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How Assassin's Creed's scarf physics slowed down 2007 computers.
How Assassin's Creed's scarf physics slowed down 2007 computers.

How Assassin's Creed's scarf physics slowed down 2007 computers.

9.6
2026
Documentary
🇺🇸 English

Assassin's Creed was released in 2007, and few expected that a small detail—Altaïr's scarf—would become the main culprit behind the game's performance issues. This seemingly innocuous item of clothing could...

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Description

Assassin's Creed was released in 2007, and few expected that a small detail—Altaïr's scarf—would become the main culprit behind the game's performance issues. This seemingly innocuous item of clothing could slow down even the most powerful computers of the time to the point of being unplayable.

The challenge lay in the unprecedentedly realistic fabric simulation. The protagonist, Altair,'s scarf was animated as a complex object with dozens of virtual bones and thousands of vertices, requiring continuous real-time physics calculations.

While other elements of the Assassin's Creed world relied on simpler methods, the dynamic scarf heavily taxed the CPU. The dual-core Intel Core 2 Duo and AMD Athlon 64 X2 processors, typical for 2007, often struggled, dropping frame rates below 20 FPS.

The developers at Ubisoft Montreal were aware of this computational load, but considered dynamic cloth critical to immersing themselves in Altair's character. Players were forced to lower graphics settings or endure frame rate drops even on a GeForce 8800 GT.

The irony is that for the sake of such a single detail, gamers sacrificed the performance of the entire game world. This became a shining example of how the pursuit of the smallest visual nuances can have a colossal systemic effect, leaving a mark on the history of game design.

Movie Details

Release Year
2026
Genre
Documentary
Language
🇺🇸 English
Rating
9.6

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