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Assassin’s Creed Valhalla combat is built specifically to make you feel like a Viking, not an Assassin – GamesRadar+ AU

Game director Eric Baptizat details the way of the Bear, Wolf, and Raven in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla

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As I watched Eivor decapitate a man with a fatal flick of an axe, it became clear that Assassin’s Creed Valhalla is embracing the notoriously brutal way of the viking in its combat. Fighting in Valhalla is much slower, and more deliberate, than anything we’ve seen in recent wave of RPG-inspired Assassin’s Creed games. Gone is the more nimble, almost dance-like combat of Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, and although there are more parallels to be drawn between this and Assassin’s Creed Origins, this is Assassin’s Creed combat like you’ve never seen it before. 
It helps, of course, that this is new territory for the series. Assassin’s Creed Valhalla takes us back to the Dark Ages, circa 873CE, a period in which Norwegian Vikings began to settle on the shores of England. From what I’ve seen so far, the game does well to balance the English and Viking elements, with a huge part of the story and the resulting violence tied to the clashing of the two cultures. Huge raids are a big part of the game too, both in terms of story and as one of many options for attacking an enemy camp, which is where I got my first taste of exactly how bloody Valhalla’s combat was going to be. 
 “What we wanted from the beginning is really this idea that the character is a Viking, first, you know?”  says Eric Baptizat, game director of Assassin’s Creed Valhalla. “It’s something very important, to be sure that we are true to what the Norse were in this time period,” continues Baptizat, adding, “we want the player, without telling them directly, to live the drama that a Norse experienced in this time period.” 
Viking first, Assassin later 
(Image credit: Ubisoft)
A big part of experiencing what it might be like to be a Norse in this period of history means you’re going to need to wrap your head around some heavy, cumbersome weaponry.  In my playthrough, I opted for wielding a large shield and an axe, which meant that parrying enemy attacks became an incredibly important component to the cycle of combat. A well-timed parry could send an enemy staggering back, giving me the space to get in a few attacks with my axe, or even send my foe crashing to the ground, offering up the opportunity for a head-crunching stomp attack. 
But everything you do while fighting has to be precise, because the weapons are heavy, making them slow to physically wield in-game. A missed swing will be a real blow pun intended to your attacking strategy, and it means that actually taking an enemy down can be immensely satisfying. One thing you constantly need to be aware of, though, is that getting surrounded is pretty much a death sentence enemy attacks are slow but deadly. Valhalla layers in strategy as much as it does physicality in its combat systems, forcing you to balance your basic attacks with perfect parries and dodges, and that’s before we even get to the special abilities that you unlock as you progress.
 “One objective was also to increase the strategy of the player, but also to increase the number of challenges,” explains Baptizat. “Your new skills are really needed for enemies that you can’t easily bypass. So there might be a block or skill you need that you must earn to be able to defeat them. A lot has been done to create a large variety of archetypes that are pretty different compared to what we used to have, but are more rich in terms of fresh strategies for the player.”
How key these skills and ability will be for survival is laid bare in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla’s raids, staggering events that force you to balance a variety of threats at you at all times. These can range from lightly armed, no-named enemies, to bow-wielding marksmen and fast and deadly Berserkers. And if they don’t provide enough of a challenge, then there’s also the kind of enemy that might make your knees tremble the Slayers. If ever there were a need to utilise the full extent of your abilities and arsenal, it’ll be to take on Slayers.   
Bear, Wolf, or Raven? 
(Image credit: Ubisoft)
Assassin’s Creed Valhalla will give you the scope to decide what kind of viking you want to be. The game comes equipped with three distinct skill trees Bear, Wolf, and Raven that you can channel upgrade points into throughout the game, giving you the ability to really dial into your preferred style and approach to combat. “We wanted to have some symbolic animal to represent the three directions of the skill tree. If we do a caricature, we could say that the Bear is more of a warrior-oriented element. The Raven is more stealth-oriented, whilst the Wolf is more hunting-oriented,” explains Baptizat. 
“But it’s not only those three branches. Because in each branch, there is already a mix and variety of variable elements. So you can have new skills that are useful in combat, stealth, exploration and navigation, depending on the branch. It’s not restricted,” he tells me, noting that the system gets even deeper once you begin matching your weapons to each branch of the system. “The more you go into a branch, the more than you will see that you specialise in one type of weapon, and one type of track. You can really define which tactic you think is the best. Then the skills that you’re going to learn will be very, very different

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