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Assassin's Creed II New DLC Trailer
Ubisoft reveals another round of DLC for Assassin's Creed II, called Bonfire of the Vanities. Get this, it comes in two variants - the "vanilla" variant, which will cost 320 Microsoft Points ($4) and offers a continuation of the main story set in a new district of Florence. Here Ezio joins Machiavelli in an effort to take down the mad monk Savonarola.

There's one more version - the "enhanced" version, with a price of 520 Microsoft Points ($6.50), which includes extra areas, as follows:

Palazzo Medici - Located in Florence, the player gets to explore the house of the Medici family. It is located in the San Marco district of Florence.

Santa Maria dei Frari - Located in Venice, in the San Polo district, the player gets to explore this renowned church built in the XIII century.

Arsenal Shipyard - Venice was known for its Arsenal, a shipyard that was settled in the eastern part of the city. The last Templars' Lair is located there, and lets the player explore the Drydocks.




4 post(s)
Reader Comments
Forteh [mail] Feb 18 2010, 03:25 am EST
is there a release date for this dlc ?
Vader [STAFF] [mail] Feb 18 2010, 03:39 am EST
No, but here's an interesting fact I just picked up from VE3D.

"Whether you like it or not, Bonfire Of The Vanities, Templar Secret Locations, and Battle Of Forli are included with the $64.99 delayed PC conversion. On consoles, the DLC sets you back a total of $10.50. Therefore, without the DLC, Assassin's Creed II PC would be priced $54.49, which verges into the 'price premium' territory of Modern Warfare 2."
Superastic [mail] Feb 18 2010, 04:11 am EST
Greed.
Cheddar [mail] Feb 18 2010, 04:31 am EST
More like "what the market will bear".

DLC is popular with developers/publishers right now because like it or not PEOPLE ARE BUYING IT.

You can't objectively blame businesses for merely making the profit the consumers are all too eager to give them. Gaming is a luxury, obviously, not a need like food, gas, etc, so the businesses involved are fully and completely justified charging whatever they want for however much content they want... and if the market lets them do it, then there's really nothing 'wrong' whatsoever about it.
  Marku5K: yep, dont like it, but it's true.
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