Some of the players got caught up in the Viking warrior, but Ubisoft explained



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Yesterday, the new Viking-themed Assassin’s Creed Valhalla was finally introduced. The trailer was still a largely undivided success as it was a very professional and welcoming job, the information (more precisely one) completely annoyed some of the players who might be upset about everything. In addition to the male Viking, Ubisoft will make a female Viking playable, whatever we use to create a new home and, of course, to get the prey, it will be up to us. Many were outraged by the fact that the warrior would not only be a man, and some went so far as to make the historically loyal series on this occasion confront past and known facts for the sake of profit maximization.

The situation is eerily reminiscent of the misfortune that arose when Battlefield V was announced, but there is one big difference, as historian Thierry Noel and a Ubisoft consultant have pointed out. Noel said that there were many female characters and warriors in the northern sagas and myths, and that it was very common for them to march alongside the men, and these are already reflected in the Assassin’s Creed Valhalla development squad. The cause of the outrage is likely due to previous leaks that were surprisingly accurate in terms of, for example, the era or locations, but we’ve repeatedly read that after Origins and Odyssey, Ubisoft will only allow male Vikings to play. Still, this seemed surprising, as Kassandra, the female lead, also became incredibly popular in the last act, so it’s no wonder that the company is trying to reunite an equally memorable lead again.

Assassin’s Creed Valhalla will debut this holiday season on PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, and PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5.

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