolish boy who couldn't see our grant visions and ambitions. All we did are ultimately for the prosperity and peace for the people. People are chaotic and ignorant by nature, and....... Thomas Hickey: Heehee, Beer and tiddy, heehee
alright, this was AWESOME to watch, seeing you get low on health before getting better at the counters & timing and, even as you're getting the advantage, taking a hit here and there? so much more exciting than the 'NO DAMAGE' runs where nothing really happens. i just wish you did more than spam the same sword combo over and over. the magic of this game, like DMC, is how you can use all of your tools in tandem to get into a groove where you can truly style on your foes!
David Brewster said amazing line : we fight for things we cannot take away with us when we die. I saw the first AC game 's animus corridor confessions too. Every Templar we kill, they will say we are with wrong people and they are creating a paradise. Templars want control. Assassins want freedom. Both are evil in their own actions. The world is dancing between Order and chaos.
I like all these confessions in AC series. Every Templar agent we kill, we are ridiculed by the target for killing them as they think they are God or something which can actually bring a healthy change in society and world.