Was Assassin’s Creed Origins’ Egypt the best open world in the series?

  • By: srtmorar@gmail.com
  • Date: July 16, 2026
  • Time to read: 3 min.


Archive Spelunker

Wes Fenlon
Archive Spelunker

Wes Fenlon

From the archives: This Extra Life columb was originally published in PC Gamer 313 (January 2018). It appears as originally written, with only minor changes in formatting and presentation.

In the years since Andy celebrated AC Origins’ Egypt with this magazine column, Ubisoft has made a few new open worlds: Greece (2018’s Odyssey), the British Isles (2020’s Valhalla), and Japan (2025’s Shadows). They keep getting bigger and more detailed, but I’m not sure one has quite sold the majesty of the real world the way Origins’ did with Giza. It’s no coincidence this was also the game that launched the series’ Discovery Tour feature, turning all the work Ubisoft’s artists did to authentically recreate ancient Egypt into an educational opportunity.

PC Gamer’s Chris Livingston called Origins’ Egypt “a stunningly lovely place” in his review, but then again, Assassin’s Creed worlds are almost always the highlight, aren’t they? It’s what you do in them that’s often the letdown, as with Shadows’ disappointingly bland quests.

What do you think, AC lifers: Which game had the best world?

Getting lost in history in Assassin’s Creed Origins

By Andy Kelly

In Assassin’s Creed we usually visit civilisations at their peak, whether it’s Renaissance Italy or London at the height of the Industrial Revolution. Ubisoft could have done this for Origins too, taking us to the golden age of Ancient Egypt. But instead we visit this period of history in its twilight years. The pharaonic line is coming to an end and the Greeks have dramatically transformed the landscape, culture and religious practices of this part of the world.

(Image credit: Ubisoft)

This makes for a fascinating architectural contrast. In the largest cities you see statues of Egyptian gods crumbling and forgotten, outnumbered by pristine, polished marble statues of Greek legends. And even monuments, like the pyramids of Giza and the Great Sphinx, are already falling apart. There’s a tragedy to seeing this grand civilisation fade away as foreign invaders erect gleaming temples and acropolises across the desert.

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