---
product_id: 3930340
title: "Assassin's Creed 2 - PC"
brand: "ubisoft"
price: "E£ 2964"
currency: EGP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
category: "Ubisoft"
url: https://www.desertcart.com.eg/products/3930340-assassins-creed-2-pc
store_origin: EG
region: Egypt
---

# Dynamic multi-weapon combat Cloud-synced cross-PC saves Open-world Renaissance Italy Assassin's Creed 2 - PC

**Brand:** ubisoft
**Price:** E£ 2964
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> ⚔️ Step into the shadows of history—become the legend everyone’s chasing!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Assassin's Creed 2 - PC by ubisoft
- **How much does it cost?** E£ 2964 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.com.eg](https://www.desertcart.com.eg/products/3930340-assassins-creed-2-pc)

## Best For

- ubisoft enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted ubisoft brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Combat Reimagined:** Engage in fluid, strategic battles using a variety of weapons and stealth tactics, including iconic hidden blades and Leonardo da Vinci’s inventions.
- • **Seamless Cross-Device Play:** Your progress syncs online, letting you pick up the action on any PC without missing a beat—work, home, or a friend's place.
- • **Epic Storyline of Power & Revenge:** Dive into a gripping narrative filled with political intrigue, family drama, and alliances with legendary figures like Leonardo da Vinci.
- • **Master the Renaissance Playground:** Explore sprawling, historically rich cities like Florence and Venice with unparalleled freedom and detail.
- • **Endless Side Missions & Challenges:** Beyond the main quest, enjoy races, assassination contracts, and faction battles that keep gameplay fresh and addictive.

## Overview

Assassin’s Creed 2 for PC elevates the open-world action genre with its richly detailed Renaissance Italy setting, innovative combat system, and cloud-synced saves that enable seamless gameplay across multiple devices. Featuring Ezio Auditore’s epic journey through a world of conspiracy and power, this title combines immersive storytelling with diverse missions and cutting-edge gameplay mechanics, making it a must-have for fans of narrative-driven action games.

## Description

Assassin’s Creed 2 is the follow-up to the title that became the fastest-selling new IP in video game history. The highly anticipated title features a new hero, Ezio Auditore da Firenze, a young Italian noble, and a new era, the Renaissance. Assassin’s Creed 2 retains the core gameplay experience that made the first opus a resounding success and features new experiences that will surprise and challenge players. Assassin’s Creed 2 is an epic story of family, vengeance and conspiracy set in the pristine, yet brutal, backdrop of a Renaissance Italy. Ezio befriends Leonardo da Vinci, takes on Florence’s most powerful families and ventures throughout the canals of Venice where he learns to become a master assassin.

