Woops.Good news for everyone who hates the Dark Souls sub-threads: now we're in an Assassin's Creed sub-thread!
Anyway - I finished Revelations.
Whilst 2 was an improvement on 1, and Brotherhood was an improvement on 2, I feel like Revelations was just a worse Brotherhood. Sure, I didn't spend as much time in menus as I did in Brotherhood, but I just feel like a lot of its mechanics were pointless, and I never felt invested in its story.
I never used bombs. The Assassin's Guild never felt necessary. The hookblade undermine's the game's own climbing mechanics. I did the tower defence minigame once.
And the story was just weird. The entire story of the Ottomans and the Templars etc, felt completely tangential to unlocking Altair's library, and I never felt like Ezio pulled into this plot. Other than the Templars being Templars, this had nothing to do with Ezio, aside from that one time that they kidnapped his girlfriend, and the main villain was surprise revealed in the second-to-last mission.
It just felt weak, and was definitely the weakest of the 3 games, overall.
Its interesting, because for years I felt for sure that 2, Brotherhood, and Revelations were basically the same game, just with different stories and cities, but having played them for the first time in my adult life, I can say for sure that my assessment was incorrect. Originally, 2 was my favourite, but now I will definitely be singing the praises of Brotherhood. The other 2 games are fine, but definitely don't hold up as well.
If anything though, im now more invested in playing the rest of the franchise, just to see how my opinions have changed.
And now, onto 3 (Remastered).
First impressions: the game handles much nicer than the Ezio trilogy. For the first time in the series' life, there is a change in engine, and that change is substantial. Everything looks much nicer. The terrain is much more complex. Ships! Fantastic animations. Additional bells and whistles, like more accurate cloth simulation. Its great!
The only weird quirk is that they added manual aiming to ranged weapons. In theory, this is fine, but in practice, for some reason they offset the crosshair to the right, so I have to undo almost 2 decades of muscle memory of centre-screen aiming, just to quickly land a shot. Or, you can just press the Y button, and your character will immediately shoot the highlighted enemy. Guess I will be using the Y button, then.
As for the story - the first quarter of the game gets you to play as someone who turns out to be a Templar. The next quarter of the game, you are now playing as the first character's son, and you trying to convince some old, retired Assassin to train you. Now im on Sequence 6 of 12, and... I've barely even started? Okay. We will see how his plays out.
I've got to say though, that im having fun. Navigating the frontier is a blast, and im about to captain a ship.
Can't wait.