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US professor teaches Assassin’s Creed trolls a lesson by killing with kindness

Narrative adviser Sachi Schmidt-Hori became the target of backlash by gamers who did not like the idea of a ‘woke’ Black African samurai

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Sachi Schmidt-Hori, a Japanese literature and culture professor, who was a consultant on the Assassin’s Creed Shadows video game. Photo: AP
Associated Press

Sachi Schmidt-Hori has never played Assassin’s Creed Shadows, but facing an onslaught of online harassment from its fans, she quickly developed her own gameplay style: confronting hate with kindness.

Schmidt-Hori, an associate professor of Japanese literature and culture at Dartmouth College, worked as a narrative consultant on the latest instalment in the popular Ubisoft video game franchise.

The game launched on March 20, but the vitriol directed at Schmidt-Hori began in May 2024 with the release of a promotional trailer.

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“Once I realised that I was by myself – nobody was defending me – I just decided to do what I knew would work,” she said. “It’s very difficult to hate someone up close.”

Set in 16th century Japan, the game features Naoe, a Japanese female assassin, and Yasuke, a black African samurai. Furore erupted over the latter, with gamers criticising his inclusion as “wokeness” – or a state of being socially aware – run amok.

A scene from the new Assassin’s Creed Shadows video game. Photo: Ubisoft/AP
A scene from the new Assassin’s Creed Shadows video game. Photo: Ubisoft/AP

They quickly zeroed in Schmidt-Hori, attacking her in online forums, posting bogus reviews of her scholarly work and flooding her inbox with profanity.

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