I gotta hand this one to the suits: I thought gamers might find a $60 price tag on a rehash of a 13-year-old Assassin’s Creed game to be a bit much, and apparently I was wrong. Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced sold more than two million copies in just one day, and has handily surpassed Steam player counts of newer games in the series, including Assassin’s Creed Shadows.
“Dash my Buttons… Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced has already passed 2 million copies sold!” Ubisoft wrote on X the day after the overhauled Black Flag launched. “Whether you’re sailing with us again, or stepping aboard the Jackdaw for the first time: THANK YOU from the bottom of ARR hearts.”
(Image credit: Ubisoft (Twitter))
It’s notable here that Ubisoft refers specifically to two million copies sold, as opposed to the “one million players” it used to characterize the success of Assassin’s Creed Shadows in its first day of release. As Joshua Wolens noted at the time, it left us uncertain as to how Shadows was really doing compared to Valhalla, although Ubisoft later said Shadows had put up the “second-highest day one sales revenues in Assassin’s Creed franchise history.”
A more straightforward comparison can be found in the concurrent player numbers on Steam, where Black Flag Resynced stands head and shoulders above the rest. Here too, some differences need to be accounted for: Ubisoft had a years-long no Steam dalliance so Valhalla didn’t arrive on that storefront until a couple years after its debut on the Epic Games Store, and Shadows was weighed down by coordinated culture war nonsense over the presence of the Black samurai Yasuke. Shadows also costs $10 more than Black Flag Resynced.
Still, it’s about as close to apples-to-apples as we’re going to get, and the numbers make it clear: Nostalgia is a hell of a drug.
(Image credit: SteamDB)
(These are ordered by their all-time peak concurrent player count.)
“Black Flag has always held a special place in the heart of the community, and ours.” Assassin’s Creed brand boss Martin Schelling said. “Bringing it back with Resynced was a promise to that passion for Edward’s adventures, and to the unique sense of freedom players experienced back then. Seeing two million players set sail on day one, along with the great reviews from critics, is the greatest reward we could have hoped for.”
2026 games: All the upcoming gamesBest PC games: Our all-time favoritesFree PC games: Freebie festBest FPS games: Finest gunplayBest RPGs: Grand adventuresBest co-op games: Better together