Review: Amazing game, frustrating DRM system with some bonuses - Let's just say up front, Assassin's Creed 2 is one of the best games I've ever seen, let alone played. The story is immersive, the gameplay is great. The best part though, is the overall feeling of the game. It feels so great to walk the busy streets of Renaissance Italy, and it feels even better to free run across the rooftops. The graphics, atmosphere and animations are amazing, and within these beautifully recreated cities, there's a great game to be played. Now the DRM. I was really frustrated by this at first. I heard it would always be cutting me off, I wouldn't ever be able to connect, and the world would end. However, my time in the game is at least 40 hours now, and I've never had an issue at all, even though my internet isn't even that stable. If you're mostly playing games at home, I wouldn't worry that much honestly. The aspect of the DRM people don't mention is that it allows you to install it an as many PC's as you want, with your saved games synchronized online. What does that mean? It means I can install it on my friends laptop at work, and pick up right where I left off at home. Or at my other friend's home computer. It also means they can make their own profile (you can have 3) and play through the game themselves whenever I'm not playing, all without a disc. I probably sound like a Ubisoft representative, but I was really surprised and pleased with how this system actually worked out. It sounds awful on paper, but it can end up being quite handy. Now, if I regularly played games on my laptop on the train (a believable situation, though if you read the DRM reviews it seems as if the only place anyone EVER plays games is on a train) or some other situation where internet was unavailable, I agree it would be really frustrating. But if you're into gaming enough to boot up your gaming laptop during the commute, you probably have another game that you could pass the time with. It's also probably not the only time you play games, so, trust me, buy Assassin's Creed 2 anyway, because it's one of the best games you'll ever play. That's my take on it. So, more about the game itself. I'm sure you've heard, they really improved the gameplay in the second game. It has big, open cities like the first one, but this time the story and side missions have a lot more variety. There's just a lot more stuff to do, races, side assassination contracts, factions, etc. Though at first glance it seems the same, the fighting in this game has a had a major overhaul from the first. You can fight with your hidden blade(s!) use a ton of different weapons, quick-step around enemies, and of course, disarm and dispatch them; the finishing moves always look sweet. If you're willing to not just smash the attack button, they give you everything you need to create interesting and epic battles. The assassinations themselves are a lot more interesting, Ezio's skills let you come at them from a lot of different ways. From the air, from a hiding place, from below, with a gun, two at a time, it all makes it more fun. So, it's a FANTASTIC game, with an unusual DRM scheme that you can actually find a lot of good in--if you're that kind of person.
Review: Everything You Could Hope For in a Sequel to Assassin's Creed - Assassin's Creed was for me a mixture of a perfect game and a lackluster game, offering equal parts of both. The world, graphics and basic gameplay were all solid and you really felt like you were in the dark ages, during the crusades, adventuring in the middle east. Unfortunately the game was also repetitive, offered no real mission variety or progression and also lacked some subtle nuances which make games fun to play for longr periods. Assassin's Creed 2 changes ALL of that, thankfully. The world is just as wonderful to look at and interesting to traverse, but now what you do in the world is also entertaining. The missions shake things up, there are more of them and the story really carries you through it all. No more rigid structure, instead there is a greater open world feeling like in a Grand Theft Auto game. Collecting items for your base and improving it through investment is also rewarding and adds to the gameplay, no more mindless searching for flags in AC2, now you search for improvements to your character and your surroundings. It's hard not to recommend AC2 to a fan of the original, it has everything you liked about that game plus a ton of improvements and additions. If you disliked the original game entirely, well, the basic fundemental gameplay is identical, so you should probably steer clear. The important thing to remember is the gameplay is the same, it's what you do with the game that is bigger and better. Note: A lot of the reviews on desertcart right now are focused on the DRM (digital rights management) system the game uses, called Uplay. Uplay basically makes AC2 play like an MMO on PC, but without other players in the game. A server connection is required and your saves are on a server, so you can log in and play where you left off from any PC. There are also unlocks and new content delivered through Uplay like an MMO content patch. A lot of consumers have issues with this because of the constant internet connection requirement, which I understand, but as a person with constant internet I can say the DRM has no real impact on gameplay if you have a similar setup. The game logs in in less than 5 seconds and during gameplay you never notice it. I am not rating the DRM, only the game, which is a stellar achievement in game design and a must play for those who can.

## Features

- Explore the deadly, shadowed world of the assassin with new assassin Ezio
- Roam freely through the lush and dangerous world of Renaissance-era Italy
- Do whatever it takes to complete your missions in the game's all-new open world and mission structure
- Thrive in an environment rich with power, revenge and conspiracy
- Practice your assassin's art with all-new weapons and instruments created by Leonardo da Vinci

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B001TOQ8R0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #16,436 in Video Games ( See Top 100 in Video Games ) #2,605 in PC-compatible Games |
| Computer Platform | PC |
| Customer Reviews | 3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars (302) |
| Date First Available | May 11, 2009 |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00008888685340 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 1 pounds |
| Item model number | 008888685340 |
| Manufacturer | Ubisoft |
| Number of Players | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 5.35 x 0.55 x 7.5 inches; 1 Pounds |
| Publication Date | March 9, 2010 |
| Rated | Mature |
| Release date | March 9, 2010 |
| Type of item | DVD-ROM |
| UPC | 008888685340 |

## Images

![Assassin's Creed 2 - PC - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51kzuaOkJCL.jpg)
![Assassin's Creed 2 - PC - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71nfaIw3EyL.jpg)
![Assassin's Creed 2 - PC - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71ENGIDNdFL.jpg)
![Assassin's Creed 2 - PC - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81Un1pHdOcL.jpg)
![Assassin's Creed 2 - PC - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71tVa0-w6xL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Platform For Display, Edition** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Amazing game, frustrating DRM system with some bonuses
*by K***R on April 14, 2010*

