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Assassin's Creed 4 Black Flag Freedom Cry Gameplay Walkthrough Part 4 - Let's Play (Xbox One/PS4/PC)

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Assassin's Creed 4 Black Flag Freedom Cry Gameplay Walkthrough - Part 4 (Xbox One/PS4/PC)

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For Adéwale, freedom isn't just a vague concept. The charismatic quartermaster who co-starred alongside Edward Kenway in Assassin's Creed IV Black Flag was once enslaved himself -- until he forged his own path to freedom, then turned to a life of piracy and eventually embraced the Creed. And now he's taking center stage in the story-driven single-player DLC Freedom Cry, which will be out on December 17 on PS4, Xbox One, PS3, Xbox 360 and PC.

Set 15 years after the end of Black Flag, Freedom Cry stars an older Adéwale, who has since stepped out of Kenway's shadow to become a seasoned Assassin and valued member of the Brotherhood. When the DLC begins, Adéwale is shipwrecked in St. Domingue (modern-day Haiti), where he comes face to face with some of the most brutal slavery in the West Indies. As he makes his way through St. Domingue, Port-au-Prince and the surrounding seas, Adéwale will counter the abominable cruelty festering in the region with his own ruthless justice, delivered via bloody machete, powerful blunderbuss -- and while aboard his fearsome brig Experto Crede.

What drives Adéwale to get so involved in this local struggle? According to Lead Writer Jill Murray, his choice isn't as simple as it might seem. "Adéwale was a slave as a child, and he escaped around the age of 14," Murray says. "For many people in history who were slaves, once they managed to free themselves, they just wanted to be left alone to live their lives in peace. And so they would turn to subsistence farming, raise a family, that kind of thing. For Adéwale, he flees to piracy, and he becomes a self-made man with his own idea of liberty that he's able to maintain throughout his life. I think it's a very human reaction to not necessarily want to go back and get re-involved with slavery. And, as we see in Black Flag, he does not make freeing other slaves the point of his existence. He chooses piracy, and then he chooses the Creed."
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