Description
Assassin’s Creed: Ezio Trilogy (Xbox 360, 2013) No Manual, Very Good
Assassin’s Creed: Ezio Trilogy (Xbox 360, 2013)
Assassin’s Creed: Ezio Trilogy on Xbox 360 is basically “the complete Ezio midlife crisis box set.”
Released in 2013, this compilation packs three full games on three discs: Assassin’s Creed II, Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood, and Assassin’s Creed: Revelations,
following Ezio Auditore da Firenze from hot-headed rich kid in Renaissance Italy to grizzled Master Assassin chasing answers in Constantinople.
On 360, you’re getting the original base games; the PS3 version is the one that came with the Bonfire of the Vanities and Battle of Forlì DLC built in. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
Across the three titles, the core loop is the same delicious Assassin’s Creed formula: open-world cities, parkour across rooftops, social stealth in crowds,
and “accidentally” shoving people off bell towers in the name of freedom. AC II is the origin story — Ezio learns the Creed, builds his gear, and dismantles Templar power across Florence, Venice, and more.
Brotherhood drops him into Rome to build an actual assassin network and kick the Borgia family in the teeth. Revelations finishes the arc in Constantinople, layering bombs, hookblade parkour,
and Altair flashbacks on top of an older, more worn-out Ezio who’s clearly ready to retire if the universe would stop giving him side quests. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Mechanically, each game ramps things up. AC II gives you proper dual hidden blades, money, shops, and the whole “upgrade your villa” lifestyle. Brotherhood adds the recruitable assassin system,
letting you whistle in backup to zipline murder people on command, plus a more fluid combat system and Rome-wide territory control. Revelations leans into gadgets and traversal: the hookblade speeds up climbing
and ziplines, bomb crafting lets you customize distraction, damage, and stealth tools, and the city design stacks vertical routes everywhere so you’re basically doing cardio with knives. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
On Xbox 360, all three games are fully playable offline from the discs with their full single-player campaigns. Brotherhood and Revelations originally had online multiplayer modes
(the “blend in a crowd and stab your friends” cat-and-mouse stuff), but Ubisoft has been decommissioning online services for older Assassin’s Creed titles, including the Xbox 360 versions of
AC II, Brotherhood, and Revelations. As of 2024, their online services were scheduled for shutdown, so you should treat this trilogy primarily as an offline single-player package with Ezio’s full story,
not as a multiplayer destination. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
- This 360 release is a 2013 compilation with three separate game discs — one each for AC II, Brotherhood, and Revelations — rather than a single-disc install collection. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
- The Xbox 360 version includes only the base games; the PS3 Ezio Trilogy is the one that bundles in Bonfire of the Vanities, Battle of Forlì, and an extra Ezio skin for AC II. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
- Brotherhood was the first Assassin’s Creed with full competitive multiplayer, letting you play as different Templar agents hunting and hiding among crowds — a mode that later influenced how Ubisoft handled online in the series. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
- Revelations closes Ezio’s narrative while also wrapping up Altair’s storyline via playable flashbacks and hidden “Desmond’s Journey” sequences, making this trilogy effectively the “complete old-school Assassin’s Creed lore dump” in one box. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
- The Ezio Trilogy on 360 is often contrasted with the later Ezio Collection on newer systems: this one is original versions with minimal visual tweaks and limited DLC, while the Collection is the remastered, all-DLC-included upgrade for modern hardware. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
You can buy retro games on Retro Games eXchange.







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.