Gamer Update
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Tuesday, Jul 29, 2025
Gamer UpdateGamer Update
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Follow US
- Advertisement -
Ad image
Main

Assassin’s Creed Shadows day one patch detailed, includes destructible shrine changes after concern over copycats

Author
Last updated: 20.03.2025 17:11
Author
Share
SHARE


Ubisoft has quietly updated Assassin’s Creed Shadows with a day one patch that includes changes to how players can interact with objects within the game’s shrine locations.


The change is minor, but notable as it follows attention on the game raised by Japanese politician Hiroyuki Kada, who was upset at preview footage of the game featuring a player crashing around a local shrine within Shadows (thanks, IGN).


At launch, major items in Shadows’ shrines are no longer destructible. Ubisoft appears to have released the patch alongside the game’s release last night, meaning players will already have it installed.

Assassin’s Creed Shadows Review. Watch on YouTube


Yesterday, Kada flagged the situation again, to get a response from the country’s prime minister. The following exchange comes via IGN, with translation by IGN Japan colleagues.


“I fear that allowing players to attack and destroy real-world locations in the game without permission could encourage similar behavior in real life,” Kada said. “Shrine officials and local residents are also worried about this. Of course, freedom of expression must be respected, but acts that demean local cultures should be avoided.”


According to IGN Japan staff, the context to Kada’s comments is that Japan has seen record tourism since the country’s post-lockdown reopening, and wider concern of “over tourism” that has sparked a rise in vandalism. Kada’s concern is that Shadows players who have played the game might try and recreate its violence in real-life.


“Defacing a shrine is out of the question – it is an insult to the nation itself,” Japanese prime minster Ishiba said yesterday, in a response to Kada. “When the Self-Defense Forces were deployed to Samawah, Iraq, we ensured they studied Islamic customs beforehand. Respecting the culture and religion of a country is fundamental, and we must make it clear that we will not simply accept acts that disregard them.”


Otherwise, Assassin’s Creed Shadows’ launch day patch includes a small list of fixes previously flagged as arriving on day one.


If you’re playing Shadows already, you likely have this patch installed. Ubisoft told Eurogamer it will not be highlighting the patch publicly beyond confirming the below notes are accurate:

  • Players no longer getting stuck inside movable objects after dodging forward and interacting with them in kofuns
  • Fix for procedural weapons being removed incorrectly when selling items
  • Adjustments to prevent players from going out of bounds when proning against objects
  • Improved horse navigation, reducing issues with turning and blocked paths
  • Lighting adjustments for cave, kofun, and architectural entrances/exits
  • Fixes for cloth clipping on Yasuke’s outfits (while riding) and Naoe’s outfits (while crouching)
  • Citizens without weapons no longer bleed when attacked, reducing unintended blood spill in temples/shrines
  • Tables and racks in temples/shrines are now indestructible (Some objects like drums or bowls can still be broken as they are generic ones present everywhere in the world) (Tables are still dynamic objects, so players can still move/push them).


Assassin’s Creed Shadows has been a lightning rod for controversy over its road to release, including a reworked figurine with an initially “insensitive” design, and gripes over historical inaccuracies in concept art within a collector’s art book.

There has also been an ongoing backlash to Yasuke’s presence and role in Shadows, which caught the attention of Elon Musk. In July, Ubisoft issued an apology for elements in the game’s marketing campaign that had “caused concern” among some Japanese fans.

You Might Also Like

Switch 2 Edition games will be complete on the card without a download, Nintendo confirms

13 years later, the Louvre museum’s 3DS audio guide service is coming to an end

US court denies emergency motion issued by Apple in legal case against Epic Games

What worked in The Witcher 3 and what didn’t: looking back on a landmark RPG with CD Projekt Red

Sonic Racing: Crossworlds might be the most mechanically rich kart racer ever made – hands-on

Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Contact us

- Advertisement -
Ad image

You Might Also Like

Main

After impressing on Quest, The Room studio’s spooky, 80s-set VR adventure Ghost Town hits PC very soon

3 Min Read
Main

Relic Entertainment outlines new business strategy

2 Min Read
Main

EA pushes office return, largely phasing out remote roles

3 Min Read
Main

Blizzard co-founder and former CEO launches new sci-fi live-service game Wildgate

3 Min Read
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 Gamer Update. All rights reserved.

Gamer Update
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?