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Ubisoft Is Back On Steam, With Assassin's Creed Valhalla Launching December 6

In 2019, a Ubisoft executive called Steam's distribution model "unrealistic."

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After a years long absence, it seems Ubisoft is once again set to release some of its games on Steam, including Assassin's Creed Valhalla.

In a statement to Eurogamer, Ubisoft confirmed that two additional titles, the city-builder Anno 1800 and the free-to-play roller derby title Roller Champions, will also be released on Steam in the near future.

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The move comes after Ubisoft said in 2019 that it made a "business decision" to not launch Assassin's Creed Valhalla and other Ubisoft titles on Steam and instead opt for using the Epic Games Store or its own Uplay (now Ubisoft Connect) storefront. That same year, Ubisoft's vice president for partnerships and revenue, Chris Early, called Steam's distribution model "unrealistic" and that Steam "doesn't reflect where the world is today in terms of game distribution."

In Ubisoft's statement to Eurogamer, the publisher said it is "constantly evaluating how to bring out games to different audiences wherever they are, while providing a consistent player ecosystem through Ubisoft Connect."

Ubisoft found itself among numerous game publishers who opted to release games via its own distribution platforms or release on the Epic Games Store instead of publishing on Steam in recent years. Steam typically keeps about 30% of each game sale, with 70% going to the game's publishers. The Epic Games Store, in contrast, only takes a 12% cut. Game sales from a platform run by the publisher of a given game, like Ubisoft Connect, makes it so publishers keep virtually 100% of the profit from each sale.

However, the tides have been turning recently. Activision released Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II on Steam this year (to great success) after multiple previous entries found themselves exclusive to the Activision-owned Blizzard Battle.net launcher. Microsoft, too, made a grand return to Steam in recent years, with some of Xbox's biggest titles, including Halo Infinite, Gears 5, Forza Horizon 5, and Sea of Thieves, all available on Valve's platform.

Assassin's Creed Valhalla will arrive on Steam December 6, the same day as the game's final content update releases for all platforms. Though the update won't include a New Game+ mode, it will wrap up the game's ongoing story and include a few other "surprises," according to Ubisoft.

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deactivated-64c06b51403e7

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Will it still use Ubi launcher?

What's the point, then?

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deactivated-64f32fa0d8a48

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@proceeder: I prefer Steam for convenience, keeping all my games in one place.

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naryanrobinson

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As monumentally indifferent as I feel towards Ubisoft's latest assassin-themed talking and walking simulator,
and as much as I think 30% is too big a cut on Steam's part,
I'm glad to see Ubisoft's attempts at independence fail.

"[Steam] doesn't reflect where the world is today in terms of game distribution."
What an idiot...
It's literally where the world is today in terms of games distribution. Literally.
Not only in popularity, but the only thing that even comes close is GOG,
and that's not even fair, since GOG's entirely DRM-free.

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Cydie

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@naryanrobinson: it doesnt' reflect yet everyone coming back to it because they found out they still sell more on steam then on their own platform/epic. So yes steam takes more money but if you sell 2x more then who cares. COD MW2 is the proof. it outsold 3 to 1 their own launcher.

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Skulker87

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Great! Now we just need Anno 1800 on Steam.

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naryanrobinson

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@Skulker87: Second paragraph:

“In a statement to Eurogamer, Ubisoft confirmed that two additional titles, the city-builder Anno 1800and the free-to-play roller derby titleRoller Champions , will also be released on Steam in the near future.

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