
Assassin’s Creed AC Shadows video game is at the center of controversy for including interracial and gay sex scenes among samurais and inserting LGBTQ into old Japanese culture that was not in existence at that time.
The video game produced by Ubisoft Quebec promoted LGBTQ+ and woke culture in Japan with its latest AC Shadows release by including a character named Ibuki who identified as non-binary with the pronouns they/them.
The video game made Ibuki have a crush on a black sumari named Yasuke. The two samurai threw caution to the wind and had a gay romance which saw them heavily kissing in the woods.
Meanwhile, Yasuke also had a crush and hot romance with Lady Oichi, who was happily married to Azai Nagamasa. Nagamasa was a highly ranked man in Japanese history and was also one of the best generals of Oda Nobunaga.
Below is a video compilation of all the romantic and sexually explicit scenes in the game:
Oda Nobunaga during his time between 1568 to 1582 was a Japanese warrior and government official who is widely known as the “Great Unifier” of Japan.
AC Shadows was seen as a humiliation to feudal Japan and nothing more than a weird erotic fantasy for liberal people trying to change history by subtly instilling LGBTQ in old traditions and culture.
“They didn’t even bother to read any history from legit source”, one of the comments read. “It’s like Ubi was trying to think of every possible way of insulting the Japanese”, another wrote.
The video game was also likened to the storyline in BBC porn videos where white married women would want to sleep with black men.
Assassin’s Creed AC Shadows’ boldness did not go unnoticed by the Japanese government, especially in light of disrespecting the Shinto shrine. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba in a statement said they would address it accordingly after consulting with other ministers.
Meanwhile, those behind the game issued an apology claiming it was not intended to be a factual representation of history.