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Difference between revisions of "Assassin's Creed Rogue"

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The "Indian Flintlock Pistols" are based on the Kolser "Antique Pistol" reproduction which is actually a replica of an Indian flintlock pistol from Lucknow made circa 1776.
 
The "Indian Flintlock Pistols" are based on the Kolser "Antique Pistol" reproduction which is actually a replica of an Indian flintlock pistol from Lucknow made circa 1776.
[[Image:Indian Flintlock pistol.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Non-firing Kolser made replica of Indian Flintlock Pistol (mismarketed as "Antique Pistol"). Lucknow, India circa 1776. It features a 8" engraved barrel, fittings and a deluxe resin stock. It comes in either antique grey or brass finish. L:13.25", Wt: 3 lbs.]]
+
[[Image:Indian Flintlock pistol.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Non-firing Kolser made replica of Indian Flintlock Pistol (mismarketed as "Antique Pistol") from Lucknow, India circa 1776. It features a 8" engraved barrel, fittings and a deluxe resin stock. It comes in either antique grey or brass finish. L:13.25", Wt: 3 lbs.]]
  
 
=Long guns=
 
=Long guns=

Revision as of 02:25, 25 November 2021

ITLOFFiringPistol.jpg

Work In Progress

This article is still under construction. It may contain factual errors. See Talk:Assassin's Creed Rogue for current discussions. Content is subject to change.


Assassin's Creed Rogue
ACR-Cover.jpg
PC Boxart
Release Date: 2014 (Console)
2015 (PC)
Developer: Ubisoft Sofia
Publisher: Ubisoft
Series: Assassin's Creed
Platforms: PlayStation 3
Xbox 360
PC
Genre: Action-adventure


Assassin's Creed Rogue is the seventh game in the popular Assassin's Creed series and the fifth in the main line of games, developed by Ubisoft Sofia and published by Ubisoft for PS3 and Xbox 360 in November 2014 and for Windows PC in March 2015. Ubisoft has stated it will be the last Assassin's Creed game to be released on seventh-generation consoles; eighth-generation consoles instead had Assassin's Creed Unity released around the same time.

Acting as a direct sequel to Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag and featuring many of the same gameplay mechanics, Rogue uses a similar meta-narrative where the actual player character (only ever referred to as "Numbskull") is a videogame designer working for Abstergo Entertainment, in part a thinly-veiled pastiche of Ubisoft itself. The story begins with Abstergo again using their fictional genetic memory-reading "Animus" technology to research a new videogame, only to trigger a Trojan program somehow hidden in the memories of a young Irish-American Assassin recruit named Shay Patrick Cormac, which severely affects the computer systems of their entire building. Continuing working on Shay's memories seems the only way to solve the problem, but as before Abstergo seems to have a sinister ulterior motive for their studies.

The majority of gameplay occurs in the game-within-a-game, set in a period from 1752 to 1760, with three main areas: a sea map in the North Atlantic, a river map in the Hudson River Valley near Albany and a city map set in Manhattan (reworked from Assassin's Creed III). The player takes control of Cormac as he comes to doubt the principles the Brotherhood of Assassins is founded on, until a mission to recover an ancient artifact results in him causing an earthquake that levels the city of Lisbon (the real-life 1755 Lisbon quake, one of the deadliest in history). This causes him to turn his back on the Brotherhood, instead embracing their sworn enemies the Templars. Around this personal conflict is the wider conflict of the Seven Years' War. Rather than being a pirate as with Edward Kenway in Black Flag, Cormac is a privateer, working for the French initially and then later throwing in his lot with the British.

The sections played as Numbskull are in first-person, while the main game is a third-person open-world stealth-action adventure game.

The following weapons appear in the video game Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag:


Overview

The player character, Shay Cormac, carries a number of weapons in a four-direction inventory, including various tools like smoke bombs and later a silent "air rifle." His primary weapons are a pair of swords and a brace of single-shot pistols; unlike Kenway in the previous game he can only ever have two, which he can fire using a spinning "combo" animation or use for aimed shots. It is also possible to pick up rifles found in the world and use them as a temporary weapon, but they cannot become a permanent part of Cormac's inventory and will be dropped if any other weapon is selected.

Permanently upgrading Cormac's armament requires purchasing weapons from merchants which unlock at set points in the campaign; these can then be equipped in place of the default flintlocks and swords. The best weapons also require specific tasks be completed in order to unlock them.

