After months of build-up,Ā multiple delays, andĀ controversy, Assassinās Creed Shadows finally launched worldwide this month. Despite the negative press surrounding the title, the RPG has been performing decently so far, amassing overĀ 3 million playersĀ already and the second-best launch in the franchiseās history.
However, Assassinās Creed Shadows is having a harder time impacting Japan, with manyĀ fans not warming upĀ to the title despite positive reviews from critics. And, as it turns out, the gameās first-week sales in Japan are among the worst in Assassinās Creed franchise history.
Why it matters: The RPGās failure to pander to Japanese audiences even after being set in their country is troubling for Western titles.
As perĀ Famitsuās charts, only the PlayStation 5 edition of Assassinās Creed Shadows made it into this weekās top 10, selling a mediocreĀ 17.1K copiesĀ and sitting at 5th place in its debut week. These launch numbers make it the franchiseās worst start in the series in almost a decade.
Previous entries like Valhalla and Odyssey sold over double the amount in their first week, with even AC Mirage releasing with better numbers in Japan than Assassinās Creed Shadows.
To make matters even worse, the RPGās debut week accumulated much lower sales than other AAA Samurai titles set in Japan, such as Ghost of Tsushima,Ā Nioh, and Rise of the Ronin. All these opened to over 50K sales, with Sonyās Ghost of Tsushima selling a whoppingĀ 212K units, twelve times more than Assassinās Creed Shadows.
Overall, the RPG performed poorly in its first week, overshadowed by older Assassinās Creed titles and other Samurai-based AAA games set in Japan. Outside the country, however, the game is doing surprisingly well, with projections putting it atĀ 6 million playersĀ in under a month in addition toĀ positive Steam reviews.