- 0-20%: Unlikely - Lacks credible sources
- 21-40%: Questionable - Some concerns remain
- 41-60%: Plausible - Reasonable evidence
- 61-80%: Probable - Strong evidence
- 81-100%: Highly Likely - Multiple reliable sources
80%
Probable
Yesterday, we learned that Clint Hocking, the creative director on Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory, Far Cry 2, Watch Dogs: Legion, and most recently, the creative director behind the upcoming Assassin's Creed Hexe, had left Ubisoft. The newly named head of content for Assassin's Creed and former Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag creative director, Jean Guesdon, is stepping in to fill his role on the project, which, according to a reliable Ubisoft insider, is showing a lot of promise within Ubisoft.
So much so that it's even the project that "everyone" across the company is looking to work on "because of how good it's shaping up to be." The insider in question who made that comment is Tom Henderson, who noted it alongside Insider-Gaming's coverage of Hocking's departure.
"Some folk will be wary of this change," Henderson writes, "but Assassin's Creed Hexe is the one project that everyone at Ubisoft wants to work on because of how good it's shaping up to be."
So far, we know very little about Assassin's Creed Hexe. It was announced in 2022 alongside a slew of upcoming titles for the series, and in the time since, all we have to go on about what to expect from the game are a few rumours. Back in 2024, we heard that it had been pushed into 2026, but after Ubisoft's "major reset" that was revealed last month, it could have easily been one of the projects that was pushed back further while Ubisoft works through this transition.
Regardless, Henderson's record when it comes to reporting on Ubisoft lends a lot of weight to his comments. Whether you're more pessimistic and figure that 'everyone' at Ubisoft wants to work on Hexe because they see it as a life raft to not get laid off during a tumultuous time for the company, or because they think it might be one of the best games Ubisoft has in the works right now, neither could be possible if it wasn't, as Henderson says, "shaping up" so well.
Hopefully, we'll hear more about Hexe soon.
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