Following the first mission, Comac acquires a vessel, the Morrigan, which becomes his personal command. The Morrigan is a sloop-of-war with a shallower draft than the Jackdaw brig from the previous game, allowing it to navigate rivers as well as the open ocean (not that this actually stopped Kenway taking the Jackdaw up a river at one point). The sloop's weapons are operated by rotating the in-game camera; forward fires the chase carronades, the sides broadside cannons and heavy shot, and astern allows a slick of oil to be deployed and ignited. Mortars can also be purchased, which are then aimed using a special first-person view with an aiming line. Finally, the swivel guns (referred to as "Puckle Guns") can be operated by holding down down the button for them; as before they can get critical hits by holding the button down when a critical hit location appears and releasing when the gun crosshair lines up with the critical box, but now can also be free-fired by holding the button at any other time. Oil, mortars and heavy shot for the broadside cannons have limited ammunition, while all other weapons do not.

Pistols

Presumably for visual appeal, all purchasable pistols are shown with left-handed lockwork in menus; this does not carry over into the game itself.

Denix 18th Century Flintlock Pistol Replica

A generic 18th Century Flintlock Pistol replica made by Denix is featured in the game. It is identifiable by the specific pistol grip decoration.

Generic 18th century flintlock pistol replica by Denix
Oddly, Cormac's dislike of the Assassins had nothing to do with their habit of handing him guns barrel-first with their fingers on the triggers.

Doglock Pistol

A generic doglock pistol appears as the "Modern Pistols".

Heckler & Koch Mark 23 Phase II Prototype

One of the intel files accessed by rebooting Abstergo employee computers shows a sequence from Assassin's Creed III of Daniel Cross brandishing a Heckler & Koch Mark 23 Phase II Prototype as he confronts Desmond at the Abstergo lab in Italy. It cannot be used during gameplay.

Airsoft Heckler & Koch MK23 Mod 0 Phase II Prototype (note front cocking serrations, deleted from production models) with Tokyo Marui replica of a Knight's Armament suppressor and prototype Laser Aiming Module - (fake) .45 ACP
Daniel Cross holds his Mark 23 Phase II prototype.

Queen Anne Flintlock

A set of English Queen Anne Flintlock Pistols, incorrectly called "Queen Anne's Pistols," (the pistol is named as such because it was popular during Queen Anne's reign, not because it belonged to her) are one of the available pistol weapons. They have moderate stats across the board, and improved loading times over the standard flintlocks, explained to be due to their screw-in detachable barrels. They are the highest-rated pistol that does not have special unlocking conditions.

English "Queen Anne" breech-loading pistol with detachable barrel
Inventory image of the Queen Anne flintlock, which apparently actually belonged to Queen Anne.

Richard Hollis & Sons Percussion Duelling Pistol

A set of Percussion Cap Pistols, incorrectly named the "English Percussion Flintlock Pistol," (a percussion lock does not have a flint) can be unlocked for use after Numbskull has found all of the Abstergo PDAs in the present-day segments. They are anachronistic, since the percussion cap was invented in 1807; the game appears to explain this as Abstergo putting a pistol that shouldn't exist yet in the Animus simulation as a reward.

Richard Hollis & Sons percussion duelling pistol - .54
Menu image of the "English Percussion Flintlock Pistol."

Wheellock Pistol

A set of Wheellock Pistols are also available; as in Black Flag they are the longest-ranged handguns that can be purchased, at a cost of the lowest possible score in both other areas.

Wheellock pistol
Menu image for the "Standard Wheellock Pistols."

German Wheellock Pistol

A set of Wheellock Pistols of the German/Dutch type are available with the "Officer Pack".

An early 17th century wheellock pistol of the German/Dutch type

Tula Arsenal Flintlock Pistol

The "Russian Flintlock Pistols" are based on the Denix produced replica of the hunting pistols crafted by master Ivan Lyalin in the Tula Arsenal in 1790. The lack of ramrod and darker color of the decorations suggests that the Denix replica was used for reference instead of the actual pistols. The 1790 manufacture date of the guns makes them anachronistic for the setting of Assassin's Creed: Rogue.

Denix produced replica of the hunting pistols crafted by master Ivan Lyalin in the Tula Arsenal circa 1790

Liège Flintlock Pistol

The "Belgian Engraved Pistols" are based on the Kolser S.A. produced replica of a late 18th century Belgian engraved flintlock pistol made in Liège.

Late 18th century Belgian Flintlock Pistol made in Liège replica produced by Kolser S.A.

Hawken Percussion Pistol

The same Hawken Percussion Pistol inspired "Common Flintlock Pistols" are returning from Assassin's Creed IV. This is still anachronistic for the 1752-1760 setting of Rogue as the Hawken pistols along with their percussion mechanism were produced in the 19th century.

A pair of percussion dueling pistols by J & S. Hawken of St. Louis, MS, .66 caliber

Kolser "Antique Pistol" (Lucknow 1776 Flintlock Pistol Replica)

The "Indian Flintlock Pistols" are based on the Kolser "Antique Pistol" reproduction which is actually a replica of an Indian flintlock pistol from Lucknow made circa 1776.

Non-firing Kolser made replica of Indian Flintlock Pistol (mismarketed as "Antique Pistol") from Lucknow, India circa 1776. It features a 8" engraved barrel, fittings and a deluxe resin stock. It comes in either antique grey or brass finish. L:13.25", Wt: 3 lbs.

Long guns

Brown Bess Carbine

Early in the game, Cormac discovers a secret weapon consignment consisting of an "advanced" (read "impossible") compressed-air powered carbine, which is essentially a replacement for Black Flag's blowpipe weapon. It is functionally identical, apparently not requiring any kind of air supply, being totally silent and able to fire a variety of darts with varying effects. The gun itself appears to be a custom modified Brown Bess carbine, even though its flintlock mechanism could not possibly serve any function on a pneumatic gun.

Even more strangely, it can later be upgraded to fire rifle grenades, the dartgun somehow able to generate enough pressure to do this without exploding. Moreover, the weapon is shown with what appears to be a grenade cup mounted under the barrel seemingly in an awkward attempt to emulate modern underbarrel grenade launchers, actual grenade launcher carbines of the 18th century had the cup mounted on the muzzle.

File:S262b.jpg
Modern reproduction Brown Bess Carbine - .75 caliber
Cormac is surprised as accidentally shooting a British soldier with the air rifle has sleepier results than he had been expecting.
The "air rifle" is on his back for the rest of the game; it features an awkward holstering animation where he more or less just tosses it over his shoulder and it slides into position. Note that the carbine is modified with custom barrel hoops or some kind of straps, an oversized trigger guard and a leather stock sleeve with some Celtic symbol.

Hybrid Madrid Type Musket

The same hybrid Madrid type musket returns from Assassin's Creed IV. The usage of the Spanish Madrid type stock by the British and French is inappropriate, also matchlock style designs were long obsolete by the Seven Years' War.

These can be found in racks in the game world or in the hands of enemy soldiers, and are always used by snipers posted in the rigging of large enemy vessels. Cormac can pick up and use the musket, which has longer range than his standard pistols but is unwieldy to use: it cannot permanently be added to his inventory, and will be discarded if he selects a different weapon.

Spanish Madrid type miquelet musket circa 1800
Modern reproduction of 17th Century English Doglock muskets
Cormac holds a hybrid musket after dealing with its former owner. The pseudo Spanish musket from Assassin's Creed IV this time appears to stand in for Brown Bess and Charleville muskets.

Charleville Musket

Two Charleville Muskets are displayed on the wall in the captain's cabin of the Morrigan; they cannot be used.

Original Charleville Mle 1763 - .69 Caliber
Two muskets can be seen crossed on the wall of the Morrigan's cabin as Cormac regrets choosing a cannon as a bunkmate. If they're intended to be the Model 1763 pictured above, they would be anachronistic.

Mounted weapons

Cannon

Cannons are the standard armament of every armed ship in the game and are also seen on fortresses. The Morrigan's broadside cannons can fire aimed normal shot or unaimed heavy shot. The number of cannons on the Morrigan can be upgraded using materials.

As with all of the Morrigan's weapons, there is no animation for reloading the cannons, the weapons simply becoming ready again after a short interval. Perhaps most bizarrely, the penultimate upgrade for heavy shot allows the cannons to be fired twice per unit of ammunition

3-inch naval cannon
After instructing his crew to service the air next to the Morrigan's cannons, Cormac is ready to come ashore.
The broadside cannons of the Morrigan are visible as Cormac's crew attempt an incredibly elaborate prank involving using the ship's giant invisible crane to hide a humpback whale in the crow's nest.

Carronade

The Morrigan's bow chaser cannons are described as carronades, a type of low-velocity short-range smoothbore cannon made by the Carron Company ironworks in Scotland and designed to have a wide angle of fire: they were briefly popular in the late 18th to mid-19th centuries. The developers appear to have confused the carronade with the Paixhans Gun, the first successful high-powered flat-trajectory cannon designed to fire explosive projectiles, since that is what the Morrigan's guns do, and the depiction of the ammunition on the upgrade screen seems based on the Paixhans' saboted explosive cannonballs. In both cases the weapon is an anachronism, since claims for the invention of the carronade range from 1759-1779 while the Morrigan has them mounted when Cormac acquires her in 1752; the Paixhans gun, meanwhile, was not developed until 1823.

Oddly, in mechanical terms they are identical to the chainshot used by the Jackdaw, and as in that game the Morrigan starts out with two bow chasers and can be upgraded to four.

68-pounder British naval carronade on HMS Victory - 4.4in
Cormac's unsuccessful attempt to declare himself the king of the world results in a good view of the Morrigan's chaser carronades.

Field gun

Revolutionary war-era field guns on wooden carriages fitted with supply boxes are found throughout the open world, mostly in areas where battles have taken place and around forts. The model itself is the same one used in the previous two Assassin's Creed games. They cannot be used by the player.

Lurking about a fort, Cormac encounters a field gun usefully pointed at a suspicious building nearby.

Mortar

As with the previous game, the Morrigan can eventually be upgraded to mount a pair of large-calibre mortars, this time on the sides of her deck. While this was done with ships starting in the 17th century, these "bomb vessels" were specialised warships and it was not a feature of standard Men O'War as shown in the game.

As before, the mortars fire an implausible airbursting non-conservation-of-mass submunition round which rains cannonball-sized projectiles over a wide area. When used by enemy ships or forts, their radius of effect is shown as a yellow circle indicating their projected point of aim and turns red when the round is about to impact

The mortar on the Morrigan's deck. A mortar this size close to the edge of the deck would stand a fair chance of firing itself into the gun deck; "bomb ships" typically housed their mortars in a reinforced pit on their centreline.

"Puckle Gun"

Following a mission in which plans of the weapon are discussed, the Morrigan ends up equipped with four swivel guns described as "Puckle guns," though they are a poor approximation of the real thing since they are effectively just a revolver cylinder and some mechanical-looking bits thrown onto the model for the Jackdaw's muzzle-loading swivel gun. This results in the weapon having a comically oversized barrel. Presumably to save on polygon count, the cylinders are shown as hexagonal rather than round or square as with the real weapon.

The depiction of the weapon's effects is equally inaccurate, buying into the incorrect idea that Joseph Puckle's design was some kind of advanced early machine gun rather than a mediocre and overcomplicated manually-operated flintlock cannon. In reality, the crank attached to the cylinder was only to used to screw it into and out of battery position and rotate it by hand, with the hammer requiring manual cocking and the trigger a lever completely separate from the cylinder assembly.

Instead, it is shown to operate exclusively via the crank like an Agar "coffee-mill" gun or Gatling gun, and in terms of control is fully automatic with simply holding the button down producing a constant barrage of shots. In reality a Puckle gun could only manage around 9 shots per minute, giving it little practical rate-of-fire advantage over a period breech-loading swivel gun with preloaded breech blocks. In Black Flag the gun was mentioned in conversation as if it was the first weapon that could carry more than one load, which is severely incorrect; revolvers, some with self-advancing mechanisms, date back to the 15th century, and true self-loading lever-action guns like the Kalthoff repeater had existed for a century by Puckle's time.

During general sailing the swivel guns can be used in the same way as in Black Flag to target weak points and explosive barrels, but they can now also be fired manually by holding the fire button without the target crosshair visible. The guns have infinite ammunition but will eventually have a brief pause for reloading, explained as the capacity of the cylinders; this can be upgraded to a ridiculous 45 shots between reloads, while the real Puckle gun only had cylinder capacities from 6 to 11 shots.

In boarding actions, rather than only being able to fire five shots from one gun like in Black Flag, the Morrigan can fire 25 shots from each of the two "Puckle guns" on each side, making it extremely easy to complete a boarding action without ever actually boarding the enemy ship. As in Black Flag, the shots have splash damage as if they are explosive, which would have been impossible to achieve at the time. The guns on the Morrigan have a wider range of motion than the Jackdaw's mounts, particularly vertically.

Puckle Gun - 1.25in
Some Assassins install the ersatz Puckle Gun on the Morrigan, which seems incredibly rusty given they only just built it.
Cormac steps over and pointedly refuses to acknowledge the fake Puckle Gun.

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