Assassin's Creed Syndicate feels like Ubisoft's multi-million dollar apology

So it is a breath of fresh this year to see that main character Evie Frye provides a thoughtful foil to brother Jacob's punch-first approach. In a brilliantly savvy PR move, the publicists appear to have sent Anita Sarkeesian of Feminist Frequency fame a copy. (You can tell she got it early as as she published her review at the time the review embargo broke). She gave the game a broad stamp of approval for meeting some of the depressingly low expectations she has for modern games: Evie was not unnecessarily sexualised, her costume was combat-appropriate and her character was well rounded and integral to the plot. The game has also done away with the ability for players to disguise themselves by hiding in a crowd of sex workers.

This isn't a coincidence – Ubisoft's PR people are pushing the feminist angle quite heavily, as evidenced by emails sent to journalists offering interviews with Victoria Atkin, who voices Evie. They play up the fact she is "one of the first female leading roles for any video game".