AC III plunges Connor Kenway into the American Revolution with a wild frontier, snowy Boston, Lexington and Concord. Ambitious and spectacular despite a slow ramp-up. The saga's best setting.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure4 players18+
Description
New saga cycle starring Connor Kenway, a young Mohawk drawn into the American Revolution to defend his people. Published by Ubisoft, released in 2012 across Europe, Scandinavia, Asia, Australia, North America and Japan. Boston, New York and the Frontier to traverse, naval battles aboard the Aquila, forest hunting, Davenport homestead management, expanded multiplayer with co-op and competitive modes.
Assassin's Creed III review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
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.
Blending a broad orchestra and American folk accents, the music raises the Revolution to the scale of a great historical fresco. Vibrant strings and fifes underline Connor's commitment with an epic nobility. This symphonic breadth, polished and inspired, elevates every moment of the adventure.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Taking the saga into revolutionary America, this third entry opens vast wildernesses, naval battles at the helm of the Aquila and a whole homestead to make prosper. Hunting, crafting, contracts and collectibles pile onto an ample campaign, clearly swelling the length. That opening toward nature remains one of its most striking traits.
The first entry to leave Ezio for the American Revolution and hero Connor, a big launch issued in countless regional and language versions. Sold in volume, it stays very common and cheap. Its collector interest lies mostly in the wealth of its market variants, a regional completism playground, more than in any scarcity or price of the standard game.
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 III still worth playing in 2026?
Assassin's Creed III still intrigues through its ambition, even if it ages unevenly. The American Revolution, the snowbound wilderness frontier and the naval battles deliver spectacular moments that have lost none of their breadth. Connor Kenway divides with his stiffness, and the lengthy introduction still discourages many players. The heavier combat system and the period bugs call for patience. We recommend it to devotees of the saga and of history rather than to the hurried player chasing instant gratification.