After years of rumours and leaks, Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced was confirmed in March and clarified further in April. The remake is due on 9 July for PS5, Xbox Series X/S and PC.
In a recent interview with Eurogamer, the game's director dropped a brief but notable hint about additional modern-day material that had been cut from the original project. The tease suggested that more modern-day sequences exist than previously known and left open the possibility that some of that material could be revisited for the remake, either at launch or through post-release updates.
The prospect of restored modern-day content is significant for the franchise's narrative framing. Black Flag's original incarnation featured a relatively restrained modern-day thread compared with other entries in the series. Restoring or expanding such sequences in Resynced could add context to the broader Assassin's Creed mythos, modify the player's sense of time and consequence, and shift the tonal balance between historical piracy and contemporary conspiracy.
Hands-on impressions of Resynced emphasise a remake that leans into polish rather than wholesale reinvention. The updated presentation, ship-to-ship combat and open-world seafaring remain central to its appeal. Additional modern-day scenes would represent a different kind of update: one that affects storytelling and franchise continuity rather than purely visual or mechanical upgrades.
Ubisoft's approach to remakes has increasingly mixed fidelity to source material with targeted changes intended to align older games with modern expectations. Bringing back cut modern-day content would be consistent with that philosophy, offering both a nod to legacy players and new connective tissue for the series going forward.
The director's tease sharpens attention on Resynced ahead of its July release. Confirmation of restored modern-day sections would alter conversations about the remake's scope and intent, and will be monitored closely by players and critics in the run-up to launch.
Source: Eurogamer.