Let's just say up front, Assassin's Creed 2 is one of the best games I've ever seen, let alone played. The story is immersive, the gameplay is great. The best part though, is the overall feeling of the game. It feels so great to walk the busy streets of Renaissance Italy, and it feels even better to free run across the rooftops. The graphics, atmosphere and animations are amazing, and within these beautifully recreated cities, there's a great game to be played. Now the DRM. I was really frustrated by this at first. I heard it would always be cutting me off, I wouldn't ever be able to connect, and the world would end. However, my time in the game is at least 40 hours now, and I've never had an issue at all, even though my internet isn't even that stable. If you're mostly playing games at home, I wouldn't worry that much honestly. The aspect of the DRM people don't mention is that it allows you to install it an as many PC's as you want, with your saved games synchronized online. What does that mean? It means I can install it on my friends laptop at work, and pick up right where I left off at home. Or at my other friend's home computer. It also means they can make their own profile (you can have 3) and play through the game themselves whenever I'm not playing, all without a disc. I probably sound like a Ubisoft representative, but I was really surprised and pleased with how this system actually worked out. It sounds awful on paper, but it can end up being quite handy. Now, if I regularly played games on my laptop on the train (a believable situation, though if you read the DRM reviews it seems as if the only place anyone EVER plays games is on a train) or some other situation where internet was unavailable, I agree it would be really frustrating. But if you're into gaming enough to boot up your gaming laptop during the commute, you probably have another game that you could pass the time with. It's also probably not the only time you play games, so, trust me, buy Assassin's Creed 2 anyway, because it's one of the best games you'll ever play. That's my take on it. So, more about the game itself. I'm sure you've heard, they really improved the gameplay in the second game. It has big, open cities like the first one, but this time the story and side missions have a lot more variety. There's just a lot more stuff to do, races, side assassination contracts, factions, etc. Though at first glance it seems the same, the fighting in this game has a had a major overhaul from the first. You can fight with your hidden blade(s!) use a ton of different weapons, quick-step around enemies, and of course, disarm and dispatch them; the finishing moves always look sweet. If you're willing to not just smash the attack button, they give you everything you need to create interesting and epic battles. The assassinations themselves are a lot more interesting, Ezio's skills let you come at them from a lot of different ways. From the air, from a hiding place, from below, with a gun, two at a time, it all makes it more fun. So, it's a FANTASTIC game, with an unusual DRM scheme that you can actually find a lot of good in--if you're that kind of person.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Everything You Could Hope For in a Sequel to Assassin's Creed
*by M***N on March 11, 2010*

Assassin's Creed was for me a mixture of a perfect game and a lackluster game, offering equal parts of both. The world, graphics and basic gameplay were all solid and you really felt like you were in the dark ages, during the crusades, adventuring in the middle east. Unfortunately the game was also repetitive, offered no real mission variety or progression and also lacked some subtle nuances which make games fun to play for longr periods. Assassin's Creed 2 changes ALL of that, thankfully. The world is just as wonderful to look at and interesting to traverse, but now what you do in the world is also entertaining. The missions shake things up, there are more of them and the story really carries you through it all. No more rigid structure, instead there is a greater open world feeling like in a Grand Theft Auto game. Collecting items for your base and improving it through investment is also rewarding and adds to the gameplay, no more mindless searching for flags in AC2, now you search for improvements to your character and your surroundings. It's hard not to recommend AC2 to a fan of the original, it has everything you liked about that game plus a ton of improvements and additions. If you disliked the original game entirely, well, the basic fundemental gameplay is identical, so you should probably steer clear. The important thing to remember is the gameplay is the same, it's what you do with the game that is bigger and better. Note: A lot of the reviews on amazon right now are focused on the DRM (digital rights management) system the game uses, called Uplay. Uplay basically makes AC2 play like an MMO on PC, but without other players in the game. A server connection is required and your saves are on a server, so you can log in and play where you left off from any PC. There are also unlocks and new content delivered through Uplay like an MMO content patch. A lot of consumers have issues with this because of the constant internet connection requirement, which I understand, but as a person with constant internet I can say the DRM has no real impact on gameplay if you have a similar setup. The game logs in in less than 5 seconds and during gameplay you never notice it. I am not rating the DRM, only the game, which is a stellar achievement in game design and a must play for those who can.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Beautiful, flawed, fun.
*by F***H on December 29, 2010*

