About the game
Developer...........: Ubisoft.
Release Date......: April 8th, 2008.
Discs..................: 1
Size....................: 6.42 GB
Game Type.........: RPG Stealth Adventure
Protection...........: Safedisc.
Image Type........: ISO Image
File Type.............: 1GB / 8 Downloads
[MULTI 5] 5 Languages, ENG/FR/GER/ITA/SP
FULL version. Nothing is omitted from the original
Game Info
Assassin's Creed features one of the most unique gameworlds ever created: beautiful, memorable, and alive. Every crack and crevasse is filled with gorgeous, subtle details, from astounding visual flourishes to overheard cries for help. But it's more than just a world--it's a fun and exciting action game with a ton of stuff to do and places to explore, rounded out with a complex story that will slowly grab you the more you play. The PC version has a few more issues than its console counterparts, and the keyboard-and-mouse
controls strip away some of the smooth magic of exploration. Nevertheless, if you don't mind plugging in a gamepad and have a system that exceeds the system requirements, you'll find the same free-form travels and atmospheric game world that console owners enjoyed last year.
Not enough can be said about the living, breathing universe that you'll inhabit in Assassin's Creed. As assassin extraordinaire Altair, you'll explore three major cities of the Holy Land in the 12th century:
Jerusalem, Damascus, and Acre. Each city is beautifully rendered from top to bottom and features meticulously crafted towers that reach for the sky, bustling market squares, and quiet corners where citizens converse and drunks lie in wait to accost you. As you wander the streets (and rooftops), you'll push your way through crowds of women carrying jars on their heads, hear orators shout political and religious wisdom, and watch town guards harass innocent victims. Altair has a profound effect on this world,
but the cities are entities all their own, with their own flows and personalities.
The visual design has a lot to do with how believably organic everything feels. The cities are absolutely huge, and though you don't get full exploration privileges in the first few chapters, they eventually open up to let you travel seamlessly from one side to another. Everything is beautifully lit with just the right amount of bloom effect, and almost everything casts a shadow, from tall pillars to Altair's cloak. In fact, sometimes the shadows get to be a bit much and may make you think for a moment that there is artifacting on your screen, when in fact it's a character's head casting a shadow on his or her own neck. Every object, from scaffolds to pottery, is textured so finely that you'll feel as if you could reach out and touch it.
Animations are almost as equally well done. Altair scales walls, leaps majestically from towers, and engages in swashbuckling swordfights that would make Errol Flynn proud. And he does it all with fluid ease, generally moving from one pose to another without a hitch. Minor characters move with less aplomb, but that's easy to forgive, considering that the cities are populated with thousands and thousands of individuals.
Game Features
On a high-powered PC, these elements look even more stunning than they did on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, but the splendor comes with a price: The minimum requirements to play Assassin's Creed are surprisingly high, particularly where the CPU is concerned (a dual-core processor is mandatory). On one test PC that runs Crysis at a respectable frame rate on medium settings, Assassin's Creed slowed to a crawl at lower settings.
A high-end test machine ran the game with much better results, though with some occasional slowdown.What you hear is even more impressive than what you see. At the top of a temple, you hear little but the rush of wind, the twittering of birds, and the barking of a far-off dog. In the most populated areas, your ears will fill with the din of street vendors, the pleas of beggars, and the occasional humming. It's never too much, though, and the game does a good job of making sure you hear what you need to hear (for example,
the cries of citizens who need your help) without filling your ears with pointless noise. The voice acting of the supporting cast is similarly remarkable. Conversations are completely believable and delivered with the perfect amount of solemn dignity. Oddly, the weakest link is Altair himself. Actor Philip Shahbaz does an all right job, but he isn't up to par with the first-rate acting of his fellow troupe. Rounding it all out is a beautiful orchestral score that is most notable for its subtlety. Many of the game's most impressive moments are accompanied by lovely musical themes that add even more threads to the game's rich living tapestry. We did run into some audio glitches on two of our three test systems, however, in which sound effects would occasionally stutter and hitch. The game's readme file included a potential workaround for this issue, though in our case, it didn't solve it.
The story that binds it all together rises to the occasion. Actually, there are two related stories in play.
The unfolding drama of Crusades-era Palestine is a mere memory, forcibly pulled from a modern-day bartender named Desmond by a resolute researcher using a machine called an animus. The memories aren't Desmond's
own--they are Altair's, stored safely in the hapless subject's genetic code. We follow Altair as he assassinates nine public figures at the command of his master, and as the common thread that ties these men comes into focus, so does the true identity of Desmond's captors. There are no cutscenes in the traditional sense; every bit of story exposition and dialogue flows smoothly from the gameplay and takes place entirely within the game engine. The ending is confusing and blatantly leaves open the possibility of a sequel, but
this is a small blemish on an otherwise stirring tale. Altair's world is not one of absolutes. His assassination targets aren't always evil, and Altair isn't always likable. As he is fond of reminding us, "Nothing is true. Everything is permitted."
