With Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced just under two weeks from launch, someone posted the game's full opening half-hour on Chinese video platform Bilibili. The footage surfaced barely 24 hours after Ubisoft sent the game out to creators and media. Video quality is rough, apparently captured off a review build, but it's enough to confirm quite a bit about what Ubisoft has built.
The opening plays out largely as you'd expect, with the remake looking like a faithful reimagining of the 2013 original. That said, a few things have changed. New scenes have been added before the Duncan Walpole boss fight, and viewers who watched the footage noted the extended intro makes Duncan look considerably more incompetent than he did in the original. Whether that's an improvement is going to be subjective, but it's a clear creative choice to flesh out his backstory before Edward deals with him.

The other notable change is a fix Ubisoft apparently made after fan feedback. In the original reveal trailer, Edward's leap of faith was performed awkwardly, drawing comparisons to how Eivor handled it in Valhalla before the tutorial. In the final game, it's been corrected. That one quietly slipped through, but players caught it immediately during the showcase months ago, and it seems like Ubisoft has listened.

Moreover, the game runs on the latest version of the Anvil engine and supports Dolby Atmos and ray tracing, with the visual fidelity appearing similar to Assassin's Creed: Shadows. Combat has also been rebuilt, and Ubisoft has added a handful of new mechanics, including the ability to pull enemies toward you with a rope during stealth, throw coins as a distraction, and dive underwater almost anywhere on the map.

Over on r/GamingLeaksAndRumours, the thread went up quickly, and reactions were largely positive. The faithful approach to the opening seems to have settled some nerves, given earlier rumors that the game could lean into RPG mechanics from the modern AC era.
As we covered previously, Ubisoft already has a second Assassin's Creed remake in development, and how Resynced performs will likely determine how aggressive that pipeline gets. There's also Assassin's Creed Hexe still in the works, though that's a different beast entirely.

Ubisoft claims to have packed roughly six hours of additional content beyond the original release. The standard edition is priced at $59.99, with a Collector's Edition at $199.99. The review embargo drops July 8, and the game launches on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC on July 9, 2026.




