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Ubisoft reportedly has an anti-harassment plan in place for Assassin's Creed Shadows developers

Published on January 01, 0001

With just a few days from release, has reportedly implemented an anti-harassment plan for developers to protect them from potential backlash on social media.

has been the target of persistent outrage from some corners of gaming fandom, primarily due to the presence of , a Black samurai, which has amplified unhappiness with pre-release and from the company. The game itself (our full review will arrive [[link]] on March 18) and Ubisoft says preorders are "," but it's still an ugly environment in which to launch the game.

"We're advised not to post on social media that [[link]] we work at Ubisoft to avoid harassment," one employee told French site (, via ). The company has also worked with a CSE—comité social et économique—at Ubisoft, which are employee-elected groups required for French companies with 11 or more employees represent and advocate for employees within the company.

"Our stance has always been that team members’ social media channels are their own," Ubisoft said in a statement provided to PC Gamer. "Our top priority is the safety of our employees, including online, which is why, as a standard practice across Ubisoft, we offer guidance on navigating social media, digital safety, and support for team members’ well-being. We also share resources to help prevent and protect against online harassment, something our teams have unfortunately faced."

Ubisoft has previously pushed back on some of that abuse: While CEO Yves Guillemot made a fruitless attempt to mollify angry gamers in 2024 by saying the company's "is not to push any specific agenda," creative leadership has been rather more : In November 2024, franchise head Marc-Alexis Coté said developers throughout the industry "face the added challenge of distinguishing between genuine feedback and attacks driven by intolerance," but added, "When we self-censor in the face of threats, we hand over our power, piece by piece, until freedom and creativity both wither away. We cannot let that happen."

Correction: The report initially indicated that Ubisoft worked with Canada's Communications Security Establishment on its anti-harassment plan. Ubisoft clarified that CSE in the BFMTV story refers to Comité Social et Economique, which translates to "Social and Economic Committee."

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