Minimum System Requirement
Supported OS: Windows XP or Windows Vista only
Processor: Dual core processor 2.6 GHz Intel® Pentium® D or AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 3800+ (Intel Core® 2 Duo 2.2
GHz or AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ or better recommended)
RAM: 1 GB Windows Xp / 2 GB Windows Vista
256 MB DirectX® 10.0-compliant video card or DirectX 9.0-compliant card with Shader Model 3.0 or higher
Sound Card: DirectX 9.0 or 10.0 compliant sound card (5.1 sound card recommended)
DirectX Version: DirectX 9.0 or DirectX 10.0 libraries (included on disc)
DVD-ROM: DVD-ROM dual-layer drive or blu-ray disc
Hard Drive Space: 11 GB
Peripherals Supported: Keyboard, mouse, optional controller (Xbox 360 Controller for Windows recommended)
Supported video cards at time of release:
ATI® RADEON® X1600†/1650†-1950/HD 2000/3000 series
NVIDIA GeForce® 6800†/7/8/9 series
1GB - 8 Links to download (#8-73meg)= 6.42 GB ISO Image
Code: |
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=CP602UFL http://www.megaupload.com/?d=Q2NTM0F0 http://www.megaupload.com/?d=PDV9DQCY http://www.megaupload.com/?d=WCSH5FZV http://www.megaupload.com/?d=B63M33NR http://www.megaupload.com/?d=B4PRAV6I http://www.megaupload.com/?d=DUZHNG4E http://www.megaupload.com/?d=STKW2KPR password: tooth |
Got Problem Files ??? We got the fix for
corrupt files!
MD5 Hash Value - unique file identity
To check your download with the original uploaded file, compare the
MD5 Hash Value.
Code: |
google hashtab2_setup,exe
|
or download here:
Code: |
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=5VTQUBEY password: tooth |
-Small file. Add to your system.
How it works
1- after install, right click properties of the file.
2- go to Hash Tab
3- program generates a unique number (MD5) to identify a specific
file.
-if your number does not match mine, that would be the problem file.
-This is quite simple to do and we can identity the specific problem
file.
Quote: |
MD5 Hash Value-Assassin Creed 1GB part 01-162A966875637BF93D756A5D41E41B1E part 02-B03849258A09CDF14A8E9066A6BA9533 part 03-4D8DE6281006FE5242C5C3D323AF1494 part 04-FFF61B4778E715A42C8231A56CB455D0 part 05-FA3FE8A9DEC38AA93280C639BC37E141 part 06-20B8DEE66E8E8F2472B66316BF2BEDC3 part 07-47B7B6C93B1F533D15130D3AE0D5053D part 08-366A39B5856E4526E3FA11C993FFE878
|
Quote: |
ISO Image MD5 hash file value: 565F9E3C60F1B30ADE55144D9C456E8E If you ISO does not match, you have a corrupt ISO Image |
1.02 game patch
Code: |
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=86WYJPHX password: tooth |
1.02 crack file
Code: |
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=Z2NC5E35 password: tooth |
Tutorials - How to mount a Gaming Image and install the Game
Code: |
http://www.gamezlinks.net/2009/09/how-do-i-mount-gaming-image-and-install.html |
How to Install
DISCONNECT FROM INTERNET DURING THE INSTALL
AFTER INSTALL, GAME CONNECTS TO INTERNET TO UPDATE
1. download the 8 links and extract to ISO Image.
2. Mount the ISO image on your virtual drive and install.
3. After install, download the 1.02 game patch and install patch.
4. Download the crack file and these 2 files will replace
the exact same files in your game installed directory
Code: |
C:\Program Files\Ubisoft\Assassin's Creed\ |
5. NOW PLAY THE GAME! PLEASE READ BELOW!
For sound problems:
Quote: |
If using Realtek High Definition Audio, Soundmax HD Audio, or nForce Audio, you may experience sound anomalies. To work around the problem, reduce the Hardware acceleration slider to 'Basic' in the Windows Control Panel -> Sounds and Audio Devices -> Audio tab -> Advanced -> Performance tab. |
after the first mission, you can choose Acre or Jerusalem, choose Acre.
To play Jerusalem, you must play it LAST!!!
To play Jerusalem, you must play it LAST!!!
To play Jerusalem, you must play it LAST!!!
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