logo
Assassin's Creed Shadows updated after Japan's prime minister addressed concerns in parliament

Assassin's Creed Shadows updated after Japan's prime minister addressed concerns in parliament

Independent20-03-2025
Assassin's Creed Shadows has been updated by video game giant Ubisoft in a day-one patch, after concerns about the game were addressed by Japan's prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, in parliament.
The game, released on 20 March, is set in Feudal Japan but has courted controversy, as some people have vented frustration at how its setting has been depicted.
Ubisoft's latest entry in the Assassin's Creed series has already been censored in Japan, compared with its Western release, because it was considered to be too gory to obtain a rating unless changes were made.
According to a report from IGN, on 19 March, Hiroyuki Kada, a Japanese politician and member of the House of Councillors of Japan, raised a question about the game, because players had the ability to deface and destroy shrines.
He is reported to have said: 'I fear that allowing players to attack and destroy real-world locations in the game without permission could encourage similar behaviour in real life. Shrine officials and local residents are also worried about this. Of course, freedom of expression must be respected but acts that demean local cultures should be avoided.'
Kada seemed to be concerned that players being able to perform certain acts in the game could lead to them visiting Japan and replicating that behaviour in real life, with over-tourism already being blamed for an increase in cases of vandalism.
He is understood to have seen pre-release gameplay in which a shrine in his constituency was defaced.
Prime minister Ishiba is reported to have replied: 'How to address this legally is something we need to discuss with the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
'Defacing a shrine is out of the question – it is an insult to the nation itself. Respecting the culture and religion of a country is fundamental, and we must make it clear that we will not simply accept acts that disregard them.'
While it has not been confirmed if Ubisoft updated the game directly because of this exchange, the developer and publisher released a day-one update in which shrines are no longer destructible.
According to patch notes seen by IGN, changes include 'tables and racks in temples/shrines are now indestructible' and 'citizens without weapons no longer bleed when attacked, reducing unintended blood spill in temples/shrines'.
This update has been rolled out to all countries and not just in Japan. Ubisoft has previously issued reassurances that the game is not a representation of history and is a work of historical fiction.
Assassin's Creed Shadows was released on 20 March on PS5, Xbox Series X/S and PC.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Horrendous images are tipping point for outrage over Gaza
Horrendous images are tipping point for outrage over Gaza

The Herald Scotland

time18 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Horrendous images are tipping point for outrage over Gaza

But not until it was confronted with the jutting out shoulder blades and shrivelled heads of emaciated children did the government sit up and take notice of a situation it had the power and the responsibility to prevent. And even then it's mostly been empty words, with little action behind them. Keir Starmer described the suffering as 'unspeakable and indefensible'; but it is 'unspeakable' only in the sense that he has chosen not to speak about it (and tried to prevent others doing so). And, by finding excuses for [[Israel]] – by declaring it had the right to switch off water and electricity, for example – he has himself defended it. Wilful ignorance is a form of complicity, but the Prime Minister has done worse than this: he has been an apologist for war crimes. Read more Dani Garavelli: For all his apparent disgust at the plight of malnourished babies, Starmer was last week focused on another bug bear: takeaway delivery drivers. In a dog-whistle tweet, he pledged to hand over the addresses of asylum seeker hotels – already lightning rods for racist attacks – so the likes of Deliveroo and Just Eat can make sure they don't pay their low wages to anyone who has fled here from other countries. Asylum seekers are not here illegally (whatever the subtext of the policy might be). It is just that, under our laws, they are not allowed to earn a living. Still, unlike a crackdown on Israel, it's likely to raise a smile on the Reform crowd's faces. No wonder some of Starmer's own party are embarrassed to be associated with him. Others have raised their voices, of course: charities, human rights organisations, the tens of thousands who have taken to the streets with their placards, powerless in the face of establishment apathy, but desperate to do their bit. The UK government has demonised those protesters, portraying them as violent anti-Semites in an attempt to shut them down. Even as the Express newspaper — the right-wing Express, for God's sake — was publishing a splash headline that read: The Suffering of Little Muhammad Clinging to Life Shames Us All, police officers were arresting pensioners under the Terrorism Act for carrying placards and, in one case, a copy of Private Eye magazine. This they justified by alleging those protesters were supporting Palestine Action, an organisation which has been proscribed for trying to draw attention to the very humanitarian catastrophe Starmer has deemed 'unspeakable'. No Western leader has done enough. They have tutted at outrageous statements from the likes of former Knesset member Moshe Feiglin, who said 'every child in Gaza is the enemy', they have called for a ceasefire and issued joint condemnatory statements. But they have failed to follow through on threats of concrete action, or at least they have failed to do so to any degree likely to have an impact. Earlier this month, EU ministers declined to suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement and visa-free travel, or to block imports from Israeli settlements. After the Labour Party came to power last year, it suspended 30 out of 350 arms export licences, but exempted parts for the F-35 fighter jet, used extensively in Israeli air strikes on Gaza. It suspended talks to upgrade its free trade agreement with Israel, but it has yet to impose any direct sanctions. Foreign Secretary David Lammy does appear to want more; but he is running up against the intractability of his leader, who is refusing to commit to the most basic act of solidarity: the recognition of a Palestinian state. Across the Channel, Emmanuel Macron has been pushing the G7 leaders to make a joint declaration. In the absence of support, he has decided to go it alone, and has promised to formalise his decision at the United Nations General Assembly in September. Keir Starmer has shown more interest in going after protesters. (Image: James Manning) Starmer, on the other hand, says that, while Palestinians have an unalienable right to statehood, a formal recognition must be made 'at the right time'. Half a million people in Gaza are considered to be facing catastrophe while a further one million fall into the 'emergency risk' category. The US has just withdrawn from ceasefire talks in Qatar. So when will the right time be, Keir? When the last Palestinian is dead? The Labour government has been out of touch with public opinion on Gaza for a long time. Now, it appears to be out of touch with its own backbenchers and Westminster at large. Early last week, 60 cross party MPs and peers called for a full embargo on arms exports to Israel and for the government to be more transparent about the licences it grants for military exports. And on Thursday 100, led by the chair of the International Development Committee Sarah Champion, demanded Starmer formally recognise Palestine. Perhaps the Prime Minister will buckle under the pressure. Perhaps something substantial will come out of his emergency phone call with France and Germany. It does feel as if the world has woken up to what is happening. In the short-term, we need to build on that momentum; to ensure something is actually done. But in the long-term there must be a reckoning in a way there was not in the wake of Iraq. It has been clear for so long what Israel's endgame is, and that they would stop at nothing to achieve it. Yet western governments allowed it to act with impunity, and, sure enough, here is Gaza, tipping into an abyss. Read more: In 2016, I travelled to Srebrenica courtesy of a charity that exists to ensure we do not forget what happens when the world turns a blind eye to genocide. At Potočari cemetery there are 7,000 white pillars like upended chalk pieces: one for each Muslim whose body has been recovered from mass graves in Bosnia Herzegovina (although another 7,000 are still missing, and the remains of 2,000 others lie unidentified in mortuaries). Under a simple pavilion, survivors tell how they fled the safe haven when the UN failed to protect them; how – captured on the roadside – they were loaded into lorries, then taken in batches into barns to be shot. More than 60,000 have died in Gaza since October 7, 2023. The UN, Amnesty and Médecins Sans Frontières have all declared it a genocide. And yet some people are still quibbling over the word. Perhaps, in 25 years' time, a charity will take journalists and politicians to a graveyard on the strip. Perhaps people like me will force themselves to confront the ranks of the dead, in the stupid, misguided belief that simply bearing witness will help prevent such an atrocity from ever happening again.

John Wayne's outrageous antics on set exposed... including 'bullying' a CHILD actor
John Wayne's outrageous antics on set exposed... including 'bullying' a CHILD actor

Daily Mail​

time19 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

John Wayne's outrageous antics on set exposed... including 'bullying' a CHILD actor

John Wayne is arguably one of the greatest American actors of all time. While many of his co-stars have praised his professionalism and hard working nature, not everybody had a wonderful experience with the late star. While filming his 1953 western Hondo, Wayne reportedly 'bullied' and berated one of the child actors in the film. According to Ronald L Davis' unauthorized biography on Wayne, Duke: The Life and Image of John Wayne, the star would also throw tantrums on set. 'Every morning, when he would be hungover, he would have a screaming fit,' his Hondo co-star Geraldine Page said. 'He'd yell at somebody until he got hoarse. He would pick on some technical point, and he was always right,' she added. Wayne apparently then got frustrated with child actor Lee Aaker during filming - and he wasn't afraid to show it. 'He kept trying to bully the child into doing what he wanted, and the boy wouldn't do it,' Page claimed, adding that Wayne would make Aaker retake scenes 'over and over again.' Page isn't the only former co-star of Wayne's to expose his on-set behavior. George Takei, who starred alongside Wayne in the critically panned 1968 war drama The Green Berets, claimed that The Searchers star had a reputation for relentlessly bullying one crew member of every film he worked on. 'There was a quirk in him. I was shocked. I was told he did it with every production,' Takei told Express. 'He singled out one man, always a big bruiser of a guy, tall, husky and muscular, usually a stuntman or a stand in. And he pilloried these people there on the set with everyone looking on,' he continued. 'I was embarrassed being there. He did it all consistently with this guy and then people who worked with him on other productions told me he always did that. 'He picked one person to excoriate relentlessly. Sometimes these guys broke down in tears.' Takei believes that this was Wayne's way of 'establishing his alpha, top dog status' on set. 'I was with him for three months and he wasn't like that with anyone else. It was some kind of mental thing I think,' he added. Despite his legendary status in Hollywood, Wayne has been criticized for years over a 1971 Playboy magazine interview in which he made bigoted statements against Black people, Native Americans and the LGBTQ community. 'I believe in white supremacy until the Blacks are educated to a point of responsibility. I don't believe in giving authority and positions of leadership and judgment to irresponsible people,' he said at the time. Wayne also said that although he didn't condone slavery, 'I don't feel guilty about the fact that five or 10 generations ago these people were slaves.' The actor added he felt no remorse in the subjugation of Native Americans. 'I don't feel we did wrong in taking this great country away from them. Our so-called stealing of this country from them was just a matter of survival,' he said. 'There were great numbers of people who needed new land, and the Indians were selfishly trying to keep it for themselves.' Wayne called movies such as Easy Rider and Midnight Cowboy perverted, and used a gay slur to refer to the two main characters of the latter film. He was 63 when he made the remarks. During his career, Wayne was one of America's biggest box office draws for almost three decades. His most famous films include Rio Bravo, The Searchers, Stagecoach, and True Grit, which earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor. He died of stomach cancer in 1979 and was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.

Star Wars Outlaws is Ubisoft's best game and you should get it now it's cheap
Star Wars Outlaws is Ubisoft's best game and you should get it now it's cheap

Metro

timea day ago

  • Metro

Star Wars Outlaws is Ubisoft's best game and you should get it now it's cheap

A reader is disappointed to hear that Star Wars Outlaws will not be getting a sequel but recommends the original now that it's heavy discounted. I'm sure if I was in charge of Ubisoft I'd blame Star Wars itself for the failure of Outlaws, but I really don't think that's fair. I doubt they honestly think that season 3 of The Mandalorian being bad is the real reason for its failure, but I'm sure it didn't help so it's a convenient scapegoat that shifts the blame away from them. Either way I'm very upset to hear that there won't be a Star Wars Outlaws 2. I think there's a couple of reasons for the game's failure but it's a real shame because I think it's Ubisoft's best game of recent years and definitely better than Assassin's Creed Shadows, Far Cry 5, and any of their other games I've played lately. It's not massively different from their usual open world formula but it's got a lot of small things it does better, that really should have made it be a bigger hit. Although perhaps, and this is fair enough, it was just too little too late and by that point everyone had just had enough of it all. In terms of the Star Wars aspect of it all, I think the problem was that, as GC said, when you have Star Wars without Jedi it can just seem like a generic sci-fi adventure. There's nothing necessarily wrong with that, but I don't feel they pushed the Star Wars aspects as much as they could and the aliens were definitely underused in terms of making everything feel different but also familiar. I think everything to do with Jabba the Hutt worked the best and that's because it looked and felt the most like the movies. The bigger problem was that none of the main characters were that interesting. They had all that behind the scenes footage of the actress being all bubbly and excited but in the game she's just kind of quiet and a bit dull. She is absolutely not the female equivalent of Han Solo and her pet and that unlikeable robot friend is not a good stand-in in for Chewie. Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning. But really, that's relatively minor stuff. It's not like I particularly liked any of the characters in Assassin's Creed Shadows or Far Cry 5 either, and at least Outlaws had multiple different planets (Tatooine is amazing). What Outlaws does better than the average open world game though is that it combines its side quests and its skill tree together so that instead of doing random fetch quests you're actually working to unlock new skills and upgrades, which really makes a difference in terms of things not feeling like busywork. The open world is well designed and there's plenty of variety, with shooting, driving, stealth, and spaceship combat. And the best thing? It's not 100+ hours long. I don't think it would be even if you did everything, but you can definitely beat the main story in less than 20 hours, which for me is a definite plus. Not only does it mean I can beat it in the same year I start it, but it means the game never outstays its welcome, which all the Assassin's Creed games always do. More Trending There's never going to be another one but you can get it dirt cheap at the moment and I believe it's also coming to Nintendo Switch 2. I'd definitely check it out, as it's much better than its reputation and it's sad we're never going to get another one. By reader Tacle The reader's features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro. You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. Just contact us at gamecentral@ or use our Submit Stuff page and you won't need to send an email. MORE: It is madness that Konami still hasn't made a new Castlevania - Reader's Feature MORE: I had a Commodore Amiga as a kid and this is not the gaming future I imagined - Reader's Feature MORE: The biggest problem with the Nintendo Switch 2 is that it's too big – Reader's Feature

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store