The Ezio Saga compiles AC II, Brotherhood and Revelations, Ezio Auditore's complete trilogy. Italian Renaissance then Rome then Constantinople. Monumental content, one of the best trilogies on PS3.
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Category
Compilation4 players18+
Description
Japanese compilation dedicated to the Ezio Auditore trilogy, bundling Assassin's Creed II, Brotherhood and Revelations. Published by Ubisoft, released in 2012 exclusively in Japan. Three decades alongside the Florentine noble, from his family revenge in Renaissance Italy to the Templar hunt in Rome, all the way to his final journey to Constantinople uncovering Altair's fate.
Assassin's Creed - Ezio Saga review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
Historical recreations of astonishing breadth, from the rooftops of Florence to the sunlit Caribbean: each era lives again with a dizzying care for detail. The architectural coherence and worked-over light turn History into a sumptuous playground. This visual ambition, vast and polished, defines the historical open world.
Signed by Jesper Kyd, the music blends ambient pads, ethereal choirs and Renaissance sonorities to dress Ezio's Italy. The sublime "Ezio's Family", of a poignant melancholy, became an instant anthem. This refined, atmospheric sonic identity ranks among the finest of the saga.
Bringing together the entire life of Ezio Auditore, this saga follows a Florentine noble from vengeance to wisdom against the backdrop of the Italian Renaissance. Conspiracy, grief and a search for meaning weave one of the most accomplished character arcs in video games. Watching a hero grow and age across decades lends the tale a rare depth.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Following Ezio's rise across three adventures gathered together means dozens of hours of exhilarating parkour, infiltrations and sumptuous Renaissance cities. Climbing the facades and swooping on your targets delivers an instant sense of freedom. Rich, generous and beautifully staged, an essential trilogy to savour in one go.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Scaling cathedrals and rooftops to unlock viewpoints, melting into the crowd, then striking with a hidden blade sets up a loop of urban freedom that always nudges toward the next objective. Contracts, chests and feathers to collect keep the exploration rolling. A few tailing missions wear thin, but the elegance of the parkour and the density of Renaissance Italy hold you for the long haul.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Ezio's entire arc fits in this collection, from the vengeful young Florentine to the grey-haired mentor of Constantinople. Rebuilding cities, hunting the brotherhood's secrets and clearing every side challenge demands a sizeable investment. Living the character's maturing in one continuous run stays a striking experience and a recommended classic.
Technical info
💾24,3 GB📅06/09/2012
Published by Ubisoft
Assassin's Creed - Ezio Saga (PS3) price, value & rarity
Complete: box, manual and disc/cart very clean. Lightly handled.
Q1 damagedQ6 completeQ10 new
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Collector interest
A Japanese box dedicated to the Ezio arc, the saga's most popular, assembled for the Japanese audience. Less distributed than the Western versions due to weaker Japanese sales, it mainly appeals to completists of the series' local editions. Its interest rests on this specific regional presentation, the content being the one already known elsewhere.
Better with friends
Beyond the solo adventure, the saga built a singular competitive mode where you stalk a human target by blending into the crowd rather than charging in. The tension springs from bluff and patience: spotting the real player among the extras delivers rare thrills. The online side relies on servers whose activity is no longer guaranteed, but the idea remains one of the genre's most striking.
Is Assassin's Creed - Ezio Saga still worth playing in 2026?
This compilation gathers the Ezio trilogy, namely AC II, Brotherhood and Revelations, and its appeal stays obvious for anyone wanting to live the series' most famous arc in one stretch. Following the Florentine master from Monteriggioni to Constantinople, without hunting down separate releases, lends the journey a welcome flow. All three games have aged well at heart, carried by sturdy writing and memorable settings. A generous set condensing dozens of hours, ideal for discovering the saga at its peak or rounding out a PS3 library.