This is a very fun game. Not many sequels take the complaints form the previous game as completely to heart as Assasin's Creed II. Sure there are things to nitpick, and things gamer types A and B might prefer from the first game, but the developers made an astounding effort to improve their game rather than make a straight sequel. Free running is smoother, combat is slicker, the world is larger, there are more varied and more side missions and far more varied and again simply more plot related missions. I heard one reviewer of the game mention that the extra assassinations make it ok when you botch an assassination--you don't feel like you are missing out when you fall off the roof and have a loud, messy sword fight with a bunch of guards before legging it after your fleeing, screaming target. You have other chances to feel suave and accomplished. And that gives it a greater reality to the game (not to be confused with realism). You are learning to become an assassin, and you make a hell of a lot of mistakes that the game doens't punish you for them very severely at all. You can experiment, and muck about, and when things go wrong, you don't reload from the last check point to fix it. You let the mistakes lie because there are so many things to do, the one error doesn't matter. Nor would a hundred. The sheer scale of the game allows for a more authentic progression and learning curve. The art of the game is absolutely astounding. The detail and authenticity of the various cities, the photorealisim in the texturing ... it is a gorgeous model of renaissance Italy. Much as in Spiderman 2 for the PS3, this is a game where the most fun happens when you wander around, climb buildings, sprint along the roof of famous buildings, stand where your aunt took a photo of herself while on vacation in Rome. Watch the crowds do what, within a quite reasonable margin of error, crowds DO outside of the game. It is a vibrant game world, and I derive hours of enjoyment tromping through it. This is where we hit something of a snag. The plot is ridiculous. But I think most people are fine with ridiculous plots and the game creators seem aware of their plot and seem to have added in a bit of camp and don't take it quite so seriously as the game does ... but it's rather hard for me to swallow in points and can get very distracting. The digital markers and lines of the animus get especially obnoxious and by the time I finished the game I was absolutely sick of the characters lampshading various gaming interface pieces and gaming conventions through explaining features of the animus.This said, I genuinely cared about the characters no matter how mad-cap their world or cliched it could get. They were lovingly crafted visually and otherwise and it shows even when the plot and characters ought to buckle like a match stick. Returning to the gameplay, it can sometimes seem too easy or too easily distracting to the point where I lose interest in the plot or in the game altogether, ans simply run about on the roof-tops staring at pretty buildings. Or exit the game and play something else. There is nothing in the game that really challenges me as a gamer, as a thinker, as an audience member. The whole thing is a very pretty, very smooth trail ride on a horse that requires occasional nudging but mostly knows the way better than you anyway and follows the horse in front of it. As a whole, I found it thoroughly entertaining, and a vast improvement on the initial game in the series. As a matter of principle, I despise the DRM methods used in Assasin's Creed II. As a matter of practicality, I respect that PC gaming companies lose a lot of money to Piracy. Even the Pay What You Want humble indie bundle servers were hacked by pirating gamers who stole the game rather than paying a penny for several games. It isn't as horrible as many of these reviews claim. Steam uses internet based validation (albeit not constant connection)and MMORPG's require persistant internet connections even for solo play, even in instanced areas. Steam doesn't seem to cause too many people problems, and MMOs are widely successful and MMO players widely content with their games. The problem is, of course, not all gamers want to play such games, and gamers like being able to play wherever and whenever they can--espeically laptop PC gamers. Ubisoft's DRM measures make this impossible. As someone with a large game collection and frequent access to internet, I am not terribly offended by Ubisoft's DRM methods. I can always play something else, use Steam in offline mode, or read a book if I am without internet but need my adventuring fix. Just be aware that you cannot play the game without an internet connection (even a slow one will do), and weigh that before you buy.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Assassin's Creed 2 - PC
- Assassin's Creed: Director's Cut Edition - PC

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