This music resonates with human soul and history of mankind somehow. Can't really explain. It motivates an act of deep introspection, self-analysis. Who are we? What are we doing here? Why everything exists? This music raised these questions.
@@assassinsden7 it's like you go through lot of hard times but at the end you get what you have always desired bro I listen to this while driving 18 wheeler Truck.
Man, I remember playing the game for the first time and listening to Juno explain what came before and just being mesmerized by everything. This game was incredible. Dunno why so many hated on it.
@@ariantaghdiri7937 so deep.. but I hated Assassin's Creed III as a whole game not because of its story and setting but rather its unoptimized game experience. I even passed the recommended system requirements just to lag at the "Boston" area.
I had to go back and listen to this. I will always love the moments Desmond listening to Juno telling about what came before. I was always in awe with their scenes.
This is one of my favorite tracks from the game. It is just so hauntingly beautiful. A really nice pace to it, although the ending could maybe use some work.
Lorne made his big break with this game and to think he just scored Mission Impossible Fallout too. He has made it big and deserves it, outstanding composer!
use spotify and the website "spotalike". you will still have to look through a lot of content but you can find similliar songs normally by building a playlist on spolify and looking at the recommended section, and spotalike finds similar songs and you can download the playlist to spotify. Easiest way I've found to find similar music.
There are some unrealeased Soundtrack of this game. For example the ship-scene when you travel the first time to America at the beginning. Its similar to What Came Before and very very good
Farewell Desmond. Wish we could see your full potencial as an ultimate assassin with your great knowledge you gained from the great Altair. Such a shame…
The moment where AC as a series ceased to exist. Desmond was the only thing giving it some continuity, giving it some semblance of forward momentum. Nowdays AC means a beautiful world, boring story, and even more boring gameplay loop, where after two hours spent in the game you've seen and done everything. Bravo Ubisoft, bravo. You've created the ultimate mouthbreather experience out of something really good.
this was the end of assassins creed.... desmond died all what connor did was for nothing, his people lost their lands. and the frachise lost the way... 😣😣
@N7Andy I'm talking sales numbers, not the avenue from microtransactions. Let me give you an example, AC3 from 10 years ago sold 12 million copies within a couple months. Valhalla sold 1.8 million in it's launch week, and since then, Ubisoft has stayed quiet about it's sales numbers. Why do you think that is? Dying franchise.
@@Phelps-1247 Well said. I will just add that while the first week sales of Valhalla were 1.7 million, the first week sales of AC 3 were 3.52 million, so more than double. And while AC3 sold 12+ million in just 3 months post release, Valhala sold that amount in just 1 year (according to a now deleted Ruetir article, but this is also about how much Origins sold after a year, according to Gamstat).