Ubisoft has announced that several of the older chapters of the Assassin’s Creed series will no longer be supported from September, with online multiplayer content no longer accessible in any way.
However, it seems that Assassin’s Creed III: Liberation, a chapter of the series originally published on PlayStation Vita and later also brought to PC, PS3, Xbox 360, PS4 and Xbox One, cannot even be purchased on Steam anymore.
The action-adventure, which first gave space to a female protagonist in the history of the franchise, is still present on the pages of the Valve platform but – at the request of the publisher – there is no way to proceed with the purchase.
Furthermore, according to the decisions made by the French publisher, it will no longer even be playable by those who already have it in their library: the game “will no longer be accessible starting from September 1, 2022”, on Steam.
Assassin’s Creed III: Liberation doesn’t even appear in the Ubisoft Connect store, but the reason for the removal is still unclear. According to Steam reviews, the title has historically suffered from some technical problems, and this could be the reason that pushed Ubisoft to this decision.
It is possible that on PC the title will remain available exclusively through the purchase of Assassin’s Creed III Remastered, which within the package also includes the spin-off starring the assassin Aveline de Grandpré.
The end of support for older Ubisoft games also means that several Assassin’s Creed DLCs will no longer be accessible to users.
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