
Ubisoft has committed to launching new entries in the Assassin's Creed, Far Cry, and Ghost Recon franchises before the end of March 2029. In its financial report, the company stated it will deliver a significantly stronger and more diverse content pipeline during the 2027-28 and 2028-29 fiscal years, supported by releases across these three major series. The witch-themed Assassin's Creed Hexe is among the planned titles, expected to launch sometime in 2027. A new Far Cry game is long overdue, with the last mainline installment, Far Cry 6, released in 2021. Ghost Recon hasn't seen a mainline entry since 2019's Breakpoint. Ubisoft considers these three franchises its biggest, and while it discussed the performance of live service games like Rainbow Six Siege, The Division 2, The Crew Motorfest, and For Honor, there was no mention of the long-delayed Beyond Good and Evil 2 or the Splinter Cell remake. The company did confirm it canceled seven projects and delayed six over the past year. Ubisoft has faced a tough period, with around 1,200 employees leaving (its total headcount was 16,590 at the end of March 2026). It has €1.16 billion (approximately $1.35 billion) in cash from Chinese giant Tencent to help turn things around. The next major release on Ubisoft's radar is Black Flag Resynced, due out July 9. Ubisoft said the remake's reveal "generated strong engagement across the Assassin's Creed community, with players praising the game's modernized presentation and expanded gameplay features while recognizing its faithfulness to the original experience. Early pre-order momentum has been particularly strong, notably in China, ranking among the franchise's best performances over the first three weeks."