Assassin’s Creed Shadows sparks backlash in Japan over historical accuracy
Assassin’s Creed Shadows, set for release on March 20, is the latest in a hugely successful historical action game series from Ubisoft. The first Assassin’s Creed was released in 2007 and its 13 sequels and spin-offs have sold well over 200 million copies.
However, there is little surviving historical documentation of Yasuke’s life, including whether he was considered a samurai. He is believed to have arrived in Japan from Mozambique with Portuguese priests around 1580 and later served Oda Nobunaga, a “daimyo” feudal lord known as the unifier of Japan.
It’s clear that some cultural toes have been trodden on with the game
In the game, Yasuke is depicted as a powerful samurai warrior. Critics have argued there is no historical evidence for that assertion and that it is wrong to make a foreigner one of the protagonists in a game about Japanese history.