
The official Assassin’s Creed Twitter account threw shade at Elon Musk by mocking his Path of Exile 2 credentials, or lack thereof. The move marks a continuation of a bizarre beef that started with the world’s richest known man taking shots at Assassin’s Creed Shadows.
Since its May 2024 reveal, the latest installment in Ubisoft’s open-world series has found itself targeted by some vocal groups for featuring a black protagonist in 16th-century Japan. In one of the most high-profile examples of this backlash, Elon Musk publicly claimed that “DEI kills art” and Assassin’s Creed Shadows proves it. The executive producer for the franchise, Marc-Alexis CĂŽtĂ©, subsequently characterized this comment as unproductive, asserting that the Tesla CEO was “feeding hatred” before the game was even out.
Ubisoft Mocks Elon Musk For Calling Assassin’s Creed Shadows a ‘Terrible Game’
Is that what the guy playing your Path of Exile 2 account told you? â Assassin’s Creed (@assassinscreed)Â March 25, 2025
The cheeky comment was a reference to Musk’s recent admission of boosting his Path of Exile 2 account. The billionaire only admitted to doing so after it became apparent he couldn’t have achieved his high in-game ranking himself, as his account was active while he was publicly seen elsewhere. While some social media users labeled the act of paying to boost one’s video game account as a sign of insecurity and desperation to be liked, Musk insisted that everyone does this. He also admitted to boosting his account in Diablo 4, a game he claimedâin a late 2024 interview with Joe Roganâhe was among the world’s top 20 players in.














Assassin’s Creed Shadows Is Off to a Promising Start
In spite of some vocal criticism and the Elon Musk beef, Assassin’s Creed Shadows is off to a strong start, having surpassed 2 million players in less than 48 hours of its March 20 release. The game is estimated to be the second-largest launch in the franchise after Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, whose success was propped up by several uncontrollable factors like the global pandemic and Viking media renaissance.