Skip to main content

Try a free month of being a Eurogamer Supporter

Get ad-free browsing and exclusive content. Use code "EGMay24" at checkout.

If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy.

Ubisoft expanding Assassin's Creed team by 40% over coming years

As it focuses on "big brands and long-lasting Live games".

Ubisoft has detailed plans expand its Assassin's Creed team by 40 percent "over the coming years" as it seeks to focus its resources on "big brands and long-lasting Live games".

The news comes as part of the publisher's Financial Year 2023 earnings report, its first earnings report since a disappointing quarterly update in January which saw it pledge an "increased cautiousness over the coming years" and cancel three unannounced projects.

In today's end-of-year report, Ubisoft recorded net bookings of €1.74bn, marking an 18 percent year-on-year decrease for the publisher, but there were some notable wins for its biggest games, including a record number of active users for the Assassin's Creed franchise over the last year, coming it at 44 percent higher than Origins and 19 percent higher than Odyssey.

Newscast: After Redfall's launch woes, where next for Xbox?Watch on YouTube

That's undoubtedly helped spur Ubisoft's decision to lean even harder on Assassin's Creed, with the publisher announcing plans to expand the team working on the series by 40 percent in the coming years. To achieve that target, which will bring the team's headcount up from 2000 to 2800, employees will be moved over from other franchises.

Ubisoft does, of course, have a lot of Assassin's Creed on its slate already, with five titles currently confirmed to be in development: this year's Baghdad-set Mirage, Project Hexe, and Codename Red (now Assassin's Creed Shadows), plus mobile game Codename Jade, and another mobile offering for Netflix.

Ubisoft's increased focus on Assassin's Creed comes as it hones in on what it calls its key strategic pillars: "big brands and long-lasting Live games".

In the latter camp, Ubisoft reported notable milestones for both Rainbow Six: Siege and The Division 2 in its latest financial report, the former seeing a playtime increase of 30 percent in Q4, while the latter saw a 28 percent increase in session days played in the same quarter.

Its dalliances with free-to-play have been considerably less notable so far, but Ubisoft describes "recent developments" as "encouraging", highlighting the positive response to upcoming free-to-play shooter XDefiant's recent beta.

Ubisoft is set to share more on its slate of future titles during its big summer showcase, Ubisoft Forward, which will air on 12th June.

